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Essay Comparing The World On The Turtle's Back And The Four Kingdoms

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Creation myths have similar aspects involving the importance of issues allowed by the gods, nature, duality, and creation songs that all relate to the beginning of life, that are expressed in different ways. The Iroquois cultures in “The World on the Turtle’s Back” and the Hopi cultures in“The Four Kingdoms” both explore these different aspects specifically. They show how life can be created and maintained in different ways. In both myths, disasters occur that the gods allow to happen, that affect the characters and their surroundings tremendously, and allow the different worlds to evolve as a whole. In “The World on the Turtle’s Back,” the woman falls through the sky world to the other world. The gods knew what was occurring as the woman was falling to her possible death, “but they chose to ignore it” (Iroquois). After she had made it to the end of her fall, she experiences animals and nature that are in support of her, and everyone and everything matures together. In “The Four Kingdoms,” the god …show more content…

After the woman has fallen through her sky world, “the creatures of the sea came to her and said that they would try to help her and asked what they could do” (Iroquois). Although she had not been one of the most well behaved women in the sky world and was then put in a large amount of danger, the animals were willing to help. The help of the animals balance out the evil and sin in the woman, and this is also an example of how nature supports the world in this myth. Sotuknang decides that his world is full of too much war and destruction, yet he “resolved to destroy this world quickly before it corrupted the few people who still remembered the Creator” (Hopi). It’s interesting how he decides to fight fire with fire, but he needs to balance out his world. Both myths deal with having to balance out negative situations, for hopefully better

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