The Trickster Tale Trickster and the Talking Bulb is a Native American folklore. Native Americans would tell these tales orally to the children in their tribe. The trickster tales weren’t read from a book, they were told by and brought down from generation to generation. This particular tale is from The Winnebago Trickster Cycle. According to the passage on page 35 of the Norton Anthropology American Literature Beginnings to 1865, Winnebago is a term that comes from Algonquian people.
The Other Side of the Sky It’s crazy how different cultures are when we all live on the same planet. It’s also crazy how similar cultures are when we live so far away from others. That is what makes our world and our people so diverse. In The Other Side of the Sky by Farah Ahmedi and Tamim Ansary there were many events that showed great amounts of cultural differences, and similarities.
In the story “The Earth on Turtles Back” it explores a very nurturing and unique way that the earth was created. The original idea was brought on by the Native Americans but is retold by the authors. It explores the idea that animals and dreams helped start the building of earth. Within the story you find some very shaping and well-fitting themes. The themes with in “The Earth on Turtles Back” are one thing must end for another to begin, importance of animals, and belief in dreams.
While the traditional First Nations tale known as The Boy and the Loon is important in First Nations oral storytelling tradition, it also plays a significant role in today’s modern culture. Though aspects of the story may not be relatable in the age of technology, the underlying themes and messages have an impact on society. The main themes throughout the story include tolerance and acceptance. To summarize the plot, when a once handsome and noble boy falls ill, he is disproved from his community, becoming depressed and ultimately attempting suicide. However, after he is saved and healed by the Loon Chief, the boy returns to his community as a shaman, healing the sick and aiding those in need.
The loquacious Roy E. Disney once said, “When your values are clear to you, making decisions becomes easier.” Throughout the stories that we read in this module, native american values that we use to this day were displayed. Consequently, there were three values within these stories that truly affect our lives. Firstly, there is respect, which was displayed in the story “The Coyote and the Buffalo” when Coyote disrespects Buffalo Bull and it brings him an enormous amount of anger. Furthermore, there was perseverance, which was exhibited in the myth “The World on a Turtle’s Back” when the pregnant woman falls through the cracks of the Sky World and still makes a life for her and her daughter.
Oral tradition in Native American culture illustrates the physical history of each tribe, connects origins of the natural world to a contemporary setting, and reinforces generations of societal values. In particular, the Nez Perce tale, “Red Willow,” encapsulates and preserves many elements of tradition within its narrative. Spirituality, death rituals, social roles, and analysis of their people’s surrounding environment are all essential themes compacted into the brief narrative. The story’s pacing is rapid and simple in order to entrance and educate a young audience while reinforcing the tribe’s traditions and introducing creation tales. Origin stories structured similarly to “Red Willow” have been used throughout Native American cultures
In the story “Flight Patterns” humor is presented in times of uncomfortable, confusion and realization from the main character William Loman. Who is never able to sleep due to his stress over having to pick work over family and personal struggles related to questioning if he really is a good husband and father. Loman uses humor in this story to mask what he really is feeling such as making a joke about being the only Indian in his neighborhood, when the taxi driver asks him his ethnicity, and also when the taxi driver and Loman where exchanging their last words. In the beginning when Loman is headed to Chicago to do business he starts to converse with the taxi man who is responsible to get Loman to the airport, start to discuss about their personal life.
In A.S Byatt’s “The Thing in the Forest”, the author uses the elements of a short story to craft a dark, mature fairytale. The title of the story, “The Thing in the Forest”, in the sense that it foreshadows the main idea of the story. The audience expects more than just a "thing", as listed in the title. Byatt emphasizes through figurative language that the main characters, Penny and Primrose, are dealing with more than just a creature in the forest that affected them for the rest of their lives, and that with this use of symbols to express a larger meaning to objects in the story. A.S Byatt emphasizes more on plot and setting, characters, theme and symbols.
Every property has their own story and each of them is different. Myth is a story that our ancestors created. Nobody knows if it’s true or not, more like a legend. It depends who you are talking to, if he is a believer or not. We are already in modern era and most of the people don’t know about the myths.
Native American culture and history has been used for the enjoyment of audiences over many years in film, literature, television, and other forms of media. Not surprisingly, directors and writers hardly ever portray Native Americans accurately. In the play, “Foghorn” by Hanay Geiogamah, and in Mary Tallmoutain’s poem The Last Wolf, reader scan trace their influence into modern day media, even though almost none of it is accurate.
In ceremony by Leslie Siiko, Native American have traditions that help guide them to be better “human beings.” The Native Americans way of the life is based off of tradition set by their elders. Failure to follow the tradition leads to the massive disaster that affects them later on. Even though tradition comes from early generations they must still be altered and changed to fit with the reality of the world. Many characters in the book show how traditions affect their decisions and how they perceive certain situations.