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Throughout history, there have been many cultural depictions of
spiders in popular culture, mythology and
symbolism. From
Greek mythology to
African folklore, the spider has been used in
human culture to represent many varied things and indeed endures on
into the present day with characters such as
Shelob from
The
Lord of the Rings and
Spider-Man
from the eponymous comic series. The spider has symbolized patience
due to its hunting technique of setting webs and waiting for prey,
as well as mischief and malice for its poison and the slow death it
causes, its venom often seen as a curse.
Although not all spiders spin
webs to
hunt prey, they have been attributed by numerous cultures with the
origination of
basket-weaving,
knotwork,
weaving,
spinning and
net making. Webspinning also caused the
association of the spider with creation myths as they seem to have
the ability to excrete their own artistic worlds. Spiders have been
the
focus of fears, stories and
mythologies of various cultures for centuries.
In folklore and mythology
The spider has featured in mythological fables and cultures
throughout the world since ancient times and in modern
mythology.
In Ancient Egypt, the spider was associated with the goddess
Neith in her aspect as spinner and weaver of
destiny, this link continuing later through the Babylonian
Ishtar and
Greek
Athena.
The most notable ancient legend that explains the origin of the
spider is the story of the
weaving
competition between the Greek
goddess
Athena and the sometimes princess
Arachne. This fable was added much later to the
Greek mythos when
Ovid wrote the poem
Metamorphoses between AD 2-8.
Arachne was the daughter of a famous
Tyrian purple dyer in Hypaipa of
Lydia. Due to her father's skill with cloth dying,
Arachne was adept in the art of weaving. Eventually, she began to
consider herself a greater weaver than the goddess Athena herself
and challenged the goddess to a weaving contest to prove her skill.
Athena wove the scene of her victory over
Poseidon that had inspired her patronage of Athens,
while Arachne wove a tapestry featuring twenty-one episodes of
infidelity amongst the Gods of Olympus, which angered Athena. The
goddess conceded that Arachne's weaving was flawless but she was
infuriated by the mortal's pride. In a final moment of anger,
Athena destroyed Arachne's tapestry and loom with her shuttle and
cursed Arachne to live with extreme guilt. Out of sadness, Arachne
hung herself soon after. Taking pity on her, Athena brought her
back to life as a spider (using juice of
aconite) after the princess killed herself. Athena
made sure that the spider retained Arachne's weaving abilities. The
Greek Arachne means "spider"
(αράχνη).
The
scholar Robert Graves proposed the
tale may have its roots in the commercial rivalry between the
Athenians and Cretan inhabitants
of Miletus
in Asia
Minor, who flourished around 2000 BC and to whom the spider may
have been an important figure as seals with spider emblems have
been recovered in the city's namesake in Crete
.
In African folklore, the spider is personified as
Anansi, the
trickster god
and character from later in African mythology. Alternate names
include
Kwaku Ananse in West Africa and
anglicized as
Aunt Nancy (or Sister
Nancy), a variant specifically found in some of the islands of the
West Indies, South America and the United States. And in other
cultures, such as the Native American
Lakota people's culture, the spider is present
as the deity
Iktomi, which is occasionally
depicted in its form. In Native American mythology, the spider is
again seen in the legend about the birth of the constellation
Ursa Major. The constellation was seen as
seven men transformed into stars and climbing to paradise by
unrolling a spiders web. The
Navajo
has the creation myth of
Spider
Grandmother. In the story, Spider Grandmother created all
things through the shimmering threads that came out of her belly.
The
Moche people of ancient Peru
worshipped
nature. They placed emphasis on animals and often depicted
spiders in their art.
The
Tsuchigumo (translated as "Earth
spiders") of Japan
, were both a
mythical ethnic group, believed to live in the Japanese Alps
until at least the Asuka
period, and a mythical, supernatural creature faced by the
character Minamoto no Raiko,
although the term was also loosely used for bandits and
thieves. The Tsuchigumo were said to live in caverns beneath
the mountains and the Tsuchigumo in the Minamoto no Raiko legend
were able to take the visage of a boy or a woman depending on the
version of the story. Minamoto is said to have been lured to a
house whilst on a search for a mythical, giant skull and was placed
under an illusion by a Tsuchigumo in the guise of a young boy.
