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Oral tradition

Oral tradition, or oral lore, is a form of human communication wherein knowledge, art, ideas and cultural material is received, preserved, and transmitted orally from one generation to another.[1][2][3] The transmission is through speech or song and may include folktales, ballads, chants, prose or poetry. In this way, it is possible for a society to transmit oral history, oral literature, oral law and other knowledge across generations without a writing system, or in parallel to a writing system. Religions such as Buddhism, Hinduism, Catholicism,[4] and Jainism, for example, have used an oral tradition, in parallel to a writing system, to transmit their canonical scriptures, rituals, hymns and mythologies from one generation to the next.[5][6][7]

A traditional Kyrgyz manaschi performing part of the Epic of Manas at a yurt camp in Karakol

Oral tradition is information, memories, and knowledge held in common by a group of people, over many generations; it is not the same as testimony or oral history.[1][8] In a general sense, "oral tradition" refers to the recall and transmission of a specific, preserved textual and cultural knowledge through vocal utterance.[2][9] As an academic discipline, it refers both to a set of objects of study and the method by which they are studied.[10]

The study of oral tradition is distinct from the academic discipline of oral history,[11] which is the recording of personal memories and histories of those who experienced historical eras or events.[12] Oral tradition is also distinct from the study of orality, defined as thought and its verbal expression in societies where the technologies of literacy (especially writing and print) are unfamiliar to most of the population.[13] A folklore is a type of oral tradition, but knowledge other than folklore has been orally transmitted and thus preserved in human history.[14][15]

History

According to John Foley, oral tradition has been an ancient human tradition found in "all corners of the world".[9] Modern archaeology has been unveiling evidence of the human efforts to preserve and transmit arts and knowledge that depended completely or partially on an oral tradition, across various cultures:

The Judeo-Christian Bible reveals its oral traditional roots; medieval European manuscripts are penned by performing scribes; geometric vases from archaic Greece mirror Homer's oral style. (...) Indeed, if these final decades of the millennium have taught us anything, it must be that oral tradition never was the other we accused it of being; it never was the primitive, preliminary technology of communication we thought it to be. Rather, if the whole truth is told, oral tradition stands out as the single most dominant communicative technology of our species as both a historical fact and, in many areas still, a contemporary reality.

— John Foley, Signs of Orality[9]

Africa

All Indigenous African societies use oral tradition to learn their origin and history, civic and religious duties, crafts and skills, as well as traditional myths and legends.[16] It is also a key socio-cultural component in the practice of their traditional spiritualities, as well as mainstream Abrahamic religions.[17] These African ethnic group also utilize oral tradition to develop and train the human intellect, and memory to retain information and sharpen imagination.[16]

Ancient Greece and Middle East

"All ancient Greek literature", states Steve Reece, "was to some degree oral in nature, and the earliest literature was completely so".[18] Homer's epic poetry, states Michael Gagarin, "was largely composed, performed and transmitted orally".[19] As folklores and legends were performed in front of distant audiences, the singers would substitute the names in the stories with local characters or rulers to give the stories a local flavor and thus connect with the audience, but making the historicity embedded in the oral tradition unreliable.[20] The lack of surviving texts about the Greek and Roman religious traditions have led scholars to presume that these were ritualistic and transmitted as oral traditions, but some scholars disagree that the complex rituals in the ancient Greek and Roman civilizations were an exclusive product of an oral tradition.[21] The Torah and other ancient Jewish literature, the Judeo-Christian Bible and texts of early centuries of Christianity are rooted in an oral tradition, and the term "People of the Book" is a medieval construct.[9][22][23] This is evidenced, for example, by the multiple scriptural statements by Paul admitting "previously remembered tradition which he received" orally.[24]

Asia

In Asia, the transmission of folklore, mythologies as well as scriptures in ancient India, in different Indian religions, was by oral tradition, preserved with precision with the help of elaborate mnemonic techniques:[25]

According to Goody, the Vedic texts likely involved both a written and oral tradition, calling it a "parallel products of a literate society".[5][7] Mostly recently, research shows that oral performance of (written) texts could be a philosophical activity in early China.[26]

It is a common knowledge in India that the primary Hindu books called Vedas are great example of Oral tradition. Pundits who memorized three Vedas were called Trivedis. Pundits who memorized four vedas were called Chaturvedis. By transferring knowledge from generation to generation Hindus protected their ancient Mantras in Vedas, which are basically Prose.

The early Buddhist texts are also generally believed to be of oral tradition, with the first by comparing inconsistencies in the transmitted versions of literature from various oral societies such as the Greek, Serbia and other cultures, then noting that the Vedic literature is too consistent and vast to have been composed and transmitted orally across generations, without being written down.[5]

Australia

Australian Aboriginal culture has thrived on oral traditions and oral histories passed down through thousands of years. In a study published in February 2020, new evidence showed that both Budj Bim and Tower Hill volcanoes erupted between 34,000 and 40,000 years ago.[27] Significantly, this is a "minimum age constraint for human presence in Victoria", and also could be interpreted as evidence for the oral histories of the Gunditjmara people, an Aboriginal Australian people of south-western Victoria, which tell of volcanic eruptions being some of the oldest oral traditions in existence.[28] A basalt stone axe found underneath volcanic ash in 1947 had already proven that humans inhabited the region before the eruption of Tower Hill.[27]

Ireland

An Irish seanchaí (plural: seanchaithe), meaning bearer of "old lore", was a traditional Irish language storyteller (the Scottish Gaelic equivalent being the seanchaidh, anglicised as shanachie). The job of a seanchaí was to serve the head of a lineage by passing information orally from one generation to the next about Irish folklore and history, particularly in medieval times.[29] Seán Ó hEinirí of Cill Ghallagáin, County Mayo was thought to be the last seanachaí and the last monolingual speaker of the Irish language.

Native American

Writing systems are not known to exist among Native North Americans before contact with Europeans except among some Mesoamerican cultures, and possibly the South American quipu and North American wampum, although those two are debatable. Oral storytelling traditions flourished in a context without the use of writing to record and preserve history, scientific knowledge, and social practices.[30] While some stories were told for amusement and leisure, most functioned as practical lessons from tribal experience applied to immediate moral, social, psychological, and environmental issues.[31] Stories fuse fictional, supernatural, or otherwise exaggerated characters and circumstances with real emotions and morals as a means of teaching. Plots often reflect real life situations and may be aimed at particular people known by the story's audience. In this way, social pressure could be exerted without directly causing embarrassment or social exclusion.[32] For example, rather than yelling, Inuit parents might deter their children from wandering too close to the water's edge by telling a story about a sea monster with a pouch for children within its reach.[33] One single story could provide dozens of lessons.[34] Stories were also used as a means to assess whether traditional cultural ideas and practices are effective in tackling contemporary circumstances or if they should be revised.[35]

Native American storytelling is a collaborative experience between storyteller and listeners. Native American tribes generally have not had professional tribal storytellers marked by social status.[36] Stories could and can be told by anyone, with each storyteller using their own vocal inflections, word choice, content, or form.[32] Storytellers not only draw upon their own memories, but also upon a collective or tribal memory extending beyond personal experience but nevertheless representing a shared reality.[37] Native languages have in some cases up to twenty words to describe physical features like rain or snow and can describe the spectra of human emotion in very precise ways, allowing storytellers to offer their own personalized take on a story based on their own lived experiences.[38][39] Fluidity in story deliverance allowed stories to be applied to different social circumstances according to the storyteller's objective at the time.[32] One's rendition of a story was often considered a response to another's rendition, with plot alterations suggesting alternative ways of applying traditional ideas to present conditions.[32] Listeners might have heard the story told many times, or even may have told the same story themselves.[32] This does not take away from a story's meaning, as curiosity about what happens next was less of a priority than hearing fresh perspectives on well-known themes and plots.[32] Elder storytellers generally were not concerned with discrepancies between their version of historical events and neighboring tribes' version of similar events, such as in origin stories.[38] Tribal stories are considered valid within the tribe's own frame of reference and tribal experience.[38] The 19th century Oglala Lakota tribal member Four Guns was known for his justification of the oral tradition and criticism of the written word.[40][41]

Stories are used to preserve and transmit both tribal history and environmental history, which are often closely linked.[38] Native oral traditions in the Pacific Northwest, for example, describe natural disasters like earthquakes and tsunamis. Various cultures from Vancouver Island and Washington have stories describing a physical struggle between a Thunderbird and a Whale.[42] One such story tells of the Thunderbird, which can create thunder by moving just a feather, piercing the Whale's flesh with its talons, causing the Whale to dive to the bottom of the ocean, bringing the Thunderbird with it. Another depicts the Thunderbird lifting the Whale from the Earth then dropping it back down. Regional similarities in themes and characters suggests that these stories mutually describe the lived experience of earthquakes and floods within tribal memory.[42] According to one story from the Suquamish Tribe, Agate Pass was created when an earthquake expanded the channel as a result of an underwater battle between a serpent and bird. Other stories in the region depict the formation of glacial valleys and moraines and the occurrence of landslides, with stories being used in at least one case to identify and date earthquakes that occurred in CE 900 and 1700.[42] Further examples include Arikara origin stories of emergence from an "underworld" of persistent darkness, which may represent the remembrance of life in the Arctic Circle during the last ice age, and stories involving a "deep crevice", which may refer to the Grand Canyon.[43] Despite such examples of agreement between geological and archeological records on one hand and Native oral records on the other, some scholars have cautioned against the historical validity of oral traditions because of their susceptibility to detail alteration over time and lack of precise dates.[44] The Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act considers oral traditions as a viable source of evidence for establishing the affiliation between cultural objects and Native Nations.[43]

Transmission

 
The legendary Finnish storyteller Väinämöinen with his kantele

Oral traditions face the challenge of accurate transmission and verifiability of the accurate version, particularly when the culture lacks written language or has limited access to writing tools. Oral cultures have employed various strategies that achieve this without writing. For example, a heavily rhythmic speech filled with mnemonic devices enhances memory and recall. A few useful mnemonic devices include alliteration, repetition, assonance, and proverbial sayings. In addition, the verse is often metrically composed with an exact number of syllables or morae – such as with Greek and Latin prosody and in Chandas found in Hindu and Buddhist texts.[45][46] The verses of the epic or text are typically designed wherein the long and short syllables are repeated by certain rules, so that if an error or inadvertent change is made, an internal examination of the verse reveals the problem.[45] Oral traditions can be passed on through plays and acting, as shown in modern-day Cameroon by the Graffis or Grasslanders who perform and deliver speeches to teach their history through oral tradition.[47] Such strategies facilitate transmission of information without a written intermediate, and they can also be applied to oral governance.[48]

Oral transmission of law

The law itself in oral cultures is enshrined in formulaic sayings, proverbs, which are not mere jurisprudential decorations, but themselves constitute the law. A judge in an oral culture is often called on to articulate sets of relevant proverbs out of which he can make equitable decisions in the cases under formal litigation before him.[48]

Rudyard Kipling's The Jungle Book provides an excellent demonstration of oral governance in the Law of the Jungle.[citation needed] Not only does grounding rules in oral proverbs allow for simple transmission and understanding, but it also legitimizes new rulings by allowing extrapolation. These stories, traditions, and proverbs are not static, but are often altered upon each transmission, barring any change to the overall meaning.[49] In this way, the rules that govern the people are modified by the whole and not authored by a single entity.

Indian religions

Ancient texts of Hinduism, Buddhism and Jainism were preserved and transmitted by an oral tradition.[50][51] For example, the śrutis of Hinduism called the Vedas, the oldest of which trace back to the second millennium BCE. Michael Witzel explains this oral tradition as follows:[6]

The Vedic texts were orally composed and transmitted, without the use of script, in an unbroken line of transmission from teacher to student that was formalized early on. This ensured an impeccable textual transmission superior to the classical texts of other cultures; it is, in fact, something like a tape-recording... Not just the actual words, but even the long-lost musical (tonal) accent (as in old Greek or in Japanese) has been preserved up to the present.

