The Interconnection between selected myths and geographical features in Western Uganda
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Date
2025-09-17
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Uganda Chrsitian University
Abstract
In this study I explore the interconnection between selected myths from Western Uganda
and selected geographical features in that region. Specifically, I examine the relationships
that relate to themes, geographical features and motifs in the selected myths. By
analysing the selected myths from especially the Banyankole, Banyoro and Batooro
communities, the study highlights how myths and their embedded mythemes are a
powerful lens through which we can appreciate the interpret and assign meaning to their
physical environment. The study adopted an ecocritical approach and drew perceptions
from the myths themselves and related geographical settings to demonstrate that myths
and geography are not isolated constructs but are interconnected in the narrative
frameworks. Using an ethnographical research design to examine specific myths,
mythemes and geographical features, the study uncovered patterns that reveal an
interdependent relationship between the geography and human imagination through
mythic stories. This interconnectedness underscores the importance of understanding
myths merely as stories but as dynamic reflections of human interaction with their
environment, showing that myths and their related mythemes are more than myth. Rather,
myth connects people to their environment, heritage and to each other. The study
recommends multidisciplinary and activist approaches to the study of myth in order to
exploit the potential of such narratives, especially in the context of cultural tourism.
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Masters Thesis