1. Los Dias de los Muertos
A WebQuest for Grade 8
Due: 10/29/19 for Classes 801 & 802
2. El Museo del Barrio
⢠SUPER SABADO! DĂa de los Muertos
Celebration
⢠Saturday, October 19, 2019
⢠12:00 pm - 5:00 pm
ď§ Admission is free!
Click on the picture
For more information
3. Introduction
⢠Rather than a time of
mourning, los dias de los
muertos â the Days of the
Dead - observed every Nov.
1 and 2 - is a celebration of
life and death, when the
spirits of the dearly
departed return to Earth for
a family fiesta.
⢠Octavio Paz, a native of
Mexico and winner of the
1990 Nobel Prize in
literature, observes âThe
word death is not
pronounced in New York, in
Paris, in London, because it
burns the lips. The Mexican,
in contrast, is familiar with
death, jokes about it,
caresses it, sleeps with it,
celebrates it, it is one of his
favorite toys and his most
steadfast love."
4. Introduction
⢠Day of the Dead is not a sad or scary
occasion, but a spirited holiday when
people remember and honor family
members who have died. All of this is
part of the philosophy that death is not
something to be feared, but a natural
part of life.
⢠People celebrate in their homes,
creating altars or oferings (called
ofrendas in Spanish) that display
portraits, favorite foods, and special
possessions of their loved ones.
⢠Altars or offerings are also decorated
with candles and marigoldsâthe light
of the candle and scent of the flowers
(called cempasuchitl) are said to attract
the souls of the deceased and draw
them back for a short time to take part
in the pleasures they once enjoyed in
life.
⢠Families also visit the graves of their
loved ones, cleaning the headstones,
and decorating with flowers, and
bringing food and music
⢠The roots of Day of the Dead are pre-
Colombian, and many of the symbols
and practices are derived from the
indigenous groups of Meso America
(Maya and Aztec, e.g.)
⢠Images of skeletons dancing or doing
other comical things are common.
5. Task
⢠There are 3 components for this task â
⢠1st component âgo through the entire WebQuest and explore each
resource.
⢠2nd component - Complete the attached document on âlos dias de
los muertosâ as an individual assignment.
⢠Your will find the answers located throughout this WebQuest.
⢠Submit your completed worksheet - âturn-inâ on iLearn
⢠3rd component - Individually, choose 1 of the vocabulary words
from this presentation and present it creatively to your class. You
may make the item, explain its significance and how you made it.
Or, you may display the item and explain how to make it and its
significance for this holiday.
⢠All presentations and worksheets are due on 10/26 for Classes 802
& 803; and on 10/30 for class 801.
6. Vocabulary Word Projects
⢠JosÊ Guadalupe Posada
⢠La Catrina
⢠Calaveras
⢠Calacas
⢠Pan de muerto
⢠Cempazuchitl
⢠Cascarones
⢠Papel Picado
⢠Calaveras de azúcar/
Alfeniques
⢠Calaveras de Chocolates
⢠Copal
⢠La danza de los viejos
⢠The Monarch Butterflies
Migration
⢠Ofrenda
⢠Tamales
⢠Atole
⢠Mole
7. JosĂŠ Guadalupe Posada (1852â1913)
JosĂŠ Guadalupe Posada, an ingenious
artist, lived during one of the most
turbulent times in Mexico.
He knew how to capture the essence
of this turbulence in his lithographs to
the point that they became the icon of
Revolutionary Mexico.
Most of his imagery was meant to make
a satirical point about life in Mexico at
the time he lived.
Since his death, however, his images
have become associated with the
Mexican holiday, Dia de los Muertos, the
âDay of the Deadâ.
8. Calavera de la Catrina
âLa Catrinaâ
Catrina : Spanish word that means well
dressed, rich.
Posada used it as a way of criticizing the rich
society of Mexico.
Posada's best known works are his
calaveras (the Spanish word for
skeletons , which often assume various
costumes, such as the Calavera de la
Catrina, the âCalavera of the Female
Dandyâ, which was meant to satirize the
life of the upper classes during the reign
of Portifico Diaz.
10. "Gran fandango y francachella de todas las calaverasâ -
The happy dance and wild party of all the skeletons.