However, Minamoto breaks this illusion by striking out at the boy
with his sword after he suspects foul play. Minamoto discovers he
is actually covered in a spider's web and after tracking down the
boy, learns that he is actually a giant spider, or Tsuchigumo.
Additional mythological figures in Japan include the seductive
Jorōgumo (literally "whore spider" or
"prostitute spider") which is depicted as being able to transform
into a seductive woman. In some instances, the Jorōgumo attempts to
seduce and/or marry passing samurai and in others is venerated as a
goddess dwelling in the Jōren waterfall who saves people from
drowning. The name also refers to the spider
Nephila clavata.
The 10th Century Saint
Conrad of
Constance is sometimes represented as a
bishop holding a chalice with a spider
in it or over it. This refers to a story that once when he was
celebrating mass a spider fell into the chalice. Spiders were
believed at that time to be deadly poisonous, but Conrad
nevertheless drank the wine, with the spider in it, as a token of
faith.
In more recent history, the famous legend of the King
Robert the Bruce of Scotland depicts a
spider as a symbol for hope. Historians are unsure of the legend's
truth and agree that it is probably apocryphal, but in the legend
Bruce, when fighting the English, took refuge in a cave after a
series of military failures. Whilst hiding in the cave he saw a
spider, which continued to fail to climb up its silken thread to
its web. After repeatedly failing to climb upwards, the spider
eventually succeeded due to perseverance. Taking this as a symbol
for hope and perseverance, much like the saying "try, try and try
again", Bruce came out of hiding.
Bruce eventually won Scotland's
independence and many cite Rathlin Island
as the cave in which this legend took
place.
The spider has been compared with
vampires
as they have similar characteristics. Both lure and ensnare prey
before sucking the life out of their victim. Like the arachnids,
vampires are believed to be able to scale walls and cliff faces,
and possess recognisable fangs, similar to those of spiders.
The spider is also found in modern tales. The
nursery rhymes Itsy Bitsy Spider and
Little Miss Muffet have spiders as focal
characters.
The spider is also depicted in various
urban legends. The daddy long legs
(Pholcidae) were known as to have
a very potent venom but have very short fangs to deliver the
poison. The myth might have arisen due to its similarity in
appearance with the
Brown recluse
spider. However, an episode in
Discovery Channel's
Mythbusters shown that a
host was able to survive a bite from the spider.
Another urban myth depicts a young woman who found out that her
beehive hair was infested with
Black widow spiders. An
email hoax describes the attacks by the South
American Blush Spider in public toilets. The alleged spider's
scientific name
Arachnius gluteus literally means "butt
spider". It should be noted that the hoax spider shares some
characteristics with the
two-striped
telamonia (Telamonia dimidiata)
In literature
The spider has been featured in literature for many centuries.
In the
Vedic philosophy of India
, the spider
is depicted as hiding the ultimate reality with the veils of
illusion. In the epic poem
Ovid's
Metamorphoses written about 2
millennia ago. Spiders were also depicted in
Dante Alighieri's
Purgatorio as the
half-spider Arachne, and more recently in books such as the fantasy
novel
Harry
Potter and the Chamber of Secrets by
J. K. Rowling. This book was later followed by a
motion picture of the same name, using the giant spider Aragog from
the novel as a supporting character and pet of
Hagrid, a grounds keeper in the book. Again in titles
such as
The Lord of the
Rings, written by
J.
R. R. Tolkien,
the spider takes its form as the menacing giant spider
Shelob, and was featured in the film adaption of the
last book of the
Lord of the Rings series. Tolkien had
previously used spiders in his precursor to the
Lord of the
Rings series with the book
The
Hobbit. In
The Hobbit, giant spiders roamed a
great forested area known as
Mirkwood and
attacked the main characters of the book, capturing some of them.
Spiders are a recurring theme in both Tolkien's works and in other
authors. The 1952 children's novel
Charlotte's Web written by
E. B. White, later made into a feature film in
1973 and
2006, is notable in its
portrayal of the spider in a positive manner as a heroine rather
than an object of fear or horror.
