Legends
Legends are folk history, and even when dealing with religious subject matter
they differ from myth in that they tell about what has happened in the world
after the period of its creation is over. They are believed by both narrator and
audience and encompass a great variety of subjects: saints; werewolves, ghosts,
and other supernatural creatures; adventures of real heroes and heroines;
personal reminiscences; and explanations of geographical features and
place-names (called local legends).
Legend differs from formal history in style of presentation, emphasis, and
purpose. Like other folktale forms it tends to be formulaic, using cliches and
standardized characterization. Little effort, for example, is given to recording
what a hero was really like. Jesse James, a real-life American outlaw, is
presented as a modern-day Robin Hood: a
good-hearted character who stole from the rich to give to the poor. The American
wilderness scouts Davy Crockett and Kit Carson are virtually the same character
in legends. Likewise, Helen of Troy and Cleopatra (of ancient Egypt), Deirdre
(of Irish legend), and more recently the modern actor Marilyn Monroe have passed
into folklore as symbols of female beauty with almost no individuality. A
similar patterning of characters and plots occurs in ghost stories, local
legends, and in some cases even in family reminiscences. Such stories, though
they may be presented as history, are too patterned to be trusted as objective
historical accounts.
Urban legends are contemporary stories that are set in an urban environment and
reported as true (sometimes in newspapers) but that contain patterns and motifs
that reveal their legendary character. The context of these legends may be
contemporary, but the stories reflect timeless concerns about urban living,
including privacy, death, decay, and vermin.
Introduction|Myths|Legends|Definitions|Myths of Gods|Cosmic Myths|Myths of Heroes|Legends|Robin Hood|Fairy Tales Jack and the Beanstalk