Abstract
The article proposes a typological framework of myths which applies to empirical research on political thought. The framework introduces three typologies of myths distinguished by a subject criterion. Their subjects are things, people, and animals. Each typology consists of the dyads of antinomic ideal types located on continua by the extent of the valuation of the myth’s subject. The tool will help researchers identify the processes for understanding the revaluation and devaluation of the myth’s subject over time. Furthermore, it enables researchers to determine the extents of the diversification of mythical political thought as well as to distinguish between myths in their morphology. This research tool applies to empirical research because it encompasses the objectively identifiable and verifiable theoretical models consisting of the essential features of myths.
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Articles in the same Issue
- Frontmatter
- Research Articles
- The Demobilization of Class Politics in Denmark: The Social Democratic Party’s Group-Based Appeals 1961–2004
- Theoretical Expectations and Actual Outcomes of Electoral Systems: How to Measure the Size of the Deviation?
- The Merits of the Synthesis between Theories: An Explanation of Policy Change in European Regulation on Pesticides through the Multiple Stream Framework and the Stage Model
- The Typological Framework of Myths as a Tool for Studying Political Thought
Articles in the same Issue
- Frontmatter
- Research Articles
- The Demobilization of Class Politics in Denmark: The Social Democratic Party’s Group-Based Appeals 1961–2004
- Theoretical Expectations and Actual Outcomes of Electoral Systems: How to Measure the Size of the Deviation?
- The Merits of the Synthesis between Theories: An Explanation of Policy Change in European Regulation on Pesticides through the Multiple Stream Framework and the Stage Model
- The Typological Framework of Myths as a Tool for Studying Political Thought