Neither the general bibliography on African oral literature by Harold Scheub, African Oral Narratives, Proverbs, Riddles, Poetry, and Song (Boston: G. K. Hall & Co., 1977), nor the more specific bibliography by Virginia and Mark Delancety, A Bibliography of Cameroon Folklore, an Occasional Publication of the Literature Committee of the African Studies Association