— Michael Witzel[6]

Ancient Indians developed techniques for listening, memorization and recitation of their knowledge, in schools called Gurukul, while maintaining exceptional accuracy of their knowledge across the generations.[52] Many forms of recitation or paths were designed to aid accuracy in recitation and the transmission of the Vedas and other knowledge texts from one generation to the next. All hymns in each Veda were recited in this way; for example, all 1,028 hymns with 10,600 verses of the Rigveda was preserved in this way; as were all other Vedas including the Principal Upanishads, as well as the Vedangas. Each text was recited in a number of ways, to ensure that the different methods of recitation acted as a cross check on the other. Pierre-Sylvain Filliozat summarizes this as:[53]

  • Samhita-patha: continuous recitation of Sanskrit words bound by the phonetic rules of euphonic combination;
  • Pada-patha: a recitation marked by a conscious pause after every word, and after any special grammatical codes embedded inside the text; this method suppresses euphonic combination and restores each word in its original intended form;
  • Krama-patha: a step-by-step recitation where euphonically combined words are paired successively and sequentially and then recited; for example, a hymn "word1 word2 word3 word4...", would be recited as "word1word2 word2word3 word3word4 ...."; this method to verify accuracy is credited to Vedic sages Gargya and Sakarya in the Hindu tradition and mentioned by the ancient Sanskrit grammarian Panini (dated to pre-Buddhism period);
  • Krama-patha modified: the same step-by-step recitation as above, but without euphonic-combinations (or free form of each word); this method to verify accuracy is credited to Vedic sages Babhravya and Galava in the Hindu tradition, and is also mentioned by the ancient Sanskrit grammarian Panini;
  • Jata-pāṭha, dhvaja-pāṭha and ghana-pāṭha are methods of recitation of a text and its oral transmission that developed after 5th century BCE, that is after the start of Buddhism and Jainism; these methods use more complicated rules of combination and were less used.

These extraordinary retention techniques guaranteed an accurate Śruti, fixed across the generations, not just in terms of unaltered word order but also in terms of sound.[52][54] That these methods have been effective, is testified to by the preservation of the most ancient Indian religious text, the Ṛgveda (c. 1500 BCE).[53]

Poetry of Homer

Research by Milman Parry and Albert Lord indicates that the verse of the Greek poet Homer has been passed down not by rote memorization but by "oral-formulaic composition". In this process, extempore composition is aided by use of stock phrases or "formulas" (expressions that are used regularly "under the same metrical conditions, to express a particular essential idea").[55] In the case of the work of Homer, formulas included eos rhododaktylos ("rosy fingered dawn") and oinops pontos ("winedark sea") which fit in a modular fashion into the poetic form (in this case six-colon Greek hexameter). Since the development of this theory, of oral-formulaic composition has been "found in many different time periods and many different cultures",[56] and according to another source (John Miles Foley) "touch[ed] on" over 100 "ancient, medieval and modern traditions."[57][58][59]

Islam

The most recent of the world's great religions,[60] Islam claims two major sources of divine revelation—the Quran and hadith—compiled in written form relatively shortly after being revealed:[61]

  • The Quran—meaning "recitation" in Arabic—is believed by Muslims to be God's revelation to the Islamic prophet Muhammad, delivered to him from 610 CE until his death in 632 CE. It is said to have been carefully compiled and edited into a standardized written form (known as the mushaf)[Note 1] about two decades after the last verse was revealed.
  • Hadith—meaning "narrative" or "report" in Arabic—is the record of the words, actions, and the silent approval, of Muhammad, and was transmitted by "oral preachers and storytellers" for around 150–250 years. Each hadith includes the isnad (chain of human transmitters who passed down the tradition before it was sorted according to accuracy, compiled, and committed to written form by a reputable scholar.[Note 2]

The oral milieu in which the sources were revealed,[63] and their oral form in general are important.[64] The Arab poetry that preceded the Quran and the hadith were orally transmitted.[63] Few Arabs were literate at the time and paper was not available in the Middle East.[65][66]

The written Quran is said to have been created in part through memorization by Muhammad's companions, and the decision to create a standard written work is said to have come after the death in battle (Yamama) of a large number of Muslims who had memorized the work.[64]

For centuries, copies of the Qurans were transcribed by hand, not printed, and their scarcity and expense made reciting the Quran from memory, not reading, the predominant mode of teaching it to others.[66] To this day the Quran is memorized by millions and its recitation can be heard throughout the Muslim world from recordings and mosque loudspeakers (during Ramadan).[66][67] Muslims state that some who teach memorization/recitation of the Quran constitute the end of an "un-broken chain" whose original teacher was Muhammad himself.[66] It has been argued that "the Qur'an's rhythmic style and eloquent expression make it easy to memorize," and was made so to facilitate the "preservation and remembrance" of the work.[68]

Islamic doctrine holds that from the time it was revealed to the present day, the Quran has not been altered,[Note 3] its continuity from divine revelation to its current written form insured by the large numbers of Muhammad's supporters who had reverently memorized the work, a careful compiling process and divine intervention.[64] (Muslim scholars agree that although scholars have worked hard to separate the corrupt and uncorrupted hadith, this other source of revelation is not nearly so free of corruption because of the hadith's great political and theological influence.)

At least two non-Muslim scholars (Alan Dundes and Andrew G. Bannister) have examined the possibility that the Quran was not just "recited orally, but actually composed orally".[70] Bannister postulates that some parts of the Quran—such as the seven re-tellings of the story of the Iblis and Adam, and the repeated phrases "which of the favours of your Lord will you deny?" in sura 55—make more sense addressed to listeners than readers.[63]

Banister, Dundes and other scholars (Shabbir Akhtar, Angelika Neuwirth, Islam Dayeh)[71] have also noted the large amount of "formulaic" phraseology in the Quran consistent with "oral-formulaic composition" mentioned above.[72] The most common formulas are the attributes of Allah—all-mighty, all-wise, all-knowing, all-high, etc.—often found as doublets at the end of a verse. Among the other repeated phrases[Note 4] are "Allah created the heavens and the earth" (found 19 times in the Quran).[73][74]

As much as one third of the Quran is made up of "oral formulas", according to Dundes' estimates.[75] Bannister, using a computer database of (the original Arabic) words of the Quran and of their "grammatical role, root, number, person, gender and so forth", estimates that depending on the length of the phrase searched, somewhere between 52% (three word phrases) and 23% (five word phrases) are oral formulas.[76] Dundes reckons his estimates confirm "that the Quran was orally transmitted from its very beginnings". Bannister believes his estimates "provide strong corroborative evidence that oral composition should be seriously considered as we reflect upon how the Qur'anic text was generated."[77]

Dundes argues oral-formulaic composition is consistent with "the cultural context of Arabic oral tradition", quoting researchers who have found poetry reciters in the Najd (the region next to where the Quran was revealed) using "a common store of themes, motives, stock images, phraseology and prosodical options",[78][79] and "a discursive and loosely structured" style "with no fixed beginning or end" and "no established sequence in which the episodes must follow".{{ref|group=Note|Scholar Saad Sowayan referring to the genre of "Saudi Arabian historical oral narrative genre called suwalif"[80][81]

Catholicism

The Catholic Church upholds that its teaching contained in its deposit of faith is transmitted not only through scripture, but as well as through sacred tradition.[4] The Second Vatican Council affirmed in Dei verbum that the teachings of Jesus Christ were initially passed on to early Christians by "the Apostles who, by their oral preaching, by example, and by observance handed on what they had received from the lips of Christ, from living with Him, and from what He did".[82] The Catholic Church asserts that this mode of transmission of the faith persists through current-day bishops, who by right of apostolic succession, have continued the oral passing of what had been revealed through Christ through their preaching as teachers.[83]

Study

Chronology

 
Filip Višnjić (1767–1834), Serbian blind guslar

The following overview draws upon Oral-Formulaic Theory and Research: An Introduction and Annotated Bibliography, (NY: Garland Publishing, 1985, 1986, 1989); additional material is summarized from the overlapping prefaces to the following volumes: The Theory of Oral Composition: History and Methodology, (Indiana University Press, 1988, 1992); Immanent Art: From Structure to Meaning in Traditional Oral Epic (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1991); The Singer of Tales in Performance (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1995) and Comparative Research on Oral Traditions: A Memorial for Milman Parry (Columbus, Ohio: Slavica Publishers, 1987). in the work of the Serb scholar Vuk Stefanović Karadžić (1787–1864), a contemporary and friend of the Brothers Grimm. Vuk pursued similar projects of "salvage folklore" (similar to rescue archaeology) in the cognate traditions of the South Slavic regions which would later be gathered into Yugoslavia, and with the same admixture of romantic and nationalistic interests (he considered all those speaking the Eastern Herzegovinian dialect as Serbs). Somewhat later, but as part of the same scholarly enterprise of nationalist studies in folklore,[84] the turcologist Vasily Radlov (1837–1918) would study the songs of the Kara-Kirghiz in what would later become the Soviet Union; Karadzic and Radloff would provide models for the work of Parry.

Walter Ong

In a separate development, the media theorist Marshall McLuhan (1911–1980) would begin to focus attention on the ways that communicative media shape the nature of the content conveyed.[85] He would serve as mentor to the Jesuit Walter Ong (1912–2003), whose interests in cultural history, psychology and rhetoric would result in Orality and Literacy (Methuen, 1980) and the important but less-known Fighting for Life: Contest, Sexuality and Consciousness (Cornell, 1981)[86] These two works articulated the contrasts between cultures defined by primary orality, writing, print, and the secondary orality of the electronic age.[87]

I style the morality of a culture totally untouched by any knowledge of writing or print, 'primary orality'. It is 'primary' by contrast with the 'secondary orality' of present-day high technology culture, in which a new orality is sustained by telephone, radio, television and other electronic devices that depend for their existence and functioning on writing and print. Today primary culture in the strict sense hardly exists, since every culture knows of writing and has some experience of its effects. Still, to varying degrees many cultures and sub-cultures, even in a high-technology ambiance, preserve much of the mind-set of primary orality.[88]

Ong's works also made possible an integrated theory of oral tradition which accounted for both production of content (the chief concern of Parry-Lord theory) and its reception.[87] This approach, like McLuhan's, kept the field open not just to the study of aesthetic culture but to the way physical and behavioral artifacts of oral societies are used to store, manage and transmit knowledge, so that oral tradition provides methods for investigation of cultural differences, other than the purely verbal, between oral and literate societies.

The most-often studied section of Orality and Literacy concerns the "psychodynamics of orality" This chapter seeks to define the fundamental characteristics of 'primary' orality and summarizes a series of descriptors (including but not limited to verbal aspects of culture) which might be used to index the relative orality or literacy of a given text or society.[89]

John Miles Foley

In advance of Ong's synthesis, John Miles Foley began a series of papers based on his own fieldwork on South Slavic oral genres, emphasizing the dynamics of performers and audiences.[90] Foley effectively consolidated oral tradition as an academic field [1] when he compiled Oral-Formulaic Theory and Research in 1985. The bibliography gives a summary of the progress scholars made in evaluating the oral tradition up to that point, and includes a list of all relevant scholarly articles relating to the theory of Oral-Formulaic Composition. He also both established both the journal Oral Tradition and founded the Center for Studies in Oral Tradition (1986) at the University of Missouri. Foley developed Oral Theory beyond the somewhat mechanistic notions presented in earlier versions of Oral-Formulaic Theory, by extending Ong's interest in cultural features of oral societies beyond the verbal, by drawing attention to the agency of the bard and by describing how oral traditions bear meaning.

