Other Creation Stories and Ancient History Links

Human societies have generated innumerable creation stories and epics, and increasing numbers of them are available in books or on the internet. The emphasis here on just a few stories reflects more the availability of internet and relatively cheap print sources for stories that have been claimed by European cultures and their colonized regions than from any desire or plan to exclude or marginalize stories from other traditions or parts of the world. The availability and cheapness of cultural goods themselves reveal in part the legacy of the modern historical domination of European traditions as well as the workings of an industrial capitalist system of production and consumption brought to imperial fruition over the past three centuries and still clearly discernable in today's "global market." The contested curricular transition from "Western Civilization" to "World History" itself merits further investigation in the light of these economic and ideological considerations.

Other stories from Africa, Asia, Europe, and the Americas deserve investigation and study in their own right, or they may also be analyzed in a comparative framework. Through the efforts of scholars, students, and others, these stories are becoming more accessible in print and online, and this site should be expanded to include more of them as that becomes possible. Modern scientific accounts of the origins of the universe will also interest many students and teachers. Listed below are some pathways into these sources.

Links to Other Websites

The following website, maintained by Steven Hale of DeKalb College, contains links to a variety of creation stories from around the world:
http://www.gpc.peachnet.edu/~shale/humanities/literature/religion/creation.html

Paul Halsall's Internet Ancient History Sourcebook offers an extraordinary range of online materials on ancient cultures in Africa, Asia, the Americas, and Europe:
http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/ancient/asbook.html

The Duke Papyrus Archive offers access to a wealth of texts from and information about the ancient African civilizations in Egypt:
http://odyssey.lib.duke.edu/papyrus/

The Perseus Project website maintained by Tufts University presents a wealth of information related to the ancient Mediterranean civilizations in Greece and Rome:
http;//www.perseus.tufts.edu/

The website of the Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago assembles a range of useful visual and textual materials:
http://www-oi.uchicago.edu/OI/default.html

A related site, also maintained by the Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago, is ABZU, a "guide to resources for the study of the Ancient Near East":
http://www-oi.uchicago.edu/OI/DEPT/RA/ABZU/ABZU.HTML

A site dedicated to NASA's Microwave Anisotropy Probe (MAP) offers an "Introduction to Cosmology" page with links to discussions of the Big Bang theory and other topics related to modern explanations of the origins of the universe:
http://map.gsfc.nasa.gov/html/web_site.html

Dr. Sten Odenwald, an astrophysicist who works with Raytheon at the Goddard Space Flight Center, has written several articles on Big Bang cosmology. They are available at the following website:
http://itss.raytheon.com/cafe/cosm/cosmol.html

This site, developed by Ty Benoit of Butte Community College in California, stands as a fine example of a course website for lower division undergraduate students that contains links to a variety of sources on ancient world history:
http://www.cin.butte.cc.ca.us/~tben/ancgen/ancgen.html