Loading...
Flash Player 9 (or above) is needed to view slideshows. We have detected that you do not have it on your computer.To install it, go here
Introduction To Storytelling
English myths legends
143 views | comments | 0 favorites | 12 downloads | 0 embeds (Stats)
More Info
This slideshow is Public
Total Views: 143 on Slideshare: 143 from embeds: 0
Slideshow Transcript
- Slide 1: Our stories were us, what we knew, where we came from,
and where we were going. They were told to remind us of our
responsibility, to instruct, and to entertain. They were
stories of the Creation, our travels, our laws. There were
legends of hard-fought battles, funny anecdotes – some from
the smokehouse, some from the trickster – and there were
scary stories to remind us of danger, spiritual and otherwise.
Stories were our life and still are.
- Slide 2: Storytelling and the Oral
Tradition
Entertains, educates, informs
Passes down history, lessons, morals, knowledge
Many versions of same stories
Storytelling requires cooperation and audience inclusion
Used since societies didn’t have a written record of their
history and little literacy
Modern versions of storytelling: movies, television
- Slide 3: MYTHS
Characteristics:
Religious in nature (will
involve gods,
goddesses,
supernatural beings)
Explains the origins of
things (how the world
began, etc.)
Connects to stories
within a culture
(consider the Greek
- Slide 4: MYTHS – cont’d
Exists due to oral tradition
Considered essentially true by that
society (their cultural mythology)
mythos (word or story) + logos (word
of truth)
Current meaning of “myth”???
- Slide 5: LEGENDS
Story told as though it
is a historical event
Examples are Robin
Hood and King Arthur
Extraordinary lives of
everyday people
Often elaborated upon
over time
Heroic characters are
common
- Slide 6: FOLKTALES
Passed on through
generations
May have been based
partially on truth – now
hidden
Include fables (animals
/ morals)
and fairy tales
(magical characters
and creatures)
- Slide 7: TALL TALES
Uniquely American story
form
larger-than-life main
character
a problem that is solved
in a humorous way
exaggerated major
element
characters who use
everyday language
Often based on actual
people
- Slide 8: NATIVE AMERICAN MYTHS
Could be called folklore
Belief that everything is divine
“Why” and “trickster” stories
Trickster demonstrates qualities that makes
civilization possible, but also cause problems