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==In religion and mythology== According to [[Joseph Campbell]], taboos are used in religion and mythology to [[Hero's journey#The Road of Trials|test]] a person's ability to withhold from violating a prohibition given to them.<ref name="Hyman">{{cite journal |last=Hyman |first=Stanley Edgar |date=1949 |title=Myth, Ritual, and Nonsense |journal=The Kenyon Review |publisher=Kenyon College |volume=11 |page=456 |jstor=4333071 |number=3}}</ref><ref>{{cite book| last=Sandbank |first=Shimon |editor=Mark H. Gelber |chapter=The Look Back: Lot's Wife, Kafka, Blanchot |publisher=De Gruyter |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=IFlbDAAAQBAJ&pg=PA297 |series=Conditio Judaica |title=Kafka, Zionism, and Beyond |volume=50 |number=16 |edition=reprint 2014 |isbn=3110934191 |date=2004-09-28 |page=299}}</ref> Should one fail the test and violate a taboo, they will be subsequently punished or face the consequences of their actions.<ref name="Hyman"/> Taboos are not societal prohibitions (such as incest); rather, the use of ''taboo'' in these stories relates to its original meaning of "prohibition": for example, a character could be prohibited from looking, eating, and speaking or [[word taboo|uttering a certain word]]. === Greek === An example of an eating taboo in Greek mythology could be found in the tale of the [[Persephone#Abduction myth|rape of Persephone]]. [[Hades]], who had fallen in love with [[Persephone]] and wished to make her his queen, burst through a cleft in the earth and abducted Persephone as she was gathering flowers in a field.<ref>''Homeric Hymn to Demeter'', [https://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?doc=HH+2+4 4โ20], [https://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?doc=HH+2+414 414โ434].</ref> When [[Demeter]], Persephone's mother, finds out of her daughter's abduction, she forbids the earth to produce (or she neglects the earth) and, in the depth of her despair, causes nothing to grow. [[Zeus]], pressed by the cries of the hungry people and by the other [[Twelve Olympians|deities]] who also heard their anguish, forced Hades to return Persephone.<ref name="Theoi Project - Persephone">{{cite web|url=http://www.theoi.com/Khthonios/Persephone.html |title=Theoi Project โ Persephone |publisher=Theoi.com |access-date=6 July 2012}}</ref> It was explained to Demeter that Persephone would be released, so long as she did not taste the food of the dead. Hades complies with the request to return Persephone to Demeter, but first, he tricks Persephone, forcing her to break the eating taboo by giving her some [[pomegranate]] seeds to eat.<ref>The ''[[Homeric Hymns|Homeric Hymn to Demeter]]'', [http://data.perseus.org/citations/urn:cts:greekLit:tlg0013.tlg002.perseus-eng1:398-448 411โ412], has Persephone tell Demeter: "he secretly put in my mouth sweet food, a pomegranate seed, and forced me to taste against my will." Gantz, p. 65 describes this as a "trick".</ref> In other interpretations, Persephone is seen eating the pomegranate seeds as a result of temptation or hunger. In the end, Hermes is sent to retrieve her but, because she had tasted the food of the underworld, she was obliged to spend a third of each year (the winter months) there, and the remaining part of the year with the gods above.<ref>Gantz, p. 65.</ref> With the later writers Ovid and Hyginus, Persephone's time in the underworld becomes half the year.<ref>Gantz, p. 67.</ref> The most notable [[looking taboo]] in Greek myth can be found in the story of [[Orpheus and Eurydice]]. [[Orpheus]], the son of [[Apollo]], was well-renowned as a legendary musician whose music could move anything and everything, living or not, in the world. While walking among her people in tall grass at her wedding, [[Eurydice]] was set upon by a [[satyr]]. In her efforts to escape the satyr, Eurydice fell into a nest of vipers and suffered a fatal bite on her heel. Her body was discovered by Orpheus who, overcome with grief, played such sad and mournful songs that all the humans, [[nymphs]], and [[List of Greek deities|gods]] learnt about his sorrow and grief and wept with him. On the gods' advice, Orpheus traveled to the [[greek underworld|Underworld]] wherein his music softened the hearts of Hades and Persephone, who agreed to allow Eurydice to return with him to earth on one condition: he should guide her out and not look back until they both had reached the upper world. As he reached the upper world, Orpheus looked back toward Eurydice in his eagerness to reunite with her, tragically forgetting about the looking taboo given to him by Hades, and since Eurydice had not crossed into the upper world, she vanishes back into the Underworld, this time forever. A speaking taboo in Greek myth can be found in the story of [[Anchises]], the father of the [[Troy|Trojan]] [[Trojan War|warrior]] [[Aeneas]]. [[Aphrodite]] had fallen in love with the mortal Anchises after Zeus persuaded [[Eros]] to shoot her with an arrow to cause these emergent feelings.