The Mongols have a long tradition of oral literature. About the first half of the nineteenth century, a new member came into the family of Mongolian oral tradition, namely bensen ulger. Bensen ulger first appeared in the southeastern Mongolian areas, where the influence from the Han culture has been stronger, and then spread to other areas of Inner Mongolia and Outer Mongolia.1Issue title "Chinese Oral Traditions.
The field of Mongolian Studies in North America has had its ups and downs over the past decade. Whil...
The Palawan people live in the southern half of the island of the same name between the Sulu Sea and...
In the field of Tibetan oral epic studies there is concern over that fact that the tradition of King...
In the Xinjiang region of China performances of Manas were once very popular. When a comprehensive s...
Mongolian tuuli, or epic poetry, the most important genre in Mongolian literary history, is a vast t...
Like oral epics from countries around the world, the heroic epic of King Gesar found among Tibetans ...
The riddle of memorized epics is a subject of concern for the scholarly community. With an eye to th...
Kangxi/Engke Amuulang, a Mongolian Emperor? On some Mongolian and Chinese stories This article inve...
Mongolian tuuli, or epic poetry, the most important genre in Mongolian literary history, is a vast t...
It is a well-known fact that the performer of narrative poetry usually tries to reproduce a text he ...
The academic community has long noticed the resemblance between Mongolian and Turkic epics. Some bel...
Shamanistic oral traditions in the form of primitive religion have come down to the present from anc...
Since the 1950s large-scale government-sponsored folk literature collection projects have been carri...
This paper is devoted to one of the first commercial Mongolian publishing houses in Republican China...
The epic King Geser has been in wide circulation in Chinese Inner Mongolian and Tibetan areas thanks...
The field of Mongolian Studies in North America has had its ups and downs over the past decade. Whil...
The Palawan people live in the southern half of the island of the same name between the Sulu Sea and...
In the field of Tibetan oral epic studies there is concern over that fact that the tradition of King...
In the Xinjiang region of China performances of Manas were once very popular. When a comprehensive s...
Mongolian tuuli, or epic poetry, the most important genre in Mongolian literary history, is a vast t...
Like oral epics from countries around the world, the heroic epic of King Gesar found among Tibetans ...
The riddle of memorized epics is a subject of concern for the scholarly community. With an eye to th...
Kangxi/Engke Amuulang, a Mongolian Emperor? On some Mongolian and Chinese stories This article inve...
Mongolian tuuli, or epic poetry, the most important genre in Mongolian literary history, is a vast t...
It is a well-known fact that the performer of narrative poetry usually tries to reproduce a text he ...
The academic community has long noticed the resemblance between Mongolian and Turkic epics. Some bel...
Shamanistic oral traditions in the form of primitive religion have come down to the present from anc...
Since the 1950s large-scale government-sponsored folk literature collection projects have been carri...
This paper is devoted to one of the first commercial Mongolian publishing houses in Republican China...
The epic King Geser has been in wide circulation in Chinese Inner Mongolian and Tibetan areas thanks...
The field of Mongolian Studies in North America has had its ups and downs over the past decade. Whil...
The Palawan people live in the southern half of the island of the same name between the Sulu Sea and...
In the field of Tibetan oral epic studies there is concern over that fact that the tradition of King...