it focused on the pain soldiers suffered rather than glorifying their service.
there were people from every (substantial) group who wrote stories.
just search WWII survivors stories in google, read the stories and wriite your assignment a bit like those stories
He wrote stories about the Spaniards.
During World War 1 Britain spread all kinds of stories about German atrocities allegedly committed in Belgium. These included stories that the Germans had killed babies.
it focused on the pain soldiers suffered rather than glorifying their service.
No. The stories of Adam and Eve are Western Semitic stories, with 'Adam' meaning 'man' in Hebrew, and 'Eve'meaning 'living one'. Hinduism evolved quite different creation accounts in a different environment.
WE Johns hero Captain James Bigglesworth: 'Biggles'. Great stuff, if a bit dated and romantic. But of its time it is great British derring-do against the Hun. I suppose the greatest work is Erich-Maria Remarques' All Quiet on the Western Front, or the poetry of Rupert Brooke, Wilfred Owen or Robert Graves, among others.
A:The aboriginal creation story is known as the 'dreamtime'. Different tribes of Australian aborigines had different dreamtime stories, many of which can never be told to the uninitiated or to women. Those that we do know bear a family resemblance to some of the stories in the earlier chapters of Genesis.
Western
myths are just stories that were used in the earlier times to tell how the world began and who and how our world is being run today
Some believe that the story of Jesus is a repeat of earlier stories such as the stories of Isis and Osiris, Horus or other gods, or even of Homer's epics, because they see the Christian story actually as having developed from stories well known in the first century. Early Christian church leaders agreed that the story of Jesus is a repeat of earlier stories, but said that it is because Satan had pre-empted Jesus in order to make it difficult for people to believe in him.
Such stories can be called fables, myths, legends, or folklore.
Tom Bishop has written: 'The great Mormon cricket fly-fishing festival and other western stories' -- subject(s): Social life and customs, Western stories, Fiction
Peter Dawson has written: 'The Stagline feud' -- subject(s): Large type books 'Lone rider from Texas' -- subject(s): Western stories 'Phantom raiders' -- subject(s): Western stories 'Time to ride' 'Dead man pass' -- subject(s): Large type books 'Troublsome range' 'High country' 'Claiming of the Deerfoot' -- subject(s): Western stories 'Posse guns' 'Showdown at Anchor' -- subject(s): Western stories 'Ruler of the range' 'Long ride' -- subject(s): Large type books 'Battle royal' 'Big outfit' 'Forgotten destiny' -- subject(s): Western stories
Yes, they're called literary stories - stories just to show different writing techniques.
A lot of different stories!