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How do we learn about the past?

Indians Before Europeans
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Origins of the Middle World
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The Daughters and the Serpent Monster (Caddo)
How Tlanuwa Deafeated Uktena (Cherokee)
Lightning Defeats the Underground Monster (Caddo)
Chaos into Order
Maintaining Order in Osage Communities
How People Came to Hunt Animals (Caddo)
Origins of Corn (Natchez)
Origins of Fire (Cherokee)
Natchez Sacred Fire
Understanding the World Through Stories
Caddo Creation Stories
Story 1: Creation and Early Migration
Story 2: Creation of Day and Night
Story 3: Origin of Animals
Story 4: Coyote and the Origins of Death
Story 5: Origin of the Medicine Men
Story 6: Lightning and Thunder
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Indians and Animals
The Three-Layer Universe
Trade Goods
What is a Map?
Frontier Exchange Economy
Creation Stories
Children of the Middle Waters (Osage)
Origin of the Middle World (Yuchi)
The First People (Caddo)
Origin of the Supreme Being (Caddo)
Origin of Animals (Caddo)
Origin of Corn (Natchez)
Origin of Beans (Tunica)
Origin of Fire (Cherokee)
The Calumet Ceremony in the Mississippi Valley
Marquette Account
Gravier Account
Du Poisson Account
First Encounters: Cultural Perspectives
Gentleman of Elvas: Chapter XXII
Gentleman of Elvas: Chapter XXIII
Gentleman of Elvas: Chapter XXVI
Gentleman of Elvas: Chapter XXIX
Gentleman of Elvas: Chapter XXXII and XXXIII
Ritual Analysis
Caddo Harvest Ritual
Natchez Harvest Ceremony
Smoking Ceremony from the Songs of the Wa-Xo'-Be (Osage)
Transcending Themes

Project Background and History


End of Left Side of Page

Creation Stories

Creation stories contain fascinating information concerning peoples’ beliefs about how the world began, how it is organized, and how things in the world work. This information isn’t always obvious; myth-makers tend to encode such information within the story’s content. Consequently, we need to read these stories carefully—and sometimes treat them as puzzles—to identify underlying themes.

A useful strategy is to break stories down into chunks or segments, each emphasizing a key story element (e.g., actors, event, and themes). These elements can be compared and contrasted, and we can attempt to identify their relationships to larger themes. Here’s a five-step procedure for accomplishing this:

  1. Identify the main story topic: What is it about? Common topics include the creation of the world; the creation of the earth’s inhabitants, including humans, animals, and plants; the actions of culture heroes; and moral lessons derived from events that took place when the world was created. What topics does your story address?
  2. Identify the main actors and their deeds. Who are the major players in the story, and what are they doing?
  3. Summarize the story’s action or event sequence. What happens first? What happens next? What are the primary consequences or results of these events?
  4. What special categories or qualities are reflected by the actors, their deeds, and the consequences of their actions? Examples include distinctions between males and females, day and night, earth and sky, past and present, etc.; as well as qualities like perseverance, success, failure, luck, and so on.
  5. How are special categories and qualities used to create themes? Themes are topics or principles that represent the general point or “lesson” of the story, such as the perils of greed, the dependence of humans on supernatural forces, and the benefits of cooperation among separate communities.

As an example of how this approach can be applied, let’s consider this Creek Indian story concerning the origins of day and night:

The animals held a meeting at which Bear asked: “How can we divide night from day?” Some animals wanted the day to last all the time; others wished that night never end. After much talk, Ground Squirrel said: “I see that Raccoon has rings on his tail divided equally, first a dark color then a light color. I think day and night ought to be divided like the rings on Raccoon’s tail.” The animals were surprised at Ground Squirrel’s wisdom. The adopted his plan and divided day and night like the rings on Raccoon’s tail, repeating over and over in equal measure. Bear, who was jealous of Ground Squirrel’s intelligence, scratched the back of Ground Squirrel. To this day, all ground squirrels have stripes on their backs.

Applying our five-step strategy, we can first identify the story’s main topic: how the cycle of day and night was introduced to the world.

The main characters in the story are “the animals,” with Bear and Ground Squirrel playing the lead roles and Raccoon in a cameo appearance.

The story sequence unfolds in six brief scenes, beginning with the gathering of animals for the meeting. Next, Bear poses the main question. Then all the animals talk. Ground Squirrel offers a solution. The animals adopt the plan. Bear, in envy, scratches Ground Squirrel, thereby marking all of his descendents. Note that the sequence is linear, rather than being circular, or back-and-forth (alternating). This sequence produces an outcome involving an alternating (day/night) cycle.

Special categories and qualities include: day/night, light/dark, the quality exhibited by Ground Squirrel as an “upstart” of “instigator” of a solution, and Bear’s jealous quality exhibited toward Ground Squirrel.

The toughest part of any analysis is the final identification of themes. In this story, it seems that the relationship between Raccoon’s tail rings and the alternating day/night cycle reflects a theme concerning the fundamental importance of natural patterns; in this case, the alternating patterns of light and dark, and day and night. Bear’s attack on Ground Squirrel represents a conflict theme, which poses a threat to a third theme: the value of group cooperation and consensus.

Other themes can be identified; perhaps you can expand upon this list.

Here are some more Indian creation stories. What can you find out about these stories by applying our five step strategy?

  • Children of the Middle Waters (Osage)
  • Origin of the Middle World (Yuchi)
  • The First People (Caddo)
  • Origin of the Supreme Being (Caddo)
  • Origin of Animals (Caddo)
  • Origin of Corn (Natchez)
  • The Origin of Beans (Tunica)
  • Origin of Fire (Cherokee)


Frontier Exchange Economy
Children of the Middle Waters (Osage)

 

 

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Last Updated: March 3, 2007 at 1:31:01 PM Central Time