11. A cemetery, presumably crowded with victims of the then fairly new electrical
conveyances. There were many disastrous accidents, one or which involved
the future artist Frida Kahlo, who spent most of the rest of her life in a
wheelchair due to a horrible trolley accident in which her spine was broken in
several places. Frida Kahlo later became an internationally acclaimed
surrealistic artist who was also known as the wife of Diego Rivera, a famous
muralist.
12. Calacas
⢠A calaca (a Mexican -Spanish name for
skeleton) is a figure of a skull or skeleton
(usually human) commonly used for
decoration during los dias de los muertos.
They are whimsical skeleton figures that
represent death.
⢠Tracing their origin from Aztec imagery,
calacas are frequently shown with marigold
flowers and foliage. As with other aspects of
the Day of the Dead festival, calacas are
generally depicted as joyous rather than
mournful figures.
⢠They are often shown wearing festive
clothing, dancing, and playing musical
instruments to indicate a happy afterlife. This
draws on the Mexican belief that no dead
soul likes to be thought of sadly, and that
death should be a joyous occasion. This goes
back to Aztec beliefs, one of the few
traditions to remain after the Spanish
conquest.
A calaca of La Catrina
14. Pan de los muertos
(Bread of the Dead)
⢠The pan de muertos (Spanish for Bread of
the dead) (also called pan de los muertos) is
a type of bread traditionally baked in Mexico
during the weeks leading up to the DĂa de los
Muertos, which is celebrated on November
2. It is a sweetened soft bread shaped like a
bun, often decorated with bone-like pieces.
Pan de muertos is eaten on DĂa de los
Muertos, at the gravesite or altar of the
deceased. In some regions it is eaten for
months before the official celebration of Dia
de los Muertos. In Oaxaca, pan de muertos is
the same bread that is usually baked, with
the addition of decorations. As part of the
celebration, loved ones eat pan de muertos
as well as the relative's favorite foods. The
bones represent the lost one (difuntos or
difuntas) and there is normally a baked tear
drop on the bread to represent sorrow. The
bones are represented in a circle to portray
the circle of life.
16. Cempazuchitl
⢠A marigold flower, a symbol of
death since the time of the
Aztecs, also known as
cempasuchil or zempasuchitl.
⢠They are used to decorate
graves and altars often in a
cross or arch pattern. They are
also popular as a pathway
marker to the altar.
⢠Also known as "the flower
with 400 livesâ. It is believed
that the scent of the petals
forms a welcome path for the
spirits to return to their altar
or grave.
18. Cascarones
⢠In Spanish the word cåscara means
eggshell.
⢠They are decorated, confetti-filled
eggs, trimmed in glitter.
⢠In addition to Dia de los muertos,
cascarones have become popular for
other special occasions such as Cinco
de mayo, Pascua, weddings and
QuinceaĂąeras.
⢠They are very popular in the
southwestern United States.
⢠Cascarones may be thrown or
crushed over the recipient's head to
shower him or her with confetti.
⢠Having a cascarón broken over one's
head is said to bring good luck.
20. Papel Picado
⢠Papel picado (âpaper punching") is a
decorative craft made out of paper
cut into elaborate designs. The
designs are commonly cut from
tissue paper using a guide and small
chisels.
⢠Papel picado can also be made by
folding tissue paper and cutting into
the paper using small, sharp scissors.
⢠Papel picados are used for many
different special occasions such as la
Navidad, Dia de los muertos,
weddings, quinceaĂąeras, baptisms,
and christenings.
⢠In Mexico, papel picado is especially
incorporated into altars during the
Day of the Dead.
22. Calaveras de azĂşcar/ Alfeniques (Mexican
Day of the Dead Sugar Skulls)
⢠Sugar art was brought to the New World by
Italian missionaries in the 17th century. The first
Church mention of sugar art was from Palermo
at Easter time when little sugar lambs and
angels were made to adorn the side altars in the
Catholic Church.
⢠Mexico, abundant in sugar production and too
poor to buy fancy imported European church
decorations, learned quickly from the friars how
to make sugar art for their religious festivals.