The bibliography would establish a clear underlying methodology which accounted for the findings of scholars working in the separate Linguistics fields (primarily Ancient Greek, Anglo-Saxon and Serbo-Croatian). Perhaps more importantly, it would stimulate conversation among these specialties, so that a network of independent but allied investigations and investigators could be established.[91]

Foley's key works include The Theory of Oral Composition (1988);[92] Immanent Art (1991); Traditional Oral Epic: The Odyssey, Beowulf and the Serbo-Croatian Return-Song (1993); The Singer of Tales in Performance (1995); Teaching Oral Traditions (1998); How to Read an Oral Poem (2002). His Pathways Project (2005–2012) draws parallels between the media dynamics of oral traditions and the Internet.

Acceptance and further elaboration

The theory of oral tradition would undergo elaboration and development as it grew in acceptance.[93] While the number of formulas documented for various traditions proliferated,[94] the concept of the formula remained lexically bound. However, numerous innovations appeared, such as the "formulaic system"[95][Note 5] with structural "substitution slots" for syntactic, morphological and narrative necessity (as well as for artistic invention).[96] Sophisticated models such as Foley's "word-type placement rules" followed.[97] Higher levels of formulaic composition were defined over the years, such as "ring composition",[98] "responsion"[99] and the "type-scene" (also called a "theme" or "typical scene"[100]). Examples include the "Beasts of Battle"[101] and the "Cliffs of Death".[102] Some of these characteristic patterns of narrative details, (like "the arming sequence;"[103] "the hero on the beach";[104] "the traveler recognizes his goal")[105] would show evidence of global distribution.[106]

At the same time, the fairly rigid division between oral and literate was replaced by recognition of transitional and compartmentalized texts and societies, including models of diglossia (Brian Stock[107] Franz Bäuml,[108] and Eric Havelock).[109] Perhaps most importantly, the terms and concepts of "orality" and "literacy" came to be replaced with the more useful and apt "traditionality" and "textuality".[110] Very large units would be defined (The Indo-European Return Song)[111] and areas outside of military epic would come under investigation: women's song,[112] riddles[110] and other genres.

The methodology of oral tradition now conditions a large variety of studies, not only in folklore, literature and literacy, but in philosophy,[113] communication theory,[114] Semiotics,[115] and including a very broad and continually expanding variety of languages and ethnic groups,[116][117][118][119][120] and perhaps most conspicuously in biblical studies,[121] in which Werner Kelber has been especially prominent.[122] The annual bibliography is indexed by 100 areas, most of which are ethnolinguistic divisions.[123]

Present developments explore the implications of the theory for rhetoric[124] and composition,[125] interpersonal communication,[126] cross-cultural communication,[127] postcolonial studies,[128] rural community development,[129] popular culture[130] and film studies[131] and many other areas. The most significant areas of theoretical development at present may be the construction of systematic hermeneutics[132][133][134] and aesthetics[135][136] specific to oral traditions.

Criticism and debates

The theory of oral tradition encountered early resistance from scholars who perceived it as potentially supporting either one side or another in the controversy between what were known as "unitarians" and "analysts" – that is, scholars who believed Homer to have been a single, historical figure, and those who saw him as a conceptual "author function," a convenient name to assign to what was essentially a repertoire of traditional narrative.[137] A much more general dismissal of the theory and its implications simply described it as "unprovable"[138] Some scholars, mainly outside the field of oral tradition,[139][140][141] represent (either dismissively or with approval) this body of theoretical work as reducing the great epics to children's party games like "telephone" or "Chinese whispers". While games provide amusement by showing how messages distort content via uncontextualized transmission, Parry's supporters argue that the theory of oral tradition reveals how oral methods optimized the signal-to-noise ratio and thus improved the quality, stability and integrity of content transmission.[142]

There were disputes concerning particular findings of the theory. For example, those trying to support or refute Crowne's hypothesis found the "Hero on the Beach" formula in numerous Old English poems. Similarly, it was also discovered in other works of Germanic origin, Middle English poetry, and even an Icelandic prose saga. J.A. Dane, in an article[143] characterized as "polemics without rigor"[144] claimed that the appearance of the theme in Ancient Greek poetry, a tradition without known connection to the Germanic, invalidated the notion of "an autonomous theme in the baggage of an oral poet."

Within Homeric studies specifically, Lord's The Singer of Tales, which focused on problems and questions that arise in conjunction with applying oral-formulaic theory to problematic texts such as the Iliad, Odyssey, and even Beowulf, influenced nearly all of the articles written on Homer and oral-formulaic composition thereafter. However, in response to Lord, Geoffrey Kirk published The Songs of Homer, questioning Lord's extension of the oral-formulaic nature of Serbian and Croatian literature (the area from which the theory was first developed) to Homeric epic. Kirk argues that Homeric poems differ from those traditions in their "metrical strictness", "formular system[s]", and creativity. In other words, Kirk argued that Homeric poems were recited under a system that gave the reciter much more freedom to choose words and passages to get to the same end than the Serbo-Croatian poet, who was merely "reproductive".[145][146] Shortly thereafter, Eric Havelock's Preface to Plato revolutionized how scholars looked at Homeric epic by arguing not only that it was the product of an oral tradition, but also that the oral-formulas contained therein served as a way for ancient Greeks to preserve cultural knowledge across many different generations.[147] Adam Parry, in his 1966 work "Have we Homer's Iliad?", theorized the existence of the most fully developed oral poet to his time, a person who could (at his discretion) creatively and intellectually create nuanced characters in the context of the accepted, traditional story. In fact, he discounted the Serbo-Croatian tradition to an "unfortunate" extent, choosing to elevate the Greek model of oral-tradition above all others.[148][149] Lord reacted to Kirk's and Parry's essays with "Homer as Oral Poet", published in 1968, which reaffirmed Lord's belief in the relevance of Yugoslav poetry and its similarities to Homer and downplayed the intellectual and literary role of the reciters of Homeric epic.[150]

Many of the criticisms of the theory have been absorbed into the evolving field as useful refinements and modifications. For example, in what Foley called a "pivotal" contribution, Larry Benson introduced the concept of "written-formulaic" to describe the status of some Anglo-Saxon poetry which, while demonstrably written, contains evidence of oral influences, including heavy reliance on formulas and themes[151] A number of individual scholars in many areas continue to have misgivings about the applicability of the theory or the aptness of the South Slavic comparison,[152] and particularly what they regard as its implications for the creativity which may legitimately be attributed to the individual artist.[153] However, at present, there seems to be little systematic or theoretically coordinated challenge to the fundamental tenets of the theory; as Foley put it, ""there have been numerous suggestions for revisions or modifications of the theory, but the majority of controversies have generated further understanding.[154]

See also

References

Notes

  1. ^ "During Abu Bakr's khalifate, at Omar's suggestion, all the pieces of the Qur'an were compiled in one place. It was a miscellaneous collection at first, because then the revelations were coming in, people recorded them on anything that came to hand -- a sheet of parchment, a piece of leather, a stone, a bone, whatever. As khalifa, Omar began a sorting process. In his presence, each written verse was checked against the memorized version kept by the professional reciters whom this society regarded as the most reliable keepers of information. Scribes then recorded the authorized copy of each verse before witnesses, and these verse were organized into one comprehensive collection."[62]
  2. ^ Muhammad is thought to have died in 632 CE. The compilers of the six collections of Sunni hadith that have enjoyed near-universal acceptance as part of the official canon of Sunni Islam died (that is, must have stopped compiling hadith) between 795 CE and 915 CE.
  3. ^ An alternative belief is that some of what was revealed to Muhammad was later abrogated in some way by God. "The mushaf is incomplete, in the sense that not everything that was once revealed to Muhammad is to be found today in our mushaf. The Quran, however, is complete, in the sense that everything that God intends us to find in the mushaf we shall find there, for whatever God intended to include, He made sure to preserve..."[69]
  4. ^ Dundes lists of repeated phrases come from an English translation and so those Quranic phrases in the original Arabic sometimes have slight differences
  5. ^ Donald K. Fry responds to what was known, pejoratively, in Greek studies as the "hard Parryist" position, in which the formula was defined in terms of verbatim lexical repetition (see Rosenmyer, Thomas G. "The Formula in Early Greek Poetry" Arion 4 (1965):295-311). Fry's model proposes underlying generative templates which provide for variation and even artistic creativity within the constraints of strict metrical requirements and extempore composition-in-performance

Citations

  1. ^ a b Vansina, Jan: Oral Tradition as History (1985), reported statements from present generation which "specifies that the message must be oral statements spoken, sung or called out on musical instruments only"; "There must be transmission by word of mouth over at least a generation". He points out, "Our definition is a working definition for the use of historians. Sociologists, linguists or scholars of the verbal arts propose their own, which in, e.g., sociology, stresses common knowledge. In linguistics, features that distinguish the language from common dialogue (linguists), and in the verbal arts features of form and content that define art (folklorists)."
  2. ^ a b Oral Tradition 2016-08-09 at the Wayback Machine, Encyclopædia Britannica, John Miles Foley
  3. ^ Ki-Zerbo, Joseph: "Methodology and African Prehistory", 1990, UNESCO International Scientific Committee for the Drafting of a General History of Africa; James Currey Publishers, ISBN 0-85255-091-X, 9780852550915; see Ch. 7; "Oral tradition and its methodology" at pages 54-61; at page 54: "Oral tradition may be defined as being a testimony transmitted verbally from one generation to another. Its special characteristics are that it is verbal and the manner in which it is transmitted."
  4. ^ a b "Catechism of the Catholic Church - The Transmission of Divine Revelation". www.vatican.va. Retrieved 2020-01-15.
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  8. ^ Henige, David. "Oral, but Oral What? The Nomenclatures of Orality and Their Implications" Oral Tradition, 3/1-2 (1988): 229-38. p 232; Henige cites Jan Vansina (1985). Oral tradition as history. Madison, Wisconsin: University of Wisconsin Press
  9. ^ a b c d John Foley (1999). E. Anne MacKay (ed.). Signs of Orality. BRILL Academic. pp. 1–2. ISBN 978-9004112735.
  10. ^ Dundes, Alan, "Editor's Introduction" to The Theory of Oral Composition, John Miles Foley. Bloomington, IUP, 1988, pp. ix-xii
  11. ^ Henige, David. "Oral, but Oral What? The Nomenclatures of Orality and Their Implications" Oral Tradition, 3/1-2 (1988): 229-38. p 232; Henige cites Jan Vansina (1985). Oral tradition as history. Madison, Wisconsin: University of Wisconsin Press
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  147. ^ Foley, John M. Oral-Formulaic Theory and Research: An Introduction and Annotated Bibliography. New York: Garland Publishing, Inc, 1985. p. 36.
  148. ^ Foley, John M. Oral-Formulaic Theory and Research: An Introduction and Annotated Bibliography. New York: Garland Publishing, Inc, 1985. pp. 36, 505.
  149. ^ Parry, Adam. "Have we Homer's Iliad?"Yale Classical Studies.20 (1966), pp.. 177-216.
  150. ^ Foley, John M. Oral-Formulaic Theory and Research: An Introduction and Annotated Bibliography. New York: Garland Publishing, Inc, 1985. pp. 40, 406.
  151. ^ Foley, John M. Oral-Formulaic Theory and Research: An Introduction and Annotated Bibliography. New York: Garland Publishing, Inc. 1985. p. 42.; Foley cites "The Literary Character of Anglo-Saxon Formulaic Poetry" Publications of the Modern Language Association 81 (1966):, 334-41
  152. ^ George E. Dimock. "From Homer to Novi Pazar and B ack." Arion, 2, iv:40-57. Reacts against the Parry-Lord hypothesis of an oral Homer, claiming that, although Lord demonstrated that the oral poet thinks in verse and offered many explanations of the various facets of the Homeric Question by recourse to the Yugoslav analogy, the difference between Homer and other, literate poets is one of degree rather than kind. Wants to rescue Homer's art from what he sees as the dangers inherent in the oral theory model.
  153. ^ Perhaps the most prominent and steadfast opponent of oral traditional theory on these grounds was Arthur Brodeur, in, e.g., The Art of Beowulf. Berkeley: University of California Press. 3rd printing 1969; "A Study of Diction and Style in Three Anglo-Saxon Narrative Poems." In Nordica et Anglica. Ed. Allan H. Orrick. The Hague: Mouton. pp. 97-114; "Beowulf: One Poem or Three?" In Medieval Literature and Folklore Studies in Honor of Francis Lee Utley. Ed. Jerome Mandel and Bruce A. Rosenberg. New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press. pp. 3-26.
  154. ^ Foley, John Miles. The Theory of Oral Composition: History and Methodology. Bloomington:IUP, 1988." p.93

