Name______

Miss Hicks/Miss Dawson/Mrs. King

Reading ______

Date______

Introduction to Mythology

______Genres of Literature

______—A prose narrative work of the imagination including novels and short stories.

______—Factual prose writing. Tells about incidents that really happened and people who really lived. (Includes autobiography, biography, and essays.)

______—Imaginative writing in which language, images, sound, and rhythm combine to create a special emotional effect. Have a regular rhythm, and some rhyme.

______(play)—The form of literature that presents a story to be performed for an audience.

______—An ancient, anonymous story that conveys the beliefs and ideals of a culture and usually involves gods and goddesses.

Four purposes for reading/writing

Read for the ______

Read to be ______

Read for ______

Write to ______

What is the purpose of a myth?

______—Helped people ______how natural events and human actions happened. Also helped people control what happened in the world.

______—Read for ______.

Why do I read myths?

We read myths to ______the history of a culture.

______was important in the culture?

______did they value?

______and ______did they live?

______do the events in the story matter?

How do I read a myth?

______or ______.

Identify the ______context.

Make ______.

Greek Mythology

______is a collection of myths of a particular people.

______—An ancient anonymous story, usually involving ______and ______, that conveys the beliefs and ideals of a culture.

From the Greek ______meaning story.

Connected to ______events and ______actions.

______—The handing down of songs, poems, legends, and folk talks from generation to generation by word of mouth.

People created myths to:

______how natural events and human actions happened.

______beliefs about right and wrong.

Characters in Greek Mythology

______Immortal ruling figures who lived on Mt. Olympus.

______—characters with 2 fathers; one being a king and the other is a god.

______—a female spirit typically associated with a particular location or landform.

______—are a troop of male companions of Pan and Dionysus.

______—an imaginary animal in a myth.

______—The central character of a work of literature.

______—a main character in an epic whose legendary or heroic actions are central to his/her culture, race, or nation

Examples: Achilles, Perseus, Hercules, Odysseus, and Beowulf.

______—noting or pertaining to a long poetic composition, usually centered upon a hero, in which a series of great achievements or events is narrated in elevated style.

______—a literary character who makes an error of judgment or has a fatal flaw that, combined with fate and external forces, brings on a tragedy

Examples: Heracles, Medea, Electra, Antigone

Allusion

______—A reference in a work of literature to a character, place, or situation from another work of literature.

Characters from ______mythology are the most ______alluded to characters in literature.

Examples of modern Greek allusions:

Boy, she really opened Pandora's box this time!"

"That's certainly his Achilles heel, isn't it?"