fiction: true or false? myths: our first stories? fables: teaching stories legends: stories based on...

20
Fiction: True or False? Myths: Our First Stories? Fables: Teaching Stories Legends: Stories Based on Hist ory Folk Tales: Traveling Stories Fiction: Stories Today Practice Forms of Fiction: It’s All a Story Feature Menu

Upload: tracey-rice

Post on 02-Jan-2016

239 views

Category:

Documents


5 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Fiction: True or False? Myths: Our First Stories? Fables: Teaching Stories Legends: Stories Based on History Folk Tales: Traveling Stories Fiction: Stories

Fiction: True or False?

Myths: Our First Stories?

Fables: Teaching Stories

Legends: Stories Based on History

Folk Tales: Traveling Stories

Fiction: Stories Today

Practice

Forms of Fiction: It’s All a Story

Feature Menu

Page 2: Fiction: True or False? Myths: Our First Stories? Fables: Teaching Stories Legends: Stories Based on History Folk Tales: Traveling Stories Fiction: Stories

Why do we love to read fiction?

Fiction: True or False?

We know the stories aren’t factual . . .

but we also know that a good story is true.

Page 3: Fiction: True or False? Myths: Our First Stories? Fables: Teaching Stories Legends: Stories Based on History Folk Tales: Traveling Stories Fiction: Stories

How can fiction—a pure product of imagination—be true?

Fiction: True or False?

A good story seems as if it could have happened.

A good story makes us feel that things should happen that way.

A good story tells us something important about real life.

[End of Section]

Page 4: Fiction: True or False? Myths: Our First Stories? Fables: Teaching Stories Legends: Stories Based on History Folk Tales: Traveling Stories Fiction: Stories

Fiction comes in many forms. The earliest stories were probably myths.

Myths: Our First Stories?

Myths answer basic questions:

Where do we come

from?

Why do the seasons change?

What is love?

How can we tell

right from wrong?

How did we learn about

fire?

Why do we die?

What makes the sun rise?

Page 5: Fiction: True or False? Myths: Our First Stories? Fables: Teaching Stories Legends: Stories Based on History Folk Tales: Traveling Stories Fiction: Stories

The word myth comes from the Greek word mythos, which means “story.”

Myths: Our First Stories?

Myths were passed down orally for generations.

The characters in myths are often gods and heroes.

Page 6: Fiction: True or False? Myths: Our First Stories? Fables: Teaching Stories Legends: Stories Based on History Folk Tales: Traveling Stories Fiction: Stories

Greek and Roman myths aren’t the only myths.

Myths: Our First Stories?

Myths are part of all cultures on Earth.

At one time, most myths were connected with a culture’s religious beliefs. [End of Section]

Page 7: Fiction: True or False? Myths: Our First Stories? Fables: Teaching Stories Legends: Stories Based on History Folk Tales: Traveling Stories Fiction: Stories

The fable is another kind of story told all over the world.

The most famous Western fables were told by Aesop, a slave in ancient Greece, over 2,600 years ago.

Fables: Teaching Stories

Fables are teaching stories. They have a moral, and they are often short.

Page 8: Fiction: True or False? Myths: Our First Stories? Fables: Teaching Stories Legends: Stories Based on History Folk Tales: Traveling Stories Fiction: Stories

Do you recognize these fables from Aesop?

Fables: Teaching Stories

[End of Section]

What are the morals of these stories?

The Tortoise and the Hare The Boy Who

Cried Wolf

Page 9: Fiction: True or False? Myths: Our First Stories? Fables: Teaching Stories Legends: Stories Based on History Folk Tales: Traveling Stories Fiction: Stories

Legends are stories based on historical events.

These stories are partly based on real people and real events.

Legends: Stories Based on History

Legends become more exaggerated and less accurate the longer they are told.

There really was a war in Troy around 1200 B.C.

A serpent probably didn’t rise up out of the sea and strangle one of the Trojans.

