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         American Mythology:     more books (100)
  1. Pagan Dreiser: Songs from American Mythology by Shawn St. Jean, 2001-06
  2. South American Mythology by OsborneHarold, 1968
  3. South American Mythology
  4. North American Mythology
  5. Latin-American [mythology] (The mythology of all races) by Hartley Burr Alexander, 1920
  6. Sketch of the Mythology of the North American Indians by Wesley John Powell, 2007-09-11
  7. The test-theme in North American mythology by Robert Harry Lowie, 1908
  8. AMERICAN MYTHOLOGIES by Marshall Blonsky, 1992
  9. Sketch of the Mythology of the North American Indians by John Wesley Powell, 2007-04-25
  10. American Indian Mythology
  11. The Mythology of All Races: North American (The Mythology of All Races In Thirteen Volumes, Volume X) by Hartley Burr ALEXANDER, 1916
  12. Literary aspects of North American mythology by Paul Radin, 1973
  13. Mexican & Central American Mythology by Irene Nicholson, 1959
  14. Dictionary of Native American Mythology by Sam D.GillIrene F.Sulluvan, 1992

101. Aztec Myth - Native American Myths
Humanities Aztec Myth Created by player thejazzkickazz.
http://www.funtrivia.com/quizdetails.cfm?id=39365

102. Columbus In American History
Christopher Columbus, as a hero and symbol of the first order in America,is an important figure in this pantheon of american myth.
http://xroads.virginia.edu/~CAP/COLUMBUS/col3.html
"We arouse and arrange our memories to suit our psychic needs." Michael Kammen America's national memory is filled with icons and symbols, avatars of deeply held, yet imperfectly understood, beliefs. The role of history in the iconography of the United States is pervasive, yet the facts behind the fiction are somehow lost in an amorphous haze of patriotism and perceived national identity. Christopher Columbus, as a hero and symbol of the first order in America, is an important figure in this pantheon of American myth. His status, not unlike most American icons, is representative not of his own accomplishments, but the self-perception of the society which raised him to his pedestal in the American gallery of heroism. This gallery was not in place at the birth of the political nation. America, as a young republic, found itself immediately in the middle of an identity crisis. Having effected a violent separation from England and its cultural and political icons, America was left without historyor heroes. Michael Kammen, in his Mystic Chords of Memory explains that "repudiation of the past left Americans of the young republic without a firm foundation on which to base a shared sense of their social selves." (65) A new national story was needed, yet the Revolutionary leaders, obvious choices for mythical transformation, were loath to be raised to their pedestals. "Even though every nation needs a mythic explanation of its own creation, that process was paradoxically elaborated by the reluctance of Revolutionary statesmen to have their story told prematurely." (Kammen, 27) To be raised above others would be undemocratic, they believed. The human need to explain origins, to create self-identity through national identity, was thwarted by this reluctance. A vacuum was created, and was slowly filled with the image of Christopher Columbus.

103. Myth - America
Browse Categories Atlas and PlacesAncient Greece GreekAncient Rome - RomansANEEgypt Persia Israel Biographies / PeopleMythology ReligionLanguages Latin
http://ancienthistory.about.com/library/bl/bl_myth_america.htm
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104. The Turtle
Turtle. Protection. Many tribal creation stories say that earth wasborn on the back of Turtle. Since it carries its home on its back
http://www.powersource.com/gallery/objects/dturtle.html
Turtle
Protection
Many tribal creation stories say that earth was born on the back of Turtle. Since it carries its home on its back, it has also been recognized as having the ability to "manage" in difficult circumstances. Some folk tales say that if a turtle is flipped over, it cannot right itself and will eventually die. This however is not necessarily true, the strong neck muscles that Turtle possesses can flip Turtle upright. Turtle has good hearing and can sense movement in the water through the membranes in the skin. Turtle even has a sense of smell and pretty good eyesight, reminding us not to judge any of our relations by outward appearances.
The Racing Terrapin - Cherokee Story
Long ago the rabbit and the terrapin had a race. They had a long way to go and each hoped to win. They crossed valleys and high hills, and at the top of the each hill a new terrapin started. That's the way they did throughout the entire race. (There was only one rabbit, but there were many terrapins - a different one who started at the top of each hilltop.) Therefore the rabbit was left behind. So the terrapin won the race. That's all.
The Terrapin and the Deer Race
The Terrapin and the Deer wanted to have a race. The terrapin said, "I am going to wear a white corn-shuck on my head." So he gathered his friends and told them that they were to station themselves at the top of each hill over which the race was to be run. So at each hilltop sat a terrapin exactly like the others. When they (the terrapin and the deer) started the race, they went downhill and uphill, and at the top sat the terrapin. When they went down in the valley again, then up the hill, there sat the terrapin who had arrived there already. Then when he went down and up the third time, there sat the terrapin already. The terrapin won the race, they say. He used his friends with corn-shucks just like he had and placed them at intervals. That's all.

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