Tuesday: Jewish Folktale Tradition (on Blackboard under Course Documents)
READ: “The Rabbi Who Was Turned into a Werewolf,”
“A Dispute in Sign Languages” (42-44)
“The Rabbi and the Inquisitor” (157-158)
“Chelm Justice” (176-177)
“The Magic Mirror of Rabbi Adam” (276-282)
“It Could Always be Worse” (408-409)
“A Dispute in Sign Languages” (42-44)
“The Rabbi and the Inquisitor” (157-158)
“Chelm Justice” (176-177)
“The Magic Mirror of Rabbi Adam” (276-282)
“It Could Always be Worse” (408-409)
Thursday: Native-American Folk and
Fairy Tales (on Blackboard under Course Documents)
Read: “How Men and Women Got Together” (68-72),
“Deer Hunter and White Corn Maiden” (121-123),
“The Flying Head (233-234),
“How Mosquitoes Came to Be” (350-351) and
“The End of the World” (474-475)
“Deer Hunter and White Corn Maiden” (121-123),
“The Flying Head (233-234),
“How Mosquitoes Came to Be” (350-351) and
“The End of the World” (474-475)
Blog Entry 10: This entry should be either about the Jewish folktale tradition or on the
Native-American stories and how these are distinctly different from those of
European origins. What is unique about them?) Blog is due by Sunday, April 21.
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