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Male Presence Within Flood Myth Narratives

Male Presence Within Flood Myth Narratives
According to Alan Dundes “A myth may be defined as a sacred narrative explaining how the world or humans came to be in their present form” (1). Perhaps unintentionally, many people, even to this day, continue to misinterpret myth as a fabrication of historical religions, people, places and events. Although there may appear to be a fine line between myth and folktales, William Paden best explains the difference between the two in his book Religious Worlds: The Comparative Study of Religions:
…myth is essentially different from folktales that tell of a make-believe realm set in nonexistent time and place with deliberately fictive characters. Rather, myth posits ostensibly real times and places, real heroes and ancestors, real genealogies and events…mythic settings are intended by the believers to represent an account of the actual world. In contrast, the folktale aims at entertainment and is not at all......


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Approximate Word Count: 3591
Approximate Pages: 15 (250 words per double-spaced page)

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