Bibliography

  • Bannister, Andrew G. "Retelling the Tale: A Computerised Oral-Formulaic Analysis of the Qur'an. Presented at the 2014 International Qur'an Studies Association Meeting in San Diego". academia.edu. Retrieved 20 May 2019.
  • Dundes, Alan (2003). Fables of the Ancients?: Folklore in the Qur'an. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. ISBN 9780585466774. Retrieved 2 May 2019.
  • Foley, John Miles. Oral Formulaic Theory and Research: An Introduction and Annotated Bibliography. NY: Garland, 1985
  • Foley, John Miles. The Theory of Oral Composition. Bloomington: IUP, 1991
  • Wong, Peter T. K. (2022). "The Soundscape of the Huainanzi 淮南子: Poetry, Performance, Philosophy, and Praxis in Early China". Early China. 45: 1–25. doi:10.1017/eac.2022.6

External links

  • Folkatles from around the world
  • The Milman Parry Collection of Oral Literature Online
  • Oral Tradition Journal
  • The World Oral Literature Project
  • Dédalo Project. Open Software Platform for Management of Intangible Cultural Heritage and Oral History
  • Archive of Turkish Oral Narrative at Texas Tech University

oral, tradition, this, article, about, oral, tradition, general, gospel, tradition, christianity, oral, gospel, traditions, journal, oral, tradition, journal, further, information, literature, oral, literature, oral, literature, oral, lore, form, human, commun. This article is about oral tradition in general For the gospel tradition in Christianity see Oral gospel traditions For the journal see Oral Tradition journal Further information Literature Oral literature and Oral literature Oral tradition or oral lore is a form of human communication wherein knowledge art ideas and cultural material is received preserved and transmitted orally from one generation to another 1 2 3 The transmission is through speech or song and may include folktales ballads chants prose or poetry In this way it is possible for a society to transmit oral history oral literature oral law and other knowledge across generations without a writing system or in parallel to a writing system Religions such as Buddhism Hinduism Catholicism 4 and Jainism for example have used an oral tradition in parallel to a writing system to transmit their canonical scriptures rituals hymns and mythologies from one generation to the next 5 6 7 A traditional Kyrgyz manaschi performing part of the Epic of Manas at a yurt camp in Karakol Oral tradition is information memories and knowledge held in common by a group of people over many generations it is not the same as testimony or oral history 1 8 In a general sense oral tradition refers to the recall and transmission of a specific preserved textual and cultural knowledge through vocal utterance 2 9 As an academic discipline it refers both to a set of objects of study and the method by which they are studied 10 The study of oral tradition is distinct from the academic discipline of oral history 11 which is the recording of personal memories and histories of those who experienced historical eras or events 12 Oral tradition is also distinct from the study of orality defined as thought and its verbal expression in societies where the technologies of literacy especially writing and print are unfamiliar to most of the population 13 A folklore is a type of oral tradition but knowledge other than folklore has been orally transmitted and thus preserved in human history 14 15 Contents 1 History 1 1 Africa 1 2 Ancient Greece and Middle East 1 3 Asia 1 4 Australia 1 5 Ireland 1 6 Native American 2 Transmission 2 1 Oral transmission of law 2 2 Indian religions 2 3 Poetry of Homer 2 4 Islam 2 5 Catholicism 3 Study 3 1 Chronology 3 2 Walter Ong 3 3 John Miles Foley 3 4 Acceptance and further elaboration 4 Criticism and debates 5 See also 6 References 6 1 Notes 6 2 Citations 6 3 Bibliography 7 External linksHistory EditAccording to John Foley oral tradition has been an ancient human tradition found in all corners of the world 9 Modern archaeology has been unveiling evidence of the human efforts to preserve and transmit arts and knowledge that depended completely or partially on an oral tradition across various cultures The Judeo Christian Bible reveals its oral traditional roots medieval European manuscripts are penned by performing scribes geometric vases from archaic Greece mirror Homer s oral style Indeed if these final decades of the millennium have taught us anything it must be that oral tradition never was the other we accused it of being it never was the primitive preliminary technology of communication we thought it to be Rather if the whole truth is told oral tradition stands out as the single most dominant communicative technology of our species as both a historical fact and in many areas still a contemporary reality John Foley Signs of Orality 9 Africa Edit All Indigenous African societies use oral tradition to learn their origin and history civic and religious duties crafts and skills as well as traditional myths and legends 16 It is also a key socio cultural component in the practice of their traditional spiritualities as well as mainstream Abrahamic religions 17 These African ethnic group also utilize oral tradition to develop and train the human intellect and memory to retain information and sharpen imagination 16 Ancient Greece and Middle East Edit All ancient Greek literature states Steve Reece was to some degree oral in nature and the earliest literature was completely so 18 Homer s epic poetry states Michael Gagarin was largely composed performed and transmitted orally 19 As folklores and legends were performed in front of distant audiences the singers would substitute the names in the stories with local characters or rulers to give the stories a local flavor and thus connect with the audience but making the historicity embedded in the oral tradition unreliable 20 The lack of surviving texts about the Greek and Roman religious traditions have led scholars to presume that these were ritualistic and transmitted as oral traditions but some scholars disagree that the complex rituals in the ancient Greek and Roman civilizations were an exclusive product of an oral tradition 21 The Torah and other ancient Jewish literature the Judeo Christian Bible and texts of early centuries of Christianity are rooted in an oral tradition and the term People of the Book is a medieval construct 9 22 23 This is evidenced for example by the multiple scriptural statements by Paul admitting previously remembered tradition which he received orally 24 Asia Edit In Asia the transmission of folklore mythologies as well as scriptures in ancient India in different Indian religions was by oral tradition preserved with precision with the help of elaborate mnemonic techniques 25 According to Goody the Vedic texts likely involved both a written and oral tradition calling it a parallel products of a literate society 5 7 Mostly recently research shows that oral performance of written texts could be a philosophical activity in early China 26 It is a common knowledge in India that the primary Hindu books called Vedas are great example of Oral tradition Pundits who memorized three Vedas were called Trivedis Pundits who memorized four vedas were called Chaturvedis By transferring knowledge from generation to generation Hindus protected their ancient Mantras in Vedas which are basically Prose The early Buddhist texts are also generally believed to be of oral tradition with the first by comparing inconsistencies in the transmitted versions of literature from various oral societies such as the Greek Serbia and other cultures then noting that the Vedic literature is too consistent and vast to have been composed and transmitted orally across generations without being written down 5 Australia Edit Australian Aboriginal culture has thrived on oral traditions and oral histories passed down through thousands of years In a study published in February 2020 new evidence showed that both Budj Bim and Tower Hill volcanoes erupted between 34 000 and 40 000 years ago 27 Significantly this is a minimum age constraint for human presence in Victoria and also could be interpreted as evidence for the oral histories of the Gunditjmara people an Aboriginal Australian people of south western Victoria which tell of volcanic eruptions being some of the oldest oral traditions in existence 28 A basalt stone axe found underneath volcanic ash in 1947 had already proven that humans inhabited the region before the eruption of Tower Hill 27 Ireland Edit An Irish seanchai plural seanchaithe meaning bearer of old lore was a traditional Irish language storyteller the Scottish Gaelic equivalent being the seanchaidh anglicised as shanachie The job of a seanchai was to serve the head of a lineage by passing information orally from one generation to the next about Irish folklore and history particularly in medieval times 29 Sean o hEiniri of Cill Ghallagain County Mayo was thought to be the last seanachai and the last monolingual speaker of the Irish language Native American Edit Writing systems are not known to exist among Native North Americans before contact with Europeans except among some Mesoamerican cultures and possibly the South American quipu and North American wampum although those two are debatable Oral storytelling traditions flourished in a context without the use of writing to record and preserve history scientific knowledge and social practices 30 While some stories were told for amusement and leisure most functioned as practical lessons from tribal experience applied to immediate moral social psychological and environmental issues 31 Stories fuse fictional supernatural or otherwise exaggerated characters and circumstances with real emotions and morals as a means of teaching Plots often reflect real life situations and may be aimed at particular people known by the story s audience In this way social pressure could be exerted without directly causing embarrassment or social exclusion 32 For example rather than yelling Inuit parents might deter their children from wandering too close to the water s edge by telling a story about a sea monster with a pouch for children within its reach 33 One single story could provide dozens of lessons 34 Stories were also used as a means to assess whether traditional cultural ideas and practices are effective in tackling contemporary circumstances or if they should be revised 35 Native American storytelling is a collaborative experience between storyteller and listeners Native American tribes generally have not had professional tribal storytellers marked by social status 36 Stories could and can be told by anyone with each storyteller using their own vocal inflections word choice content or form 32 Storytellers not only draw upon their own memories but also upon a collective or tribal memory extending beyond personal experience but nevertheless representing a shared reality 37 Native languages have in some cases up to twenty words to describe physical features like rain or snow and can describe the spectra of human emotion in very precise ways allowing storytellers to offer their own personalized take on a story based on their own lived experiences 38 39 Fluidity in story deliverance allowed stories to be applied to different social circumstances according to the storyteller s objective at the time 32 One s rendition of a story was often considered a response to another s rendition with plot alterations suggesting alternative ways of applying traditional ideas to present conditions 32 Listeners might have heard the story told many times or even may have told the same story themselves 32 This does not take away from a story s meaning as curiosity about what happens next was less of a priority than hearing fresh perspectives on well known themes and plots 32 Elder storytellers generally were not concerned with discrepancies between their version of historical events and neighboring tribes version of similar events such as in origin stories 38 Tribal stories are considered valid within the tribe s own frame of reference and tribal experience 38 The 19th century Oglala Lakota tribal member Four Guns was known for his justification of the oral tradition and criticism of the written word 40 41 Stories are used to preserve and transmit both tribal history and environmental history which are often closely linked 38 Native oral traditions in the Pacific Northwest for example describe natural disasters like earthquakes and tsunamis Various cultures from Vancouver Island and Washington have stories describing a physical struggle between a Thunderbird and a Whale 42 One such story tells of the Thunderbird which can create thunder by moving just a feather piercing the Whale s flesh with its talons causing the Whale to dive to the bottom of the ocean bringing the Thunderbird with it Another depicts the Thunderbird lifting the Whale from the Earth then dropping it back down Regional similarities in themes and characters suggests that these stories mutually describe the lived experience of earthquakes and floods within tribal memory 42 According to one story from the Suquamish Tribe Agate Pass was created when an earthquake expanded