<ref name=":5">Roman, L., & Roman, M. (2010). {{Google books|tOgWfjNIxoMC|Encyclopedia of Greek and Roman mythology.|page=59}}</ref> One interpretation recounts that Aphrodite pretended to be a [[Phrygians|Phrygian]] princess and seduced him, only to later reveal herself as a goddess and inform Anchises that she will bear him a son named Aeneas and warns him not to tell anyone that he lay with a goddess. Anchises does not heed this speaking taboo and later brags about his encounter with Aphrodite, and as a result, he is struck in the foot with a [[thunderbolt#In religion and mythology|thunderbolt]] by Zeus. Thereafter, he is lame in that foot so that Aeneas has to carry him from the flames of Troy.<ref>{{cite book |author=Virgil |title=''Aeneid'' |translator-first=Theodore C. |translator-last=Williams |chapter=Book II |at=Lines 714โ715 |url=http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?doc=Verg.+A.+2.714-715&fromdoc=Perseus%3Atext%3A1999.02.0054 |website=[[Perseus Project|Perseus Digital Library]] |publisher=[[Houghton Mifflin Co.]] |place=Boston |date=1910}}</ref> Another, albeit lesser-known, speaking taboo in Greek myth can be found in the story of [[Actaeon]]. Actaeon, whilst on a hunting trip in the woods, mistakenly and haplessly happened upon the bathing [[Artemis]].<ref>Callimachus, ''Hymn v''.</ref><ref>Callimachus gives no site: a glen in the foothills of [[Cithaeron|Mount Cithaeron]] near Boeotian [[Orchomenus (Boeotia)|Orchomenus]], is the site according to [[Euripides]], ''[[Bacchae]]'' 1290โ92, a spring sanctuary near [[Plataea]] is specified elsewhere.</ref> When Artemis realized that Actaeon had seen her undressed, thus desecrating her [[Artemis#Virginity|chastity]], she punished him for his luckless profanation of her virginity's mystery by forbidding him from speech.<ref name="Coulter-Harris">{{cite book |title=Chasing Immortality in World Religions |chapter=Ancient Greece: Defining Immortality in an Age of Gods and Mortals |first=Deborah M. |last=Coulter-Harris |date=2016-07-29 |isbn=978-0786497928 |page=60 |publisher=McFarland Inc. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=eNPIDAAAQBAJ}}</ref><ref name="Conner">{{cite book |title=The Everything Classical Mythology Book: Greek and Roman Gods, Goddesses, Heroes, and Monsters from Ares to Zeus |chapter=Artemis: The Thrill of the Hunt |first=Nancy |last=Conner |date=2010-02-10 |isbn=978-1440502408 |page=140 |publisher=Adams Media |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=gsSnDgAAQBAJ}}</ref> Whether it be due to forgetfulness or outright resistance, Actaeon defied his speaking taboo and called for [[Actaeon#Names of dogs|his hunting dogs]].<ref name="Coulter-Harris"/><ref name="Conner"/> Due to his failure in abiding by his speaking taboo, Artemis turned Actaeon into a stag and turned his dogs upon him. Actaeon was torn apart and ravaged by his loyal dogs who did not recognize their former master. === Abrahamic === Possibly the most famous eating taboo (if not taboo, in general) is in the story of [[Adam and Eve]] in the [[Abrahamic religions]]. In the [[Judeo-Christian]] telling, found in {{Bibleverse||Genesis|3|HE}}, [[Adam]] and [[Eve]] are placed in the [[Garden of Eden]] by God and are told not to eat from a tree lest they die,<ref>{{bibleverse|Genesis|3:3|9|3:3}}</ref> but Eve is promptly tempted by a [[Serpents in the Bible#Eden|serpent]] (often identified as [[Satan]] in disguise) to eat from the [[Tree of the knowledge of good and evil]] because they will surely not die,<ref>{{bibleverse|Genesis|3:4|9|3:4}}</ref> rather, they might become "like [[God in Christianity|God]]".<ref>{{bibleverse|Genesis|3:5|9|3:5}}</ref> Eve violates the eating taboo and eats from the [[Forbidden fruit#Biblical Story|forbidden fruit]] of the tree, shortly giving some fruit to her companion, Adam.<ref>{{bibleverse|Genesis|3:6|9|3:6}}</ref> After eating the forbidden fruit, Adam and Eve are aware of their nakedness and cover themselves with fig leaves and hide from God.<ref>{{bibleverse|Genesis|3:7โ8|9|3:7โ8}}</ref> God realizes that they are hiding and interrogates them about having eaten from the tree whereupon Adam assigns the blame to Eve and Eve assigns it to the serpent.