Native American Hero's Journey Essay

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Native American Lore is stories that are passed down through generations of each tribe. Folklore is a combination of stories that are passed down generations that include legends, myths, and fairy tales. Legends are traditional stories passed down that seem historical, but are not authenticated. Myths are an early history story usually explaining a natural phenomenon, usually involving supernatural beings and events. Fairy Tales are popular children’s stories involving magical beings and lands. Due to the Native American beliefs, myths are the most heavily concentrated folklore. The values that are reflected in this culture's lore are bravery, curiosity, faith, loyalty, and religion. Oral tradition and folklore is significant in history because …show more content…
The hero’s journey is the ordinary world, the call to adventure, refusal of the call, meeting with the mentor, crossing the threshold, tests, allies and enemies, approach, the ordeal, the reward, the road back, the resurrection, and the return with the elixir. The hero’s journey is significant because it is used to show you how your life is meant to be lived. It is in all stories in literature and movies. The archetypal hero’s journey fits into folklore by covering a big part of stories involving a hero that goes on an adventure. “Stone Boy” has the strongest connection to the archetypal hero’s journey. The Ordinary World is when the boy is born. The Call To Adventure is when he goes to find his uncles. The Approach is when he meets the killer and kills her. The Return is when he returns a killer. The journey is significant in my chosen work of folklore because he is a normal boy who is revengeful and goes on an adventure to find and kill his uncle's killer. The purpose was to get back at her for leaving his mother alone and wanting to die. The journey helps the reader connect to the story by making them want to be a hero like that person. They often put themselves in place of the main

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