the channel as a result of an underwater battle between a serpent and bird Other stories in the region depict the formation of glacial valleys and moraines and the occurrence of landslides with stories being used in at least one case to identify and date earthquakes that occurred in CE 900 and 1700 42 Further examples include Arikara origin stories of emergence from an underworld of persistent darkness which may represent the remembrance of life in the Arctic Circle during the last ice age and stories involving a deep crevice which may refer to the Grand Canyon 43 Despite such examples of agreement between geological and archeological records on one hand and Native oral records on the other some scholars have cautioned against the historical validity of oral traditions because of their susceptibility to detail alteration over time and lack of precise dates 44 The Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act considers oral traditions as a viable source of evidence for establishing the affiliation between cultural objects and Native Nations 43 Transmission Edit The legendary Finnish storyteller Vainamoinen with his kantele Oral traditions face the challenge of accurate transmission and verifiability of the accurate version particularly when the culture lacks written language or has limited access to writing tools Oral cultures have employed various strategies that achieve this without writing For example a heavily rhythmic speech filled with mnemonic devices enhances memory and recall A few useful mnemonic devices include alliteration repetition assonance and proverbial sayings In addition the verse is often metrically composed with an exact number of syllables or morae such as with Greek and Latin prosody and in Chandas found in Hindu and Buddhist texts 45 46 The verses of the epic or text are typically designed wherein the long and short syllables are repeated by certain rules so that if an error or inadvertent change is made an internal examination of the verse reveals the problem 45 Oral traditions can be passed on through plays and acting as shown in modern day Cameroon by the Graffis or Grasslanders who perform and deliver speeches to teach their history through oral tradition 47 Such strategies facilitate transmission of information without a written intermediate and they can also be applied to oral governance 48 Oral transmission of law Edit Main article Oral law The law itself in oral cultures is enshrined in formulaic sayings proverbs which are not mere jurisprudential decorations but themselves constitute the law A judge in an oral culture is often called on to articulate sets of relevant proverbs out of which he can make equitable decisions in the cases under formal litigation before him 48 Rudyard Kipling s The Jungle Book provides an excellent demonstration of oral governance in the Law of the Jungle citation needed Not only does grounding rules in oral proverbs allow for simple transmission and understanding but it also legitimizes new rulings by allowing extrapolation These stories traditions and proverbs are not static but are often altered upon each transmission barring any change to the overall meaning 49 In this way the rules that govern the people are modified by the whole and not authored by a single entity Indian religions Edit Ancient texts of Hinduism Buddhism and Jainism were preserved and transmitted by an oral tradition 50 51 For example the srutis of Hinduism called the Vedas the oldest of which trace back to the second millennium BCE Michael Witzel explains this oral tradition as follows 6 The Vedic texts were orally composed and transmitted without the use of script in an unbroken line of transmission from teacher to student that was formalized early on This ensured an impeccable textual transmission superior to the classical texts of other cultures it is in fact something like a tape recording Not just the actual words but even the long lost musical tonal accent as in old Greek or in Japanese has been preserved up to the present Michael Witzel 6 Ancient Indians developed techniques for listening memorization and recitation of their knowledge in schools called Gurukul while maintaining exceptional accuracy of their knowledge across the generations 52 Many forms of recitation or paths were designed to aid accuracy in recitation and the transmission of the Vedas and other knowledge texts from one generation to the next All hymns in each Veda were recited in this way for example all 1 028 hymns with 10 600 verses of the Rigveda was preserved in this way as were all other Vedas including the Principal Upanishads as well as the Vedangas Each text was recited in a number of ways to ensure that the different methods of recitation acted as a cross check on the other Pierre Sylvain Filliozat summarizes this as 53 Samhita patha continuous recitation of Sanskrit words bound by the phonetic rules of euphonic combination Pada patha a recitation marked by a conscious pause after every word and after any special grammatical codes embedded inside the text this method suppresses euphonic combination and restores each word in its original intended form Krama patha a step by step recitation where euphonically combined words are paired successively and sequentially and then recited for example a hymn word1 word2 word3 word4 would be recited as word1word2 word2word3 word3word4 this method to verify accuracy is credited to Vedic sages Gargya and Sakarya in the Hindu tradition and mentioned by the ancient Sanskrit grammarian Panini dated to pre Buddhism period Krama patha modified the same step by step recitation as above but without euphonic combinations or free form of each word this method to verify accuracy is credited to Vedic sages Babhravya and Galava in the Hindu tradition and is also mentioned by the ancient Sanskrit grammarian Panini Jata paṭha dhvaja paṭha and ghana paṭha are methods of recitation of a text and its oral transmission that developed after 5th century BCE that is after the start of Buddhism and Jainism these methods use more complicated rules of combination and were less used These extraordinary retention techniques guaranteed an accurate Sruti fixed across the generations not just in terms of unaltered word order but also in terms of sound 52 54 That these methods have been effective is testified to by the preservation of the most ancient Indian religious text the Ṛgveda c 1500 BCE 53 Poetry of Homer Edit Further information Oral formulaic composition Research by Milman Parry and Albert Lord indicates that the verse of the Greek poet Homer has been passed down not by rote memorization but by oral formulaic composition In this process extempore composition is aided by use of stock phrases or formulas expressions that are used regularly under the same metrical conditions to express a particular essential idea 55 In the case of the work of Homer formulas included eos rhododaktylos rosy fingered dawn and oinops pontos winedark sea which fit in a modular fashion into the poetic form in this case six colon Greek hexameter Since the development of this theory of oral formulaic composition has been found in many different time periods and many different cultures 56 and according to another source John Miles Foley touch ed on over 100 ancient medieval and modern traditions 57 58 59 Islam Edit The most recent of the world s great religions 60 Islam claims two major sources of divine revelation the Quran and hadith compiled in written form relatively shortly after being revealed 61 The Quran meaning recitation in Arabic is believed by Muslims to be God s revelation to the Islamic prophet Muhammad delivered to him from 610 CE until his death in 632 CE It is said to have been carefully compiled and edited into a standardized written form known as the mushaf Note 1 about two decades after the last verse was revealed Hadith meaning narrative or report in Arabic is the record of the words actions and the silent approval of Muhammad and was transmitted by oral preachers and storytellers for around 150 250 years Each hadith includes the isnad chain of human transmitters who passed down the tradition before it was sorted according to accuracy compiled and committed to written form by a reputable scholar Note 2 The oral milieu in which the sources were revealed 63 and their oral form in general are important 64 The Arab poetry that preceded the Quran and the hadith were orally transmitted 63 Few Arabs were literate at the time and paper was not available in the Middle East 65 66 The written Quran is said to have been created in part through memorization by Muhammad s companions and the decision to create a standard written work is said to have come after the death in battle Yamama of a large number of Muslims who had memorized the work 64 For centuries copies of the Qurans were transcribed by hand not printed and their scarcity and expense made reciting the Quran from memory not reading the predominant mode of teaching it to others 66 To this day the Quran is memorized by millions and its recitation can be heard throughout the Muslim world from recordings and mosque loudspeakers during Ramadan 66 67 Muslims state that some who teach memorization recitation of the Quran constitute the end of an un broken chain whose original teacher was Muhammad himself 66 It has been argued that the Qur an s rhythmic style and eloquent expression make it easy to memorize and was made so to facilitate the preservation and remembrance of the work 68 Islamic doctrine holds that from the time it was revealed to the present day the Quran has not been altered Note 3 its continuity from divine revelation to its current written form insured by the large numbers of Muhammad s supporters who had reverently memorized the work a careful compiling process and divine intervention 64 Muslim scholars agree that although scholars have worked hard to separate the corrupt and uncorrupted hadith this other source of revelation is not nearly so free of corruption because of the hadith s great political and theological influence At least two non Muslim scholars Alan Dundes and Andrew G Bannister have examined the possibility that the Quran was not just recited orally but actually composed orally 70 Bannister postulates that some parts of the Quran such as the seven re tellings of the story of the Iblis and Adam and the repeated phrases which of the favours of your Lord will you deny in sura 55 make more sense addressed to listeners than readers 63 Banister Dundes and other scholars Shabbir Akhtar Angelika Neuwirth Islam Dayeh 71 have also noted the large amount of formulaic phraseology in the Quran consistent with oral formulaic composition mentioned above 72 The most common formulas are the attributes of Allah all mighty all wise all knowing all high etc often found as doublets at the end of a verse Among the other repeated phrases Note 4 are Allah created the heavens and the earth found 19 times in the Quran 73 74 As much as one third of the Quran is made up of oral formulas according to Dundes estimates 75 Bannister using a computer database of the original Arabic words of the Quran and of their grammatical role root number person gender and so forth estimates that depending on the length of the phrase searched somewhere between 52 three word phrases and 23 five word phrases are oral formulas 76 Dundes reckons his estimates confirm that the Quran was orally transmitted from its very beginnings Bannister believes his estimates provide strong corroborative evidence that oral composition should be seriously considered as we reflect upon how the Qur anic text was generated 77 Dundes argues oral formulaic composition is consistent with the cultural context of Arabic oral tradition quoting researchers who have found poetry reciters in the Najd the region next to where the Quran was revealed using a common store of themes motives stock images phraseology and prosodical options 78 79 and a discursive and loosely structured style with no fixed beginning or end and no established sequence in which the episodes must follow ref group Note Scholar Saad Sowayan referring to the genre of Saudi Arabian historical oral narrative genre called suwalif 80 81 Catholicism Edit The Catholic Church upholds that its teaching contained in its deposit of faith is transmitted not only through scripture but as well as through sacred tradition 4 The Second Vatican Council affirmed in Dei verbum that the teachings of Jesus Christ were initially passed on to early Christians by the Apostles who by their oral preaching by example and by observance handed on what they had received from the lips of Christ from living with Him and from what He did 82 The Catholic Church asserts that this mode of transmission of the faith persists through current day bishops who by right of apostolic succession have continued the oral passing of what had been revealed through Christ through their preaching as teachers 83 Study EditChronology Edit Filip Visnjic 1767 1834 Serbian blind guslar The following overview draws upon Oral Formulaic Theory and Research An Introduction and Annotated Bibliography NY Garland Publishing 1985 1986 1989 additional material