Page 10: Fiction: True or False? Myths: Our First Stories? Fables: Teaching Stories Legends: Stories Based on History Folk Tales: Traveling Stories Fiction: Stories

Ancient history isn’t the only source of legends.

Did George Washington really cut down that cherry tree?

Legends: Stories Based on History

American history has also produced many legends.

Did Davy Crockett really ride a streak of lightning?

[End of Section]

Page 11: Fiction: True or False? Myths: Our First Stories? Fables: Teaching Stories Legends: Stories Based on History Folk Tales: Traveling Stories Fiction: Stories

Folk tales are stories that have been passed down by word of mouth for generations.

Folk tales are stories that feature elements like

Folk Tales: Traveling Stories

•sleeping princesses, elves, and giants

•genies, flying carpets, and magic lamps

•talking animals and three magic wishes

Page 12: Fiction: True or False? Myths: Our First Stories? Fables: Teaching Stories Legends: Stories Based on History Folk Tales: Traveling Stories Fiction: Stories

Folk tales tend to travel from culture to culture.

Who has an evil stepmother who won’t let her go to the party?

Folk Tales: Traveling Stories

Who goes to the party anyway and loses her special slipper?

You probably know her as

Cinderella

Page 13: Fiction: True or False? Myths: Our First Stories? Fables: Teaching Stories Legends: Stories Based on History Folk Tales: Traveling Stories Fiction: Stories

The Cinderella story most of us know was written down by a Frenchman, Charles Perrault, in 1697.

But researchers have found more than 900 versions of the story all over the world.

Folk Tales: Traveling Stories

The oldest version, from China, is more than 1,000 years old.

Yeh-Shen, the Chinese Cinderella, has magic fishbones instead of a fairy godmother.

[End of Section]

Page 14: Fiction: True or False? Myths: Our First Stories? Fables: Teaching Stories Legends: Stories Based on History Folk Tales: Traveling Stories Fiction: Stories

Today, the word fiction usually refers to short stories and novels.

Fiction: Stories Today

Many types of fiction are popular with readers.

mystery

historical fiction

fantasy

romance

adventure

science fiction

Page 15: Fiction: True or False? Myths: Our First Stories? Fables: Teaching Stories Legends: Stories Based on History Folk Tales: Traveling Stories Fiction: Stories

“Formula fiction” tells the same story over and over:

A lot of modern fiction is “formula fiction.”

Fiction: Stories Today

“crime doesn’t pay”

“boy meets girl”

[End of Section]

“the good guy always wins”

Most good modern fiction moves beyond formulas. It surprises us. We never know what will happen next.

Page 16: Fiction: True or False? Myths: Our First Stories? Fables: Teaching Stories Legends: Stories Based on History Folk Tales: Traveling Stories Fiction: Stories

Look at this cluster diagram. You’ll be completing a diagram like this one a little later.

Let’s Try It

Practice

1. What does this diagram show?

2. Why do lines connect most green bubbles to the red bubble?

Page 17: Fiction: True or False? Myths: Our First Stories? Fables: Teaching Stories Legends: Stories Based on History Folk Tales: Traveling Stories Fiction: Stories

Let’s Try It

Practice

3. “Fantasy” and “science fiction” are connected to each other. There is only one line to the center. Why?

Page 18: Fiction: True or False? Myths: Our First Stories? Fables: Teaching Stories Legends: Stories Based on History Folk Tales: Traveling Stories Fiction: Stories

Let’s Try It

Practice

4. Science fiction and fantasy are related because the stories cannot happen in real life. How are they different from each other?

Page 19: Fiction: True or False? Myths: Our First Stories? Fables: Teaching Stories Legends: Stories Based on History Folk Tales: Traveling Stories Fiction: Stories

On Your Own

Copy this cluster diagram showing types of popular fiction. Write the title of an example for each type in its bubble. Then, add a sentence or two defining each type of fiction.

Practice

Page 20: Fiction: True or False? Myths: Our First Stories? Fables: Teaching Stories Legends: Stories Based on History Folk Tales: Traveling Stories Fiction: Stories

Forms of Fiction: It’s All a Story

The End