Clay molded sugar figures of angels, sheep and
sugar skulls go back to the Colonial Period 18th
century. Sugar skulls represented a departed
soul, had the name written on the forehead and
was placed on the home ofrenda or gravestone
to honor the return of a particular spirit. Sugar
skull art reflects the folk art style of big happy
smiles, colorful icing and sparkly tin and glittery
adornments.
⢠Molded from a sugar paste, then decorated with
icing, glitter and foil, these skulls often are
placed on altars. The sugar represents the
sweetness of life, and the skull represents the
sadness of death.
26. Copal
⢠Copal is a name given to tree
resin that is particularly
identified with the cultures of
the ancient peoples of Mexico
and Central America as an
incense.
⢠Copal is the traditional incense
made from the resin of the
copal tree.
⢠Copal incense is the dried
resin of the copal tree. The
incense is somewhat smoky
when burned and has sort of a
pine scent. It is burnt to
welcome the spirits of the
dead on altars.
27. La danza de los viejos
⢠A traditional dance
performed at this time
in Mexico is âla danza
de los viejosâ (the
dance of the old men).
Click on the above picture to see and
hear âla danza de los viejosâ.
28. The Monarch Butterflies Migration
⢠Every year at the time of Dias
de los muertos, thousands of
monarch butterflies arrive in
Mexico to spend the winter
there in the warm weather.
⢠Locals view their arrival as the
spirits of their ancestors
arriving in time to celebrate
Dias de los muertos.
⢠Many Mexicans believe that
every butterfly contains the
spirit of someone loved and
lost in our world, and
therefore, you should never
harm a butterfly.
Click on the above picture to view
A video of the migration of the
Monarch butterfly to Mexico.
29. Ofrendas
⢠The Day of the Dead is a time
for the dead to return home
and visit loved ones, feast on
their favorite foods and listen
to their favorite music.
⢠In the homes, family members
honor their deceased with
ofrendas or offerings which
may consist of photographs,
bread, other foods, flowers,
toys and other symbolic
offerings.
⢠Ofrendas usually contain
elements of wind (papel
picado); fire (candles); earth
(food) and water.
30. Ofrendas
⢠While some prefer to visit the
graves of loved ones, others build
an ofrenda (offering), or altar, in
their home. It consists of a photo
of the one being honored; prayer
candles in purple for pain, white
for hope and pink for the
celebration; pan de los muertos
(bread of the dead), a sweetened
bread baked in round loaves or
skull shapes; marigolds; sugar
skulls; papel picado (Mexican
tissue-paper decorations); copal
(incense to clear the path for
spirits return); a glass of water
and a bottle of beer.
Ofrendas mean âofferingsâ â
offerings for the spirits to welcome
them home.
32. Click on the picture below to view the
different items that traditionally make
up Dia de los Muertos altars.
33. Build your own âOfrendaâ
Click on the above picture to build your own altar.
After the curtain opens, find âBuild your own altarâ
34. Traditional Foods for âla ofrendaâ
Mole
⢠Traditional foods
associated with Day of
the Dead include mole,
tamales and atole.
Mole (Spanish
pronunciation: [Ëmole])(Mexican
Spanish, from Nahuatl
mulli or molli, "sauce" or "concoctionâ is
the generic name for a number
of sauces used iin Mexican cuisine, as
well as for dishes based on these sauces.
Mole is a chocolate based sauce made
with many herbs and spices, served with
chicken or turkey.
.
35. Tamales
⢠A tamale is a traditional
Latin American dish made
of masa (a starchy corn-
based dough, which is
steamed or boiled in a leaf
wrapper.
⢠The wrapping is discarded
before eating. Tamales can
themselves be filled with
meats, cheese, vegetables,
chilies or any preparation
according to taste, and both
the filling and the cooking
liquid may be seasoned.
36. Atole
⢠An ancient drink made
from corn meal and
water and flavored with
various fruits.
37. Hereâs some trivia on this holiday
Click on the picture to
learn some additional
Facts about this holiday.
39. Conclusion
⢠This WebQuest was designed to acquaint you
with the Mexican holiday of âdia de los
muertosâ. Share what you have learned with
your family and friends!