8 episodes

Based on traditional myths of Mesopotamia  as translated by Betty de Shong Meador, Kramer and Wolstein, and more, these works re-envision  such celebrated poems as “The Hupullu Tree” and “Inanna’s Descent”to offer alternative perspectives to traditional depictions of women and nature.  Listen to the An Zu tell his tales of the Great Wars, learn the great creation story of the Serpent, and hear the little tree saved by Inara in the Great Flood (Lulu) tell her story and how Inara saved her---and more!. All celebrate the wildnerness within. Sponsorship Houston Arts Alliance/ the city of Houston.

Inara & The Tree of Souls- An Anthology of Tales & Poems koutsoudas

    • Religion & Spirituality

Based on traditional myths of Mesopotamia  as translated by Betty de Shong Meador, Kramer and Wolstein, and more, these works re-envision  such celebrated poems as “The Hupullu Tree” and “Inanna’s Descent”to offer alternative perspectives to traditional depictions of women and nature.  Listen to the An Zu tell his tales of the Great Wars, learn the great creation story of the Serpent, and hear the little tree saved by Inara in the Great Flood (Lulu) tell her story and how Inara saved her---and more!. All celebrate the wildnerness within. Sponsorship Houston Arts Alliance/ the city of Houston.

    Tales of the Great An Zu

    Tales of the Great An Zu

    Three creation tales from the canon of An Zu legends: the love story
    of creation of the First An Zu and the unfurling of the Tree of
    Souls, the birth of the Second An Zu, and the Magnificent Ones.
    Stories as told by Ki, the last surviving An Zu of the Great Wars.
    More to come! Based on traditional character of the An Zu from
    Mesopotamian mythology(with great artistic liberty). “An Zu.”
    from Dalley, Stephanie. Myths from Mesopotamia: Creation, the
    Flood, Gilgamesh, and Others. Oxford University Press, 1989.
    from 205-227.

    Sponsored in part through a grant from the Houston Arts
    Alliance and the city of Houston.

    Original artwork courtesy of Tania Day Magallon.

    Image courtesy of Creative Commons.

    • 6 min
    The Serpent & the Cosmic Egg: A Creation Story

    The Serpent & the Cosmic Egg: A Creation Story

    This story is inspired by Orphic tales of creation and the ancient Greek creation story of Eurynome who danced and created/mated with the serpent Ophion. In this re-envisioned myth, the sacred creation story or origin story of the first Serpent comes from Night and Chaos itself. The story is said to be held by the serpents of Mesopotamia, such as Sakina, the guardian of the Tree of Immortality/Life and Sabr, the great serpent rescued from the Flood (found wound around the little hupullu saved by Inara (Inanna)) . See “Sakina Speaks of Gilgamesh: A Serpent’s Perspective,” Inara & the Hupullu Tree: A Retelling & “Inara’s Return.”
    Sponsored in part through a grant from the Houston Arts Alliance and the city of Houston.

    Original artwork courtesy of Tania Day Magallon.
    from Inara & the Tree of Souls: An Anthology of Tales & Poems

    • 1 min
    Lulu

    Lulu

    Lulu is short for “hupullu” the ancient Sumerian word for a date palm tree. In the original myth, “The Hupullu Tree,” the little tree was found after the Flood and rescued by the goddess of love and death, Inanna, Queen of Heaven. She planted it in her garden and nurtured it. Later, Gilgamesh cuts the tree down to make weapons and a marriage bed. In this story, the tree survives both the Flood and Gilgamesh. Told from the perspective of the little, rescued tree, this story gives voice to her memories of the different stages of her life: from a dream within her parents memories, to a little seed being born, falling into the earth, rooting, and blossoming into maturity, to becoming part of a community of trees, until being brutally uprooted by the flood.

    Based on “The Hupullu Tree” from Diane and Samuel Noah Kramer, Inanna: Queen of the Heaven and Earth; Her Stories and Hymns from Sumer. Harper & Row, 1983.

    Sponsored in part through a grant from the Houston Arts Alliance and he city of Houston.

    Original artwork courtesy of Tania Day Magallon.

    from Inara & the Tree of Souls: an Anthology of Tales & Poems

    • 2 min
    Ki Speaks

    Ki Speaks

    This soliloquy is told from the perspective of the last surviving An Zu bird found by Inara (Inanna) in the little hupullu tree rescued from the great Flood (see Inara & the Hupullu Tree: A Retelling). In this poem, the An Zu is a giant Phoenix-like bird who has suffered greatly at the hands of the Sky Gods and wishes to correct their version of history and the demonic portrayal of his kind as seen in traditional Mesopotamian myth. (Stay tuned for more in “ An Account of An Zu history by Ki, the last surviving An Zu of the Great Wars”)

    Based on the character of Ki in “An Zu" from Dalley, Stephanie. Myths from Mesopotamia: Creation, the Flood, Gilgamesh, and Others. Oxford University Press, 1989. pp. 205-227.

    Sponsored in part through a grant from the Houston Arts Alliance and the city of Houston.

    Original artwork courtesy of Tania Day Magallon.


    from the collection Inara & the Tree of Souls: An Anthology of Tales & Poems

    • 3 min
    Lily Speaks of Lillith

    Lily Speaks of Lillith

    One creature living in the little sacred hupullu tree that was
    saved by Inara (and Inanna/Ishtar), is a female tree spirit, Lillith,
    or Lily. In this tale, Lily, the second Lillith, speaks her understanding of the her ancestor, the Biblical Lillith, and her true relationship with Adam. In this version, one can see how the traditional story, “The Hupullu Tree,” may very well have been Hebraic in origin ( i.e. in comparison to other Mesopotamian mythic characterizations of the goddess. See Inara & the Hupullu Tree: A Retelling for the full re-envisioned poetic myth. Full story coming soon!)

    Based on “The Hupullu Tree” from Diane and Samuel Noah Kramer, Inanna: Queen of the Heaven and Earth; Her Stories and Hymns from Sumer. Harper & Row, 1983.
    Sponsored in part through a grant from the Houston Arts Alliance and the city of Houston.

    Original artwork courtesy of Tania Day Magallon.
    from the collection Inara & the Tree of Souls: An Anthology of Tales & Poems

    • 1 min
    The Serpentess Speaks of Gilgamesh: A Serpent's Perspective

    The Serpentess Speaks of Gilgamesh: A Serpent's Perspective

    The traditional Mesopotamian myth “The Epic of Gilgamesh” relates a tale of how Gilagamesh, the well known hero of Mesopotamian myth has his journey’s goal, the herb of immortality, stolen from him by a serpent. The serpent rises up out of the waters of the Tigris-Eurphrates, swallows the herb from the hand of Gilgamesh and returns to the waters before he could blink. Effectively preventing the hero from restoring the life of his beloved and becoming immortal, the serpent is then demonized for its action. In this story however, the serpent herself speaks, sharing her version of events.

    *Loosely based on the character of Gilgamesh as seen “The Epic of Gilgamesh” and “Gilgamesh” from Dalley, Stephanie. Myths from Mesopotamia: Creation, the Flood, Gilgamesh, and Others. Oxford University Press, 1989. pp 39-153.

    Sponsored in part through a grant from the Houston Arts Alliance and the city of Houston.

    Original artwork courtesy of Tania Day Magallon.

    from the collection Inara & the Tree of Souls: An Anthology of Tales & Poems

    • 1 min

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