is summarized from the overlapping prefaces to the following volumes The Theory of Oral Composition History and Methodology Indiana University Press 1988 1992 Immanent Art From Structure to Meaning in Traditional Oral Epic Bloomington Indiana University Press 1991 The Singer of Tales in Performance Bloomington Indiana University Press 1995 and Comparative Research on Oral Traditions A Memorial for Milman Parry Columbus Ohio Slavica Publishers 1987 in the work of the Serb scholar Vuk Stefanovic Karadzic 1787 1864 a contemporary and friend of the Brothers Grimm Vuk pursued similar projects of salvage folklore similar to rescue archaeology in the cognate traditions of the South Slavic regions which would later be gathered into Yugoslavia and with the same admixture of romantic and nationalistic interests he considered all those speaking the Eastern Herzegovinian dialect as Serbs Somewhat later but as part of the same scholarly enterprise of nationalist studies in folklore 84 the turcologist Vasily Radlov 1837 1918 would study the songs of the Kara Kirghiz in what would later become the Soviet Union Karadzic and Radloff would provide models for the work of Parry Walter Ong Edit In a separate development the media theorist Marshall McLuhan 1911 1980 would begin to focus attention on the ways that communicative media shape the nature of the content conveyed 85 He would serve as mentor to the Jesuit Walter Ong 1912 2003 whose interests in cultural history psychology and rhetoric would result in Orality and Literacy Methuen 1980 and the important but less known Fighting for Life Contest Sexuality and Consciousness Cornell 1981 86 These two works articulated the contrasts between cultures defined by primary orality writing print and the secondary orality of the electronic age 87 I style the morality of a culture totally untouched by any knowledge of writing or print primary orality It is primary by contrast with the secondary orality of present day high technology culture in which a new orality is sustained by telephone radio television and other electronic devices that depend for their existence and functioning on writing and print Today primary culture in the strict sense hardly exists since every culture knows of writing and has some experience of its effects Still to varying degrees many cultures and sub cultures even in a high technology ambiance preserve much of the mind set of primary orality 88 Ong s works also made possible an integrated theory of oral tradition which accounted for both production of content the chief concern of Parry Lord theory and its reception 87 This approach like McLuhan s kept the field open not just to the study of aesthetic culture but to the way physical and behavioral artifacts of oral societies are used to store manage and transmit knowledge so that oral tradition provides methods for investigation of cultural differences other than the purely verbal between oral and literate societies The most often studied section of Orality and Literacy concerns the psychodynamics of orality This chapter seeks to define the fundamental characteristics of primary orality and summarizes a series of descriptors including but not limited to verbal aspects of culture which might be used to index the relative orality or literacy of a given text or society 89 John Miles Foley Edit In advance of Ong s synthesis John Miles Foley began a series of papers based on his own fieldwork on South Slavic oral genres emphasizing the dynamics of performers and audiences 90 Foley effectively consolidated oral tradition as an academic field 1 when he compiled Oral Formulaic Theory and Research in 1985 The bibliography gives a summary of the progress scholars made in evaluating the oral tradition up to that point and includes a list of all relevant scholarly articles relating to the theory of Oral Formulaic Composition He also both established both the journal Oral Tradition and founded the Center for Studies in Oral Tradition 1986 at the University of Missouri Foley developed Oral Theory beyond the somewhat mechanistic notions presented in earlier versions of Oral Formulaic Theory by extending Ong s interest in cultural features of oral societies beyond the verbal by drawing attention to the agency of the bard and by describing how oral traditions bear meaning The bibliography would establish a clear underlying methodology which accounted for the findings of scholars working in the separate Linguistics fields primarily Ancient Greek Anglo Saxon and Serbo Croatian Perhaps more importantly it would stimulate conversation among these specialties so that a network of independent but allied investigations and investigators could be established 91 Foley s key works include The Theory of Oral Composition 1988 92 Immanent Art 1991 Traditional Oral Epic The Odyssey Beowulf and the Serbo Croatian Return Song 1993 The Singer of Tales in Performance 1995 Teaching Oral Traditions 1998 How to Read an Oral Poem 2002 His Pathways Project 2005 2012 draws parallels between the media dynamics of oral traditions and the Internet Acceptance and further elaboration Edit The theory of oral tradition would undergo elaboration and development as it grew in acceptance 93 While the number of formulas documented for various traditions proliferated 94 the concept of the formula remained lexically bound However numerous innovations appeared such as the formulaic system 95 Note 5 with structural substitution slots for syntactic morphological and narrative necessity as well as for artistic invention 96 Sophisticated models such as Foley s word type placement rules followed 97 Higher levels of formulaic composition were defined over the years such as ring composition 98 responsion 99 and the type scene also called a theme or typical scene 100 Examples include the Beasts of Battle 101 and the Cliffs of Death 102 Some of these characteristic patterns of narrative details like the arming sequence 103 the hero on the beach 104 the traveler recognizes his goal 105 would show evidence of global distribution 106 At the same time the fairly rigid division between oral and literate was replaced by recognition of transitional and compartmentalized texts and societies including models of diglossia Brian Stock 107 Franz Bauml 108 and Eric Havelock 109 Perhaps most importantly the terms and concepts of orality and literacy came to be replaced with the more useful and apt traditionality and textuality 110 Very large units would be defined The Indo European Return Song 111 and areas outside of military epic would come under investigation women s song 112 riddles 110 and other genres The methodology of oral tradition now conditions a large variety of studies not only in folklore literature and literacy but in philosophy 113 communication theory 114 Semiotics 115 and including a very broad and continually expanding variety of languages and ethnic groups 116 117 118 119 120 and perhaps most conspicuously in biblical studies 121 in which Werner Kelber has been especially prominent 122 The annual bibliography is indexed by 100 areas most of which are ethnolinguistic divisions 123 Present developments explore the implications of the theory for rhetoric 124 and composition 125 interpersonal communication 126 cross cultural communication 127 postcolonial studies 128 rural community development 129 popular culture 130 and film studies 131 and many other areas The most significant areas of theoretical development at present may be the construction of systematic hermeneutics 132 133 134 and aesthetics 135 136 specific to oral traditions Criticism and debates EditThe theory of oral tradition encountered early resistance from scholars who perceived it as potentially supporting either one side or another in the controversy between what were known as unitarians and analysts that is scholars who believed Homer to have been a single historical figure and those who saw him as a conceptual author function a convenient name to assign to what was essentially a repertoire of traditional narrative 137 A much more general dismissal of the theory and its implications simply described it as unprovable 138 Some scholars mainly outside the field of oral tradition 139 140 141 represent either dismissively or with approval this body of theoretical work as reducing the great epics to children s party games like telephone or Chinese whispers While games provide amusement by showing how messages distort content via uncontextualized transmission Parry s supporters argue that the theory of oral tradition reveals how oral methods optimized the signal to noise ratio and thus improved the quality stability and integrity of content transmission 142 There were disputes concerning particular findings of the theory For example those trying to support or refute Crowne s hypothesis found the Hero on the Beach formula in numerous Old English poems Similarly it was also discovered in other works of Germanic origin Middle English poetry and even an Icelandic prose saga J A Dane in an article 143 characterized as polemics without rigor 144 claimed that the appearance of the theme in Ancient Greek poetry a tradition without known connection to the Germanic invalidated the notion of an autonomous theme in the baggage of an oral poet Within Homeric studies specifically Lord s The Singer of Tales which focused on problems and questions that arise in conjunction with applying oral formulaic theory to problematic texts such as the Iliad Odyssey and even Beowulf influenced nearly all of the articles written on Homer and oral formulaic composition thereafter However in response to Lord Geoffrey Kirk published The Songs of Homer questioning Lord s extension of the oral formulaic nature of Serbian and Croatian literature the area from which the theory was first developed to Homeric epic Kirk argues that Homeric poems differ from those traditions in their metrical strictness formular system s and creativity In other words Kirk argued that Homeric poems were recited under a system that gave the reciter much more freedom to choose words and passages to get to the same end than the Serbo Croatian poet who was merely reproductive 145 146 Shortly thereafter Eric Havelock s Preface to Plato revolutionized how scholars looked at Homeric epic by arguing not only that it was the product of an oral tradition but also that the oral formulas contained therein served as a way for ancient Greeks to preserve cultural knowledge across many different generations 147 Adam Parry in his 1966 work Have we Homer s Iliad theorized the existence of the most fully developed oral poet to his time a person who could at his discretion creatively and intellectually create nuanced characters in the context of the accepted traditional story In fact he discounted the Serbo Croatian tradition to an unfortunate extent choosing to elevate the Greek model of oral tradition above all others 148 149 Lord reacted to Kirk s and Parry s essays with Homer as Oral Poet published in 1968 which reaffirmed Lord s belief in the relevance of Yugoslav poetry and its similarities to Homer and downplayed the intellectual and literary role of the reciters of Homeric epic 150 Many of the criticisms of the theory have been absorbed into the evolving field as useful refinements and modifications For example in what Foley called a pivotal contribution Larry Benson introduced the concept of written formulaic to describe the status of some Anglo Saxon poetry which while demonstrably written contains evidence of oral influences including heavy reliance on formulas and themes 151 A number of individual scholars in many areas continue to have misgivings about the applicability of the theory or the aptness of the South Slavic comparison 152 and particularly what they regard as its implications for the creativity which may legitimately be attributed to the individual artist 153 However at present there seems to be little systematic or theoretically coordinated challenge to the fundamental tenets of the theory as Foley put it there have been numerous suggestions for revisions or modifications of the theory but the majority of controversies have generated further understanding 154 See also EditAmerican Indian elder Folk process Hadith Intangible culture Oral history Oral law Oral Torah Oral Tradition Journal Oral formulaic composition Orality Panchatantra Parampara Patha Srauta Secondary orality Traditional knowledge Understanding Media World Oral Literature ProjectReferences EditNotes Edit During Abu Bakr s khalifate at Omar s suggestion all the pieces of the Qur an were compiled in one place It was a miscellaneous collection at first because then the revelations were coming in people recorded them on anything that came to hand a sheet of parchment a piece of leather a stone a bone whatever As khalifa Omar began a sorting process In his presence each written verse was checked against the memorized version kept by the professional reciters whom this society regarded as the most reliable keepers of information Scribes then recorded the authorized copy of each verse before witnesses and these verse were organized into one comprehensive collection 62 Muhammad is thought