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The turtle or Ograbme represents the Embargo Act of 1807. The Embargo Act was put in place to hurt the British by banning American trade with the British. The snapping turtle biting the American in the pants represents how the Embargo Act actually hurt the Americans. This act devastated the American economy.…
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-it may represent the image that may be hidden in the West and East Eggs…
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The “Round Table” symbolized the unity in people. The vision that we could form together as one. The symbol is important to the legend, because that’s what the culture wanted, to be one.…
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The image by Image Zoo reflects the idea that moving into the world involves different pathways. This image uses the rule of thirds and symbolism to bring attention to the four different pathways to the centre tree trunk. The rule of thirds draws central focus to the light coming from the tree. This light symbolises the light that is present through different pathways and journeys. Light symbolises the hope, possibilities that come with moving into the world. Even though each pathway comes to the same centre of light, it branches upwards into different pathways shown at the top of the tree trunk. The tree symbolises the “Tree of life” as the tree that brings possibility to the world, it gives life and experiences to everyone. This brings to the main point that moving into the world, shown metaphorically as the tree through the four different pathways to new experiences.…
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Besides acting as the messenger, the eagle also represents the human traits; courage, swift, and strong. He has great foresight and knows everything. The medicine man could use this eagle feather to heal the patient after transferring energy from the center pole to his feather. The buffalo symbolized life because the Plain Indians’ relied on it for foods and…
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Symbolism plays a huge part in To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee. A mockingbird is a form of symbolism that can describe many of the characters in this book. The county of Maycomb and Boo Radley are other examples of symbolism. In TKAM, Maycomb, Boo Radley, and the mockingbirds are all used by Harper Lee to either foreshadow or symbolize something…
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This description reminds the reader of the Garden of Eden and the creation story. The brothers feel safe and at-home up in the trees. It is like a sanctuary from the outside world. Adam and Eve were hope for mankind just as Neil and Calum represent regeneration and hope for life after the war. Duror, embodying darkness, and a parallel for the serpent in the Garden of Eden represents evil and deceitfulness: he is described as…
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In the book 'Life of Pi' you find a young man, who grew up in a very religious world surrounded by animals of wisdom. The author goes into deep explanation of Pi's life, about how he grew up in a zoo and had a tough childhood. Pi develops a love for a higher power and starts to grasp the understanding of God, by learning three different religions. The religions were Islam,Christianity and Buddhism. After each of the teachers found that he was following multiple religions, each of them told him that he could only follow one. Pi continued to follow each of the religions and eventually studied zoology, shocker! Anyway in time soon Pi was on a boat with his parents journeying to Canada where the boat mystically crashed and began to sink. Pi escaped…
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The Iroquois, a Native American tribe, believe that the world was not actually created but that it already existed. There was a sky world and an ocean that laid below. The sky world was full of sky people, and among the sky people was a pregnant woman and her husband. While finding food one day the sky woman fell through a hole to the underworld taking the roots of the tree with her. A muskrat then brought the dirt to plant the tree on the turtle's back. She had her chikd, who was a girk. The daughter then got pregnant by a mysterious man when he laid two…
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“Happiness can be found in the darkest of times, if only one remembers to turn on the light.”…
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The creation stories “The World on a Turtle’s Back” of the Iroquois and “The Golden Chain” of the Yoruba help to define what they see as their place in the world and what they value most. Values of the Iroquois include nature, balance, and natural cycles. Key values of the Yoruba are diversity, nature, and productivity. Both the Iroquois and the Yoruba tell tales encompassing the importance of nature and its purpose; however, their views on the roles of people on Earth and on new ways of thinking differ from each other, distinguishing the two…
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Tara uses Mungi the turtle as a strong symbolic feature in the novel, it symbolises the saety and security promised by belonging and symbolises the hope that May will find belonging even where she may not seem to belong. Mungi Is also a metaphor for May as well as being a talisman, as it has a hard exterior protecting the soft interior. Representing the vulnerability of youth, something all to familiar to may.…
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The World on the Turtle’s back is an appealing story written by an Iroquois; is about a woman and what could happen when if she did not do what she was supposed to do. But most importantly the story is to teach and inform the younger people how the people were in Native American times. One way he showed how they were is by using literary devices in his short story, or in other words: creation myth.…
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Considerable attention is given to a specific set of myths: those stories that deal with the creation of the world. Cosmogonic myths try to resolve the problem of man's search for meaning in existence“. Accounts of the beginning of the world are the quintessential form of myth” (Paden, 1994, p. 85). Different stories of creation are evidence of different worldviews. Hopi and Japanese creation myth deals with the origin of human kind. While they both narrate how the world and human being were created, they utilize different metaphors. The Japanese myth imagines chaos at the beginning. Earth and heavens came together to create harmony. Cosmos and order were brought where disorder and infinite operated. Void was filled and many divinities appeared. They were created in order to organize and “preside over the land, sea, mountains, river, trees and herbs” (Japanese Creation Myth). For Hopi, gods…
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The other symbol chosen is the orange spider. The spider represents the wisdom our people show. Four of the last 5 decedents have attended an Ivy League college. The only other having attended the University of Virginia as a Jefferson Scholar. It is known that our studies are important, and we show our knowledge through thoughtful strategy. The orange on the spider shows our ambition to continue learning. We are the knowledge-seekers who create the basis of society. The heraldic line in the middle of our crest shows a difficulty we have faced as a tribe. Our most notorious descendent, William Joseph King, was killed at an early age of Prostate cancer. Our lineage has faced many problems with illness and cancer in the following years. Three members have been diagnosed with Skin cancer, two with Breast cancer, and another with Prostate cancer. Hindered-giants we are, broken and spit out by nature itself. This obstacle has been tough for us to overcome but will eventually be overcome. The arrows in the middle of the heraldic line are designed to show our readiness for battle with these illness and our ability to always fight back against the…
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