In comics and manga
In
graphic novels, spiders are often
adapted by
superheroes or
villains as their symbols or
alter ego due to the arachnid's strengths and
weaknesses. One of the most notable characters in comic book
history which has taken their identity and name from the spider is
the
Marvel comic book hero
Spider-Man. After being accidentally bitten by a
radioactive spider, Peter Parker, later known as Spider-Man, was
able to scale tall buildings and shoot web fluid from a box
attached to his wrist. Along with these abilities came super senses
and instant reflexes. The franchise, originally created by the
writer
Stan Lee and artist
Steve Ditko, has become so popular that it has
had three successful movies made based on the Spider-Man comic
books. Along with Spider-Man, the comic book has also introduced
several new characters using the spider as their patron: these
include
Spider-Woman,
Spider-Girl, the
Scarlet Spider,
Venom,
Araña, and
the
Tarantula. Many other comic
book characters have taken the guise of a spider, including
Black Spider from the
Batman universe, and in
manga
and
anime; In the
Pokémon franchise,
Spinarak and
Ariados are
similar to spiders in shape; in the
Static Shock series,
Anansi the Spider takes his name and
techniques from the African trickster god.
In film and television
Spiders have been present for many decades in both film and
television, predominantly in horror movies, which use them to cause
fear, especially amongst those who suffer from
arachnophobia; an acute fear of spiders. Many
films have featured the spider, including: 1955's
Tarantula, made in the midst of
America's fear of atomic radiation,
Kingdom of the Spiders, a
1977 film starring
William Shatner, depicts the spiders
attacking humans after their natural food supply was destroyed from
pesticides;
Arachnophobia, a
1990 movie in which spiders multiply in large
numbers and terrorize a group of humans; and more recently, the
2002 blockbuster Eight Legged Freaks in which a
group of spiders is mutated from nuclear waste and attacks the
nearby town via an underground mine. Film adaptions of books
featuring spiders have arisen too, including
The Lord of the
Rings: The Return of the King's
Shelob and
Harry Potter and the
Chamber of Secrets' Aragog, and of comic books, including
the
Spider-Man trilogy. In
Ingmar Bergman's film
Through a Glass Darkly, the
psychotic Karin believes she has an
encounter with
God in the form of a
spider.
Other depictions
As the spider further embeds itself into the culture of humans,
more and more depictions arise: From nicknames such as "Spider" for
the Olympic skier
Vladimir Sabich,
to gaming depictions such as the solitaire game
Spider, to team names such as the
Cleveland Spiders and
San Francisco Spiders to technological
mentions such as the web spider, commonly known as the
web crawler.The
World
Wide Web implies the spider-like connection of information that
is accessible in the Internet. Giant spiders appear in a number of
role-playing games,
such as
Dungeons &
Dragons, and the first edition of
Warcraft: The Roleplaying
Game, where they are described as "a spider of staggering
size—perhaps 15 feet around—with great furred body."
Atlach-Nacha is an
H-game
that revolves around a spider demon disguising herself as a human
woman. The
tarantella, a dance, is
related to the spider
Lycosa
tarantula. As tattoos, spiders serve a visible symbolic
significance in popular culture. In September 2008 a giant
mechanical spider
La Princesse was in
Liverpool as part of a French performing arts company
spectacle.
References
- Ovid Metamorphoses ( (vi.5-54 and
129-145), also mentioned in Virgil's Georgics, iv, 246.
- Berrin, Katherine & Larco Museum. The Spirit of Ancient
Peru:Treasures from the Museo Arqueológico Rafael Larco Herrera.
New York: Thames and Hudson, 1997.
- Mills et al, Mythology: Myths, Legends &
Fantasies, pp. 317.
- Benson, Elizabeth, The Mochica: A Culture of Peru. New York,
NY: Praeger Press. 1972
- Snopes: Urban Legends Reference Pages: Two-Striped Telamonia
Spider. Retrieved 2007-02-25.
- Skip
Williams, Jonathan Tweet, and Monte Cook Monster Manual (Wizards of the
Coast, 2000)
- Spider Tattoos