<ref>{{bibleverse|Genesis|3:9โ13|9|3:9โ13}}</ref> As a result, God condemns Eve with pain in childbirth and subordination to her husband, he condemns Adam to have to labor on the earth for his food and be reduced into the earth at death, and in the Christian tradition, he condemns all of humanity for this [[original sin]].<ref>{{bibleverse|Genesis|3:16โ19|9|3:16โ19}}</ref>{{sfn|Collins|2014|p=unpaginated}} God then expels Adam and Eve from the Garden of Eden lest they eat from the [[Tree of life (biblical)|Tree of Life]] and become immortal "like Him".<ref>{{bibleverse|Genesis|3:22|9|3:22}}</ref> In [[Islam]], the story of [[Adam and Eve#Islam|Adam and Eve]] is quite different, though it contains an eating taboo: the [[Quran]] mentions that [[Adam in Islam|Adam]] ([[Arabic language|Arabic]]: {{lang|ar|'''ุขุฏู '''}}), as the successive authority of earth by decree of Allah, is placed in a paradisal garden (not [[Jannah]] nor the [[Garden of Eden]])<ref>{{YouTube|id=Vn0eMv3VTIM|title= โู ุง ูู ุงูุฌูุฉ ุงูุชู ุฃูุฒู ุงููู ู ููุง ุณูุฏูุง ุขุฏู ุนููู ุงูุณูุงู โ โุงูุดูุฎ ุงูุดุนุฑุงูู}}</ref> therein along with [[Eve#Islam|his wife]] (unnamed in the Quran, though the [[Hadith]] gives her the name แธคawwฤโ, Arabic: {{lang|ar|'''ุญูุงุก'''}});<ref>{{qref|2|30|b=y}}</ref><ref>{{qref|2|35|b=y}}</ref> such a paradise this garden was, that they would never go hungry nor unclothed,<ref>{{qref|20|118|b=y}}</ref> nor would they ever thirst or be exposed to the sun's heat.<ref>{{qref|20|119|b=y}}</ref> Allah took a promise from Adam:<ref>{{qref|20|115|b=y}}</ref> {{blockquote|หนAllah said,หบ โO Adam! Live with your wife in Paradise and eat from wherever you please, but do not approach this tree, or else you will be wrongdoers.โ|{{qref|7|19|c=y}}}} [[Iblis]], angered at his expulsion from Jannah for refusing to bow to Adam at his inception, decided to trick Adam and his wife into being shunned by Allah, just as he was. Allah had warned Adam and his wife about Iblis, telling them that he was a "clear enemy".<ref>{{qref|2|208|t=si|b=y}}</ref><ref>{{qref|20|117|b=y}}</ref> Iblis [[Oath#Islamic tradition|swore]] in the name of Allah that he was their sincere advisor, revealed unto Adam and his wife each other's nakedness, and convinced them to eat from the forbidden tree so that they may never taste death.<ref>{{qref|7|20โ21|b=y}}</ref><ref>{{qref|20|120|b=y}}</ref> After eating from the tree (thus breaking the eating taboo), Allah removes Adam and his wife from their paradisal garden, telling them that mankind will be condemned with some being enemies with others on the earth wherein they will be provided habitation and provision, for a while,<ref>{{qref|7|22โ24|b=y}}</ref><ref>{{qref|20|123|b=y}}</ref> and โThere you will live, there you will die, and from there you will be resurrected.โ{{qref|7|25|b=y|s=y}} In the [[Gnosticism|Gnostic]] telling of this story, the taboo is a plot by the [[Archon (Gnosticism)|archons]] to keep Adam in a state of ignorance by preventing him from eating the fruit, which allows him to attain [[Gnosis#Gnosticism|gnosis]] after the serpent, who is viewed as representative of the [[Pleroma#Gnosticism|divine world]], convinces him and Eve to eat it.<ref>{{cite book|first=Stefan|last=Rossbach|title=Gnostic Wars|orig-date=1999|date=August 7, 2019|publisher=[[Edinburgh University Press]]|page=51|isbn=9781474472180}}</ref> A [[looking taboo]] can be found in the Judeo-Christian telling of the story of [[Lot (biblical person)|Lot]] found within the [[Book of Genesis]]. In {{Bibleverse||Genesis|19|HE}}, two [[angels#christianity|angels]] in the form of men arrived in [[Sodom and Gomorrah|Sodom]] at eventide and were invited by Lot to spend the night at his home. The men of Sodom were exceedingly wicked and demanded Lot that he bring his two guests out so that they might "know" them; instead, Lot offered up his two daughters, who had not "known" man, but they refused. As dawn was breaking, Lot's visiting angels urged him to get his family and flee, so as to avoid being caught in the impending disaster for the iniquity of the city. The command was given, "Flee for your life! Do not look behind you, nor stop anywhere in the Plain; flee to the hills, lest you be swept away."<ref name=Schwartz>{{cite book|last=Schwartz|first=Howard|title=Tree of Souls: The Mythology of Judaism|year=2004|publisher=Oxford University Press |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=60iVk1p8Y9IC&q=Lot%27s+wife&pg=PA466 |isbn=9780195358704}}</ref>{{rp|465}} Whilst fleeing, [[Lot's wife]] broke the looking taboo by turning to look back at the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah and was turned into a pillar of salt as punishment for disobeying the angels' warning.<ref>{{bibleverse|Genesis|19:26|9|19:26}}</ref><ref name=Schwartz/>{{rp|466}}
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