to have died in 632 CE The compilers of the six collections of Sunni hadith that have enjoyed near universal acceptance as part of the official canon of Sunni Islam died that is must have stopped compiling hadith between 795 CE and 915 CE An alternative belief is that some of what was revealed to Muhammad was later abrogated in some way by God The mushaf is incomplete in the sense that not everything that was once revealed to Muhammad is to be found today in our mushaf The Quran however is complete in the sense that everything that God intends us to find in the mushaf we shall find there for whatever God intended to include He made sure to preserve 69 Dundes lists of repeated phrases come from an English translation and so those Quranic phrases in the original Arabic sometimes have slight differences Donald K Fry responds to what was known pejoratively in Greek studies as the hard Parryist position in which the formula was defined in terms of verbatim lexical repetition see Rosenmyer Thomas G The Formula in Early Greek Poetry Arion 4 1965 295 311 Fry s model proposes underlying generative templates which provide for variation and even artistic creativity within the constraints of strict metrical requirements and extempore composition in performance Citations Edit a b Vansina Jan Oral Tradition as History 1985 reported statements from present generation which specifies that the message must be oral statements spoken sung or called out on musical instruments only There must be transmission by word of mouth over at least a generation He points out Our definition is a working definition for the use of historians Sociologists linguists or scholars of the verbal arts propose their own which in e g sociology stresses common knowledge In linguistics features that distinguish the language from common dialogue linguists and in the verbal arts features of form and content that define art folklorists a b Oral Tradition Archived 2016 08 09 at the Wayback Machine Encyclopaedia Britannica John Miles Foley Ki Zerbo Joseph Methodology and African Prehistory 1990 UNESCO International Scientific Committee for the Drafting of a General History of Africa James Currey Publishers ISBN 0 85255 091 X 9780852550915 see Ch 7 Oral tradition and its methodology at pages 54 61 at page 54 Oral tradition may be defined as being a testimony transmitted verbally from one generation to another Its special characteristics are that it is verbal and the manner in which it is transmitted a b Catechism of the Catholic Church The Transmission of Divine Revelation www vatican va Retrieved 2020 01 15 a b c Jack Goody 1987 The Interface Between the Written and the Oral Cambridge University Press pp 110 121 ISBN 978 0 521 33794 6 a b c M Witzel Vedas and Upaniṣads in Flood Gavin ed 2003 The Blackwell Companion to Hinduism Blackwell Publishing Ltd ISBN 1 4051 3251 5 pages 68 71 a b Donald S Lopez Jr 1995 Authority and Orality in the Mahayana PDF Numen Brill Academic 42 1 21 47 doi 10 1163 1568527952598800 hdl 2027 42 43799 JSTOR 3270278 Henige David Oral but Oral What The Nomenclatures of Orality and Their Implications Oral Tradition 3 1 2 1988 229 38 p 232 Henige cites Jan Vansina 1985 Oral tradition as history Madison Wisconsin University of Wisconsin Press a b c d John Foley 1999 E Anne MacKay ed Signs of Orality BRILL Academic pp 1 2 ISBN 978 9004112735 Dundes Alan Editor s Introduction to The Theory of Oral Composition John Miles Foley Bloomington IUP 1988 pp ix xii Henige David Oral but Oral What The Nomenclatures of Orality and Their Implications Oral Tradition 3 1 2 1988 229 38 p 232 Henige cites Jan Vansina 1985 Oral tradition as history Madison Wisconsin University of Wisconsin Press Oral History Archived from the original on August 20 2011 Ong Walter S J Orality and Literacy The Technologizing of the Word London Methuen 1982 p 12 Degh Linda American Folklore and the Mass Media Bloomington IUP 1994 p 31 Folklore in the Oral Tradition Fairytales Fables and Folk legend Archived 2016 07 19 at the Wayback Machine Julie Carthy 1984 The Oral Tradition Volume IV Yale University Quote Folklore is said to be in the oral tradition Dundes states that the most common criterion for a definition of folklore is its means of transmission that is orally He clarifies however that materials other than folklore are also orally conveyed Therefore oral transmission itself is not sufficient to distinguish folklore from non folklore a b Cooper G C 1983 Oral tradition in African societies Negro History Bulletin 46 4 101 103 Iheanacho Valentine The significance of African oral tradition in the making of African Christianity HTS Teologiese Studies Theological Studies Online 77 2 2021 9 pages Web 19 Dec 2022 Reece Steve Orality and Literacy Ancient Greek Literature as Oral Literature in David Schenker and Martin Hose eds Companion to Greek Literature Oxford Blackwell 2015 43 57 Ancient Greek Literature as Oral Literature Michael Gagarin 1999 E Anne MacKay ed Signs of Orality BRILL Academic pp 163 164 ISBN 978 9004112735 Wolfgang Kullmann 1999 E Anne MacKay ed Signs of Orality BRILL Academic pp 108 109 ISBN 978 9004112735 John Scheid 2006 Clifford Ando and Jorg Rupke ed Religion and Law in Classical and Christian Rome Franz Steiner Verlag pp 17 28 ISBN 978 3 515 08854 1 Delbert Burkett 2002 An Introduction to the New Testament and the Origins of Christianity Cambridge University Press pp 124 125 45 46 106 107 129 130 ISBN 978 0 521 00720 7 Leslie Baynes 2011 The Heavenly Book Motif in Judeo Christian Apocalypses 200 BCE 200 CE BRILL Academic pp 40 41 with footnotes ISBN 978 90 04 20726 4 Birger Gerhardsson Eric John Sharpe 1961 Memory and Manuscript Oral Tradition and Written Transmission in Rabbinic Judaism and Early Christianity Wm B Eerdmans Publishing pp 71 78 ISBN 978 0 8028 4366 1 Terence C Mournet 2005 Oral Tradition and Literary Dependency Variability and Stability in the Synoptic Tradition and Q Mohr Siebeck pp 138 141 ISBN 978 3 16 148454 4 Donald S Lopez Jr 1995 Authority and Orality in the Mahayana PDF Numen Brill Academic 42 1 21 47 doi 10 1163 1568527952598800 hdl 2027 42 43799 JSTOR 3270278 Wong Peter T K 2022 The Soundscape of the Huainanzi 淮南子 Poetry Performance Philosophy and Praxis in Early China Early China 45 515 539 doi 10 1017 eac 2022 6 ISSN 0362 5028 S2CID 250269080 a b Johnson Sian 26 February 2020 Study dates Victorian volcano that buried a human made axe ABC News Retrieved 9 March 2020 Matchan Erin L Phillips David Jourdan Fred Oostingh Korien 2020 Early human occupation of southeastern Australia New insights from 40Ar 39Ar dating of young volcanoes Geology 48 4 390 394 Bibcode 2020Geo 48 390M doi 10 1130 G47166 1 ISSN 0091 7613 S2CID 214357121 McKendry Eugene Study Ireland An Introduction to Storytelling Myths and Legends PDF BBC Northern Ireland a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Kroeber Karl ed 2004 Native American Storytelling A Reader of Myths and Legends Malden MA Blackwell Publishing pp 1 ISBN 978 1 4051 1541 4 Kroeber Karl ed 2004 Native American Storytelling A Reader of Myths and Legends Malden MA Blackwell Publishing pp 3 ISBN 978 1 4051 1541 4 a b c d e f Kroeber Karl ed 2004 Native American Storytelling A Reader of Myths and Legends Malden MA Blackwell Publishing pp 2 ISBN 978 1 4051 1541 4 Doucleff Michaeleen Greenhalgh Jane 13 March 2019 How Inuit Parents Teach Kids To Control Their Anger NPR org Retrieved 2019 04 29 Caduto Michael Bruchac Michael 1991 Native American Stories Told by Joseph Bruchac Golden Colorado Fulcrum Publishing ISBN 978 1 55591 094 5 Kroeber Karl ed 2004 Native American Storytelling A Reader of Myths and Legends Malden MA Blackwell Publishing pp 6 ISBN 978 1 4051 1541 4 Deloria jr Vine 1995 Red Earth White Lies Native Americans and the Myth of Scientific Fact New York NY Scribner p 54 ISBN 978 0 684 80700 3 Ballenger Bruce Autumn 1997 Methods of Memory On Native American Storytelling College English 59 7 789 800 doi 10 2307 378636 JSTOR 378636 a b c d Deloria jr Vine 1995 Red Earth White Lies Native Americans and the Myth of Scientific Fact New York NY Scribner p 51 ISBN 978 0 684 80700 3 Lawrence Randee Spring 2016 What Our Ancestors Knew Teaching and Learning Through Storytelling New Directions for Adult amp Continuing Education 2016 149 63 72 doi 10 1002 ace 20177 Karen D Harvey 1995 American Indian Voices Brookfield Conn Millbrook Press p 66 ISBN 9781562943820 Native American Reader Stories Speeches and Poems Juneau Alaska Denali Press 1990 p 73 ISBN 9780938737209 a b c Ludwin Ruth Smits Gregory 2007 Folklore and earthquakes Native American oral traditions from Cascadia compared with written traditions from Japan Geological Society of London Special Publications 273 1 67 94 Bibcode 2007GSLSP 273 67L doi 10 1144 GSL SP 2007 273 01 07 S2CID 130713882 a b Echo Hawk Roger Spring 2000 Ancient History in the New World Integrating Oral Traditions and the Archaeological Record in Deep Time American Antiquity 65 2 267 290 doi 10 2307 2694059 JSTOR 2694059 S2CID 163392796 Mason Ronald J 2000 Archaeology and Native North American Oral Traditions American Antiquity 65 2 239 266 doi 10 2307 2694058 ISSN 0002 7316 JSTOR 2694058 S2CID 147149391 a b Tatyana J Elizarenkova 1995 Language and Style of the Vedic Rsis State University of New York Press pp 111 121 ISBN 978 0 7914 1668 6 Peter Scharf 2013 Keith Allan ed The Oxford Handbook of the History of Linguistics Oxford University Press pp 228 234 ISBN 978 0 19 164344 6 Oral tradition in African literature Smith Charles Ce Chinenye Nigeria 4 September 2015 ISBN 9789783703681 OCLC 927970109 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link a b Crowley David Heyer Paul 1999 Communication in History Technology Culture Society Third ed Longman Publishers USA p 67 Hanson Erin Oral Traditions Indigenous Foundations Archived from the original on 18 May 2015 Retrieved 5 May 2015 Hartmut Scharfe 2002 Handbook of Oriental Studies BRILL Academic pp 24 29 226 237 ISBN 978 90 04 12556 8 Donald Lopez 2004 Buddhist Scriptures Penguin Books pp xi xv ISBN 978 0 14 190937 0 a b Hartmut Scharfe 2002 Handbook of Oriental Studies BRILL Academic pp 24 29 226 232 ISBN 978 90 04 12556 8 a b Pierre Sylvain Filliozat 2006 Karine Chemla ed History of Science History of Text Springer pp 138 140 ISBN 978 1 4020 2321 7 Wilke Annette and Moebus Oliver Sound and Communication An Aesthetic Cultural History of Sanskrit Hinduism Religion and Society De Gruyter February 1 2007 P 495 ISBN 3110181592 Milman Parry L epithet traditionnelle dans Homere Paris 1928 p 16 cf Albert B Lord The singer of tales Cambridge Harvard University Press 1960 p 4 Dundes Fables of the Ancients 2003 p 17 Foley John Miles The Theory of Oral Composition Bloomington IUP 1991 p 36 Catherine S Quick Annotated Bibliography 1986 1990 Oral Tradition 12 2 1997 366 484 Bannister Oral Formulaic Study 65 106 EMONT Jon 6 August 2017 Why Are There No New Major Religions Atlantic Retrieved 10 July 2019 Carroll Jill The Quran amp Hadith World Religions Retrieved 10 July 2019 Tamim Ansary 2009 Destiny Disrupted a History of the World Through Islamic Eyes Public Affairs ISBN 9781586486068 a b c Bannister Retelling the Tale 2014 p 2 a b c Quran Project Appendix Preservation and Literary Challenge of the Quran Quran Project 26 February 2015 Retrieved 10 July 2019 Michael Zwettler The Oral Tradition of Classical Arabic Poetry Ohio State Press 1978 p 14 a b c d Qur an and its preservation through chain of oral tradition Arab News 27 February 2015 Retrieved 13 June 2019 Abu Zakariya 8 January 2014 The Miraculous Preservation of the Qur an Many Prophets One Message One Reason Retrieved 10 July 2019 The Qur an verses 44 58 54 17 22 32 40 Arab news 27 2 2015 Burton John 1990 The Sources of Islamic Law Islamic Theories of Abrogation PDF Edinburgh University Press p 44 ISBN 0 7486 0108 2 Retrieved 21 July 2018 Bannister Retelling the Tale 2014 p 1 Bannister Retelling the Tale 2014 p 1 4 Dundes Fables of the Ancients 2003 p 16 The Quran 6 14 79 7 54 10 3 12 101 14 10 19 32 17 99 29 44 61 30 8 31 25 32 4 35 1 39 38 46 42 11 45 22 46 33 cf 2 117 6 101 Dundes Fables of the Ancients 2003 p 32 Dundes Fables of the Ancients 2003 p 65 Bannister Retelling the Tale 2014 p 6 7 Bannister Retelling the Tale 2014 p 10 Kurpershoeck P Marcel 1994 Oral Poetry and Narratives from Central Arabia Vol 1 Leiden E J Brill p 57 Bannister Retelling the Tale 2014 p 68 Sowayan Saad 1992 The Arabian Oral Historical Narrative An Ethnographic and Linguistic Analysis Wiesbaden Otto Harrassowitz p 22 Dundes Fables of the Ancients 2003 p 68 9 Paul VI November 18 1965 Dogmatic Constitution on Divine Revelation Dei verbum www vatican va The Hole See Retrieved 2020 01 15 Paul VI November 21 1964 Dogmatic Constitution on the Church Lumen gentium www vatican va Retrieved 2020 01 15 Early Scholarship on Oral Traditions Archived 2008 05 29 at the Wayback Machine Radloff Jousse and Murko Oral Tradition 5 1 1990 73 90 See for example Marshall McLuhan The Gutenberg Galaxy The Making of Typographic Man University of Toronto Press Toronto 1962 Walter J Ong Fighting for Life Context Sexuality and Consciousness Cornell University Press Ithaca amp London 1981 