1 / 17

What is a myth? What is a legend?

What is a myth? What is a legend?. Language Arts Stripes L. Nabulsi. Legends. Based on historical event Based on real people Oral literature Exaggerated Examples – folk tales and tall tales. Myths. Basis of a system of beliefs Depicts the moral values of a culture

porter-cobb
Télécharger la présentation

What is a myth? What is a legend?

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. What is a myth?What is a legend? Language Arts Stripes L. Nabulsi

  2. Legends • Based on historical event • Based on real people • Oral literature • Exaggerated • Examples – folk tales and tall tales

  3. Myths • Basis of a system of beliefs • Depicts the moral values of a culture • Defines the needs of a culture • Teaches the morals of a culture To those who believe, it is their religion; to those who do not believe, it is a mythology

  4. TYPES OF MYTHS • CREATION • HEROIC • MORAL • ETIOLOGICAL • DEATH • HISTORICAL

  5. CREATION MYTHSANSWER THESE QUESTIONS • HOW MAN CAME INTO BEING • HOW THE WORLD WAS FORMED • HOW THE UNIVERSE WAS FORMED

  6. TYPES OF CREATION MYTHS • DELUGE ------ FLOOD • EDICT ------ PRONOUNCEMENT • ORDER OUT OF CHAOS --BIG BANG • TRANSFORMATION – CHANGING SHAPE • DISMEMBERMENT – TEARING APART • BIRTH – PARENTS

  7. HEROIC MYTHS • DREAM OF A NATION – TO SOLVE PROBLEMS OF THE NATION • DESTINED OR FATED TO BE A HERO • HAS HELP FROM THE GODS • EXAMPLES –Theseus, Jason, Hercules

  8. MORAL MYTHS • TEACH THE VALUES OF THE CULTURE • HUBRIS- TOO MUCH PRIDE, COMPARING SELF TO GOD • FATE – GODS CONTROLLED HUMAN DESTINY • APOLLONIAN – MODERATION • DIONYSIAN - EXTREME

  9. ETIOLOGICAL MYTHS • NON-SCIENTIFIC EXPLANATION OF NATURE • WHY SPIDERS SPIN WEBS? • WHY BERRIES TURN FROM WHITE TO RED? ETIOLOGICAL MYTHS CAN ALSO REFLECT A MORAL CONCEPT

  10. DEATH MYTHS • WHY DO PEOPLE DIE? • WHERE DO PEOPLE GO AFTER DEATH? STRUCTURE OF HADES: EREBUS TARTARUS ELYSIAN FIELDS ISLE OF BLESSED

  11. RIVERS OF HADES • Acheron – River of Sadness • Cocytus – River of lamentation • Lethe – River of forgetfulness • Phlegethon – River of fire • Styx – River of hate

  12. CHRONOLOGY OF DEATH • PERSON DIES – BEST WAY TO DIE IS IN BATTLE • BODY WASHED AND COIN PLACED UNDER TONGUE • BODY BURIED OR BURNED • LIBATIONS POURED OVER BODY • HERMES COMES FOR SHADE

  13. JOURNEY TO HADES • HERMES DELIVERS SHADE TO SHORE OF HADES, THE RIVER OF FORGETFULNESS, LETHE • CHARON TAKES COIN TO PAY FOR FERRY ACROSS THE RIVER • CERBERUS, a three headed dog, GUARDS THE GATES OF HADES

  14. JUDGMENT/PLACEMENT • THREE JUDGES, Rhadamanthys, Minos, and Aeacus, DETERMINE WHERE SOUL GOES • GOOD PERSONS GO TO ELYSIAN FIELDS • BAD PERSONS GO TO TARTARUS AND ARE PUNISHED FOR ETERNITY • PERSONS WHO HAVE LED THREE GOOD LIVES CAN GO TO THE ISLE OF BLESSED

  15. HISTORICAL MYTHS • BASED ON REAL BATTLES AND EVENTS • ORAL TRADITION • HOMER – THE BLIND BARD • The Iliad and The Odyssey

  16. The End

More Related