Los Mitos: Características y tipos (con ejemplos)

Los Mitos: Características y tipos (con ejemplos)

Understanding Myths: Characteristics and Types

What are Myths?

  • Myths are traditional and sacred narratives used by ancient peoples to explain the origins of the universe, natural phenomena, living beings, or the creation of the world.
  • These stories often feature magical or supernatural beings such as gods, demigods, heroes, and monsters.

Transmission of Myths

  • Initially transmitted orally within communities, myths evolved over generations with variations in story details or character names.
  • They recount events that occur in sacred times and places outside our reality, typically set in distant epochs before the world's creation.

Nature of Myths

  • Considered fantastic tales arising from human imagination; they depict extraordinary beings performing miraculous acts.
  • Ancient cultures viewed these narratives as true accounts that helped explain mysteries beyond their understanding at the time.

Functions of Myths

Explanatory Role

  • Myths serve to explain unknown origins or mysterious phenomena like the universe's creation in a more comprehensible manner for various cultures.

Societal Organization

  • They provide norms and rules for societal conduct, justifying certain situations and outlining consequences for non-compliance.

Moral Lessons

  • Myths illustrate concepts of good versus evil through narratives involving opposing forces like light vs. darkness or life vs. death.

Types of Myths

Cosmogonic Myths

  • These myths describe the universe's origin and world formation during chaotic pre-existence periods; supernatural characters often bring order from chaos.

Example: Chinese Myth of Pangu

  • In this myth, Pangu emerges from a cosmic egg to create order from chaos by forming earth (yin) and sky (yang), ultimately becoming part of the world upon his death.

Theoretical Myths

  • These focus on how gods come into existence and their characteristics; they often relate closely to cosmogonic myths due to simultaneous divine creation events.

Example: Egyptian Myth of Osiris

  • This narrative explains Horus's birth following Osiris's resurrection after being murdered by Set, highlighting themes of rebirth and divinity.

Anthropological Myths

  • These explore human origins across different cultures; they detail how humans came into existence through divine intervention or natural processes.

Example: Mayan Creation Story

  • In "Popol Vuh," creators attempt multiple times to make humans until finally succeeding with maize-based beings who inhabit Earth today.

Ideological Myths

  • These address natural phenomena's origins—ranging from simple occurrences like rain to complex disasters—often involving supernatural entities influencing these events.

Example: Greek Myth of Apollo and Daphne

Mitos Fundacionales y su Significado

Mitos Fundacionales

  • Los mitos fundacionales son narrativas que explican la creación de pueblos, ciudades o imperios, a menudo con un propósito divino.
  • Un ejemplo es la historia de Rómulo y Remo en la mitología romana, donde dos hermanos gemelos fundan Roma tras un conflicto sobre los límites de su ciudad.
  • Rómulo se convierte en el primer rey de Roma después de matar a su hermano Remo por cruzar el territorio marcado.

Mitos Morales

  • Los mitos morales relatan el origen del bien y del mal, enseñando comportamientos correctos y sus consecuencias.
  • El mito griego de Ícaro y Dédalo ilustra esta idea; Dédalo advierte a Ícaro que no se acerque al sol, pero su desobediencia resulta en su caída.

Mitos Escatológicos

  • Estos mitos abordan el fin del mundo o ciclos culturales, describiendo catástrofes provocadas por dioses o héroes mortales.
Video description

-Marcas de Tiempo- ⏱️⏱️ 0:00 Intro 0:12 ¿Qué es un mito? 0:40 Características de los mitos Tipos de Mitos: 3:47 Cosmogónicos 4:50 Teogónicos 5:38 Antropogónicos 6:22 Etiológicos 7:32 Fundacionales 8:40 Morales 9:31 Escatológicos