a b Foley John Miles The Theory of Oral Composition Bloomington IUP 1991 pp 57 ff Walter J Ong Orality and Literacy p 11 Walter J Ong Orality and literacy the technologizing of the word pp 31 76 Foley John Miles The Theory of Oral Composition Bloomington IUP 1991 p 76 Foley John Miles Oral Formulaic Theory and Research An Introduction and Annotated Bibliography NY Garland 1985 The Theory of Oral Composition Bloomington IUP 1991 pp 64 66 John Miles Foley The Theory of Oral Composition History and Methodology Indiana University Press Bloomington and Indianapolis 1988 Foley John Miles Oral Formulaic Theory and Research An Introduction and Annotated Bibliography NY Garland 1985 The Theory of Oral Composition Bloomington IUP 1991 p 70 A Orchard Oral Tradition Reading Old English Texts ed K O Brien O Keeffe Cambridge 1997 pp 101 23 Fry Donald K Old English Formulas and Systems English Studies 48 1967 193 204 Davis Adam Brooke Verba volent scripta manent Oral Tradition and the Non Narrative Genres of Old English Poetry Diss Univ of Missouri at Columbia DAI 52A 1991 2137 pp 202 205 Foley John Miles Immanent Art From Structure to Meaning in Traditional Oral Epic Bloomington IUP 1991 30 31 202n22 207 n36 211n43 Foley John Miles The Singer of Tales in Performance Bloomington IUP 1995 55 60 89 108 122n40 Olsen Alexandra Hennessey Oral Formulaic Research in Old English Studies II Oral Tradition 3 1 2 1988 138 90 p 165 Olsen cites Foley s Hybrid Prosody and Old English Half Lines in Neophilologus 64 284 89 1980 Foley John Miles The Singer of Tales in Performance Bloomington IUP 1995 2 7 8n15 17 et passim Magoun Francis P The Oral Formulaic Character of Anglo Saxon Narrative Poetry Speculum 28 1953 446 67 Fry Donald K The Cliff of Death in Old English Poetry In Comparative Research in Oral Traditions A Memorial for Milman Parry ed John Miles Foley Columbus Slavica 1987 213 34 Zumthor Paul The Text and the Voice Transl Marilyn C Englehardt New Literary History 16 1984 67 92 D K Crowne The Hero on the Beach An Example of Composition by Theme in Anglo Saxon Poetry Neuphilologische Mitteilungen 61 1960 371 Clark George The Traveller Recognizes His Goal Journal of English and Germanic Philology 64 1965 645 59 Armstrong James I The Arming Motif in the Iliad The American Journal of Philology Vol 79 No 4 1958 pp 337 354 Brian Stock The Implications of Literacy Written Language and Models of Interpretation in the Eleventh and Twelfth Centuries Princeton Princeton University Press 1983 Bauml Franz H Varieties and Consequences of Medieval Literacy and Illiteracy in Speculum Vol 55 No 2 1980 pp 243 244 Havelock Eric Alfred Preface to Plato Vol 1 A History of the Greek Mind Belknap Press of Harvard University Press Cambridge Massachusetts 1963 a b Davis Adam Brooke Agon and Gnomon Forms and Functions of the Anglo Saxon Riddles in De Gustibus Essays for Alain Renoir Ed John Miles Foley NY Garland 1992 110 150 Foley John Miles Immanent Art Bloomington IUP 1991 15 18 20 21 34 45 63 64 64n6 64 68 74n23 75 76 77n28 78 80 82 82n38 83 87 91 92 93 94 102 103 104n18 105 109 110n32 Weigle Marta Women s Expressive Forms in Foley John Miles ed Teaching Oral Traditions NY MLA 1998 pp 298 Kevin Robb Greek Oral Memory and the Origins of Philosophy The Personalist An International Review of Philosophy 51 5 45 A study of the AG oral mentality that assumes 1 the existence of composition and thinking that took shape under the aegis of oral patterns 2 the educational apparatus as an oral system and 3 the origins of philosophy as we know it in the abstract intellectual reaction against the oral mentality The opening section on historical background covers developments in archaeology and textual criticism including Parry s work since the late nineteenth century with descriptions of and comments on formulaic and thematic structure In The Technique of the Oral Poet 14 22 he sketches both a synchronic picture of the singer weaving his narrative and a diachronic view of the tradition developing over time In the third part on the psychology of performance he discusses the prevalence of rhythmic speech over prose the prevalence of the event over the abstraction and the prevalence of the paratactic arrangement of parts over alternative schema possible in other styles 23 In sympathy with Havelock 1963 he interprets Plato s reaction against the poets as one against the oral mentality and its educative process Review Communication Studies as American Studies Daniel Czitrom American Quarterly Vol 42 No 4 Dec 1990 pp 678 683 Nimis Stephen A Narrative Semiotics in the Epic Tradition Indiana University Press Bloomington 1988 African American Culture Through Oral Tradition www gwu edu Archived from the original on January 24 2009 Wayne State University Press Language and Literature Page 1 Wsupress wayne edu Archived from the original on 2012 02 10 Retrieved 2012 10 23 Native American Digital Storytelling Situating the Cherokee Oral Tradition within American Literary History Literature Compass www blackwell compass com Archived from the original on February 9 2012 Women in Oral Literature Dreams of Transgressions in two Berber Wonder Tales www usp nus edu sg Archived from the original on March 13 2008 Studies in Canadian Literature Lib unb ca Archived from the original on 2011 08 05 Retrieved 2012 10 23 Archived copy PDF Archived PDF from the original on 2008 05 29 Retrieved 2008 05 13 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Werner H Kelber Oral Tradition in Bible and New Testament Studies Oral Tradition 18 1 Muse jhu edu doi 10 1353 ort 2004 0025 Retrieved 2012 10 23 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Oral Tradition Oral Tradition Archived from the original on 2012 10 28 Retrieved 2012 10 23 Boni Stefano Contents and contexts the rhetoric of oral traditions in the oman of Sefwi Wiawso Ghana Africa 70 4 2000 pages 568 594 London Miller Susan Rescuing the Subject A Critical Introduction to Rhetoric and the Writer Southern Illinois University Press 2004 Minton John The Reverend Lamar Roberts and the Mediation of Oral Tradition The Journal of American Folklore Vol 108 No 427 Winter 1995 pp 3 37 PDF 1 October 2006 https web archive org web 20061001192638 http www oise utoronto ca CASAE cnf2002 2002 Papers simpkins2002w pdf Archived from the original PDF on 1 October 2006 Retrieved 28 April 2018 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty title help Culture Education and the Challenge of Globalization in Modern Nigeria by Ademola Omobewaji Dasylva This paper has to do with the challenges of globalization in modern Nigeria and the process of culture education a terminology used to emphasize the peculiar means and methods of instruction by which a society imparts its body of values and mores in the pursuance and attainment of the society s collective vision aspirations and goals Within this framework this paper examines the legacies of imperialism and colonization within the Nigerian educational system particularly in reference to the teaching of folklore and oral tradition including the destruction of indigenous knowledge systems and the continuing lack of adequate resources in African universities The paper concludes by offering suggestions for a more fully synthesized indigenous and formal Nigerian educational system as a method of addressing postcolonial rupture PDF Archived 2008 05 29 at the Wayback Machine Oral Tradition 21 2 2006 325 41 General Information Rural Human Services Program www uaf edu Archived from the original on 7 September 2008 Retrieved 22 May 2022 Skidmore Thomas E Black Into White Race and Nationality in Brazilian Thought New York Oxford University Press 1974 p 89 Culture Communication and Media Studies Oral Traditions and Weapons of Resistance The Modern Africa Filmmaker as Griot ccms ukzn ac za Archived from the original on 13 August 2011 Retrieved 22 May 2022 J A Bobby Loubser Shembe Preaching A Study in Oral Hermeneutics in African Independent Churches Today ed M C Kitshoff Lewiston New York Edwin Mellen Press 1996 Kelber Werner H The Oral and the Written Gospel The Hermeneutics of Writing and Speaking in the Synoptic Tradition Philadelphia Fortress P 1983 Swearingen C Jan Oral Hermeneutics during the Transition to Literacy The Contemporary Debate Cultural Anthropology Vol 1 No 2 The Dialectic of Oral and Literary Hermeneutics May 1986 pp 138 156 Foley John Miles The Theory of Oral Composition History and Methodology Bloomington IUP 1988 55 64 66 72 74 77 80 97 105 110 111 129n20 artistic cp to mechanistic 21 25 38 58 63 64 65 104 118 119n20 120 121n16 124n31 125n53 oral aesthetic cp to literate aestetics 35 58 110 11 121n26 Foley John Miles Immanent Art From Structure to Meaning in Traditional Oral Epic Bloomington IUP 1991 245 Frederick M Combellack Milman Parry and Homeric Artistry Comparative Literature Vol 11 No 3 Summer 1959 pp 193 208 p 194 Rutherford R B Homer Odyssey Books XIX amp XX Cambridge UP 1992 remarks on oral formulaic diction pp 47 49 Botstein Leon Hearing Is Seeing Thoughts on the History of Music and the Imagination The Musical Quarterly 1995 79 4 581 89 Elliot Oring cites Bruchac Joe Storytelling Oral History or Game of Telephone American Folklore Society Newsletter 19 2 3 4 chapter4 DOC PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2012 02 13 Retrieved 2012 10 23 Dawkins Richard The God Delusion Great Britain Bantam 2006 p 118 Dawkins contradicts this view however on p 227 Dane J A Finnsburh and Iliad IX A Greek Survival of the Medieval Germanic Oral Formulaic Theme The Hero on the Beach Neophilologus 66 443 449 Foley John Miles Oral Formulaic Theory and Research An Introduction and Annotated Bibliography NY Garland Publishing 1985 p 200 Kirk Geoffrey S The Songs of Homer Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1962 pp88 91 Foley John M Oral Formulaic Theory and Research An Introduction and Annotated Bibliography New York Garland Publishing Inc 1985 p 35 Foley John M Oral Formulaic Theory and Research An Introduction and Annotated Bibliography New York Garland Publishing Inc 1985 p 36 Foley John M Oral Formulaic Theory and Research An Introduction and Annotated Bibliography New York Garland Publishing Inc 1985 pp 36 505 Parry Adam Have we Homer s Iliad Yale Classical Studies 20 1966 pp 177 216 Foley John M Oral Formulaic Theory and Research An Introduction and Annotated Bibliography New York Garland Publishing Inc 1985 pp 40 406 Foley John M Oral Formulaic Theory and Research An Introduction and Annotated Bibliography New York Garland Publishing Inc 1985 p 42 Foley cites The Literary Character of Anglo Saxon Formulaic Poetry Publications of the Modern Language Association 81 1966 334 41 George E Dimock From Homer to Novi Pazar and B ack Arion 2 iv 40 57 Reacts against the Parry Lord hypothesis of an oral Homer claiming that although Lord demonstrated that the oral poet thinks in verse and offered many explanations of the various facets of the Homeric Question by recourse to the Yugoslav analogy the difference between Homer and other literate poets is one of degree rather than kind Wants to rescue Homer s art from what he sees as the dangers inherent in the oral theory model Perhaps the most prominent and steadfast opponent of oral traditional theory on these grounds was Arthur Brodeur in e g The Art of Beowulf Berkeley University of California Press 3rd printing 1969 A Study of Diction and Style in Three Anglo Saxon Narrative Poems In Nordica et Anglica Ed Allan H Orrick The Hague Mouton pp 97 114 Beowulf One Poem or Three In Medieval Literature and Folklore Studies in Honor of Francis Lee Utley Ed Jerome Mandel and Bruce A Rosenberg New Brunswick Rutgers University Press pp 3 26 Foley John Miles The Theory of Oral Composition History and Methodology Bloomington IUP 1988 p 93 Bibliography Edit Bannister Andrew G Retelling the Tale A Computerised Oral Formulaic Analysis of the Qur an Presented at the 2014 International Qur an Studies Association Meeting in San Diego academia edu Retrieved 20 May 2019 Dundes Alan 2003 Fables of the Ancients Folklore in the Qur an Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers ISBN 9780585466774 Retrieved 2 May 2019 Foley John Miles Oral Formulaic Theory and Research An Introduction and Annotated Bibliography NY Garland 1985 Foley John Miles The Theory of Oral Composition Bloomington IUP 1991 Wong Peter T K 2022 The Soundscape of the Huainanzi 淮南子 Poetry Performance Philosophy and Praxis in Early China Early China 45 1 25 doi 10 1017 eac 2022 6External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Oral tradition Back to the Oral Tradition Folkatles from around the world The Center for Studies in Oral Tradition The Milman Parry Collection of Oral Literature Online Oral Tradition Journal The World Oral Literature Project Post Gutenberg Galaxy Dedalo Project Open Software Platform for Management of Intangible Cultural Heritage and Oral History Archive of Turkish Oral Narrative at Texas Tech University Portal history Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Oral tradition amp oldid 1144536909, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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