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The loathsome bride or groom The loathsome bride or groom

Transformation of people into animals Transformation of people into animals

The grateful dead The grateful dead

The soul in the form of a butterfly The soul in the form of a butterfly

The icubus The icubus

The changeling The changeling

The foolish bargain The foolish bargain

Race won by deception Race won by deception

The disguised god, hero, or noble The disguised god, hero, or noble

Natural disaster as punishment for a people's transgressions Natural disaster as punishment for a people's transgressions

The dying and resurrected god The dying and resurrected god

The cruel sister The cruel sister



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For other uses, see Motive.

A motif is an uncommon element that recurs within a work or within a group of works. The criterion of uncommonness is essential to the definition. So, for example, the appearance in a story of a cup is not a motif, but the appearance of a cup that can never be filled or emptied is. The following are a few examples of motifs from myths and folktales around the world:

The loathsome bride or groom

Transformation of people into animals

The grateful dead

The soul in the form of a butterfly

The icubus

The changeling

The foolish bargain

Race won by deception

The disguised god, hero, or noble

Natural disaster as punishment for a people's transgressions

The dying and resurrected god

The cruel sister

The following are some examples of some motifs in the fiction of Kurt Vonnegut:

the granfalloon (an arbitrary but essentially meaningless association of human beings, such as Hoosiers, people born on Tuesday, people with the name Sarah, members of the fraternal order of whatever, etc.)

the random, absurd, but cataclysmic event (such as the bombing of Dresden or the destruction of the universe in an accident resulting from the testing by Trafalmadorians of a new rocket fuel)

the thwarting of human expectations that the universe will be purposeful and proceed according to design

Motifs are often used to classify literary works and works from the oral tradition, notably in the work of folklorists Antii Arne and Stith Thompson, which is currently undergoing revision by Hans-Jörg Uther. Stith Thompson was the author of the massive, definitive work in the field of typing by motif, Motif-Index of Folk-Literature (1932-37).

See also

References

Template:The Aarne, Thompson, Uther classification system: http://oaks.nvg.org/folktale-types.html

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