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  | LITR 5535: American
Romanticism Monday 25 September: “The Iroquois Creation Story,” N 17-21; “The Cherokee Memorials,” N 571-581; William Apess, N 476-482. Complete The Last of the Mohicans. selection reader / discussion leader: Gordon Lewis (“Iroquois Creation Story”) Many
  scholars date the beginning of civilization as the Sumerian culture because
  this civilization is the first known to have a system of writing using
  cuneiform.  Part of their
  literature was an Epic of Creation written on 7 tablets that were read each
  year as part of the New Year’s festivities. 
  The account is similar to the Iroquois and Genesis stories in that all
  identify a female mother of the earth. The
  Sumerian Creation   Mythology
  39).  http://faculty.gvsu.edu/websterm/SumerianMyth.htm Professor
  Michael Webster     Genesis 1:2
  The earth
  was empty, a formless mass cloaked in darkness. 3:20
  Then Adam
  named his wife Eve,[c]
  because she would be the mother of all people everywhere. 6:4
  In those days, and even afterward, giants[a]
  lived on the earth, for whenever the sons of God had intercourse with human
  women, they gave birth to children who became the heroes mentioned in legends
  of old. 1:9
  Let the waters beneath the sky be gathered into one place so dry ground may
  appear." And so it was. 10God named the dry
  ground "land" 1:3
  Let there be light," and there was light. Iroquois
  Creation Story lower
  world was in a great darkness   and
  there was a woman conceived   The
  monsters of the great water were alarmed   in
  order to procure some earth, if it could be obtained   good
  mind was not contented to remain in a dark situation, and he was anxious to
  create a great light in the dark world   16
  For God made two great lights, the sun and
  the moon, to shine down upon the earth. The greater one, the sun, presides
  during the day; the lesser one, the moon, presides through the night. He also
  made the stars. 17 God set these lights in the
  heavens to light the earth, 18 to govern the day and
  the night, and to separate the light from the darkness.   2:7 And the LORD God formed a
  man's body from the dust of the ground and breathed into it the breath of
  life. And the man became a living person.   1:24 And God said, "Let the earth bring forth every kind of animal--livestock, small animals, and wildlife." And so it was. 25God made all sorts of wild animals, livestock, and small animals, each able to reproduce more of its own kind. And God saw that it was good.   1:26Then
  God said, "Let us make people[b]
  in our image, to be like ourselves. They will be masters over all life--the
  fish in the sea, the birds in the sky, and all the livestock, wild animals,[c]
  and small animals."    At
  first he took the parent's head (the deceased) of which he created an orb, and
  established it in the center of the firmament, and because of very superior
  nature to bestow light to the new world, (now the sun) and again he took the
  remnant of the body and formed another orb, which was inferior to the light,
  (now the moon.)     and
  he found two images of the dust of the ground in his own likeness, male and
  female, and by his breathing into their nostrils he gave them the living
  souls. and named them Ea-gwe-howe, i e. a real people; and he gave the Great
  Island, all the animals of game for their maintenance:   and
  then created numerous species of animals of the smallest and greatest, to
  inhabit the forests, and fish of all kinds to inhabit the waters Romantic
Themes in Creation Stories   Creation – New Beginnings   Light and Dark   Good & Evil   Relationship between Man & Nature   Discussion
Questions   1. How do you account for the similarities in Creation Stories that are thousand of years and miles apart? 2. Do you see additional Romantic Themes in Creation Stories? 3. What can you add to the points above about the themes identified?   Cuneiform inscriptions 
 http://olivercowdery.com/texts/1827cusk.htm 
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