In AN INTRODUCTION TO MYTHOLOGY, originally published in the 1920s,
Spence presented a comprehensive overview of traditional forms of
narrative that, for our primitive ancestors, served as religion and
science. Besides recounting tales from around the world, Spence
explained the many differences in primitive and modern worldviews.
According to Spence, themes such as animism, while now almost absent
from out thinking, are still enlightening to us in modern times: "just
as fossil animals and plants have their living representatives to-day,
so do ideas and conceptions representing this petrified form of religion
and science still flourish in our present-day superstitions and our
present-day faiths." Spence's INTRODUCTION TO MYTHOLOGY provides a
sweeping view of worldwide mythological themes from a scholar of the
overlooked and intriguing. Scottish writer Lewis Spence (1874-1955) was
a respected authority on worldwide myths, legends, folklore, and occult
subjects, and wrote more than forty books, including ENCYCLOPEDIA OF
OCCULTISM, THE POPUL VUL, THE HISTORY OF ATLANTIS, THE MAGIC AND
MYSTERIES OF MEXICO, ANCIENT EGYPTIAN MYTHS AND LEGENDS, FAIRY TRADITION
IN BRITAIN, and THE MAGIC ARTS IN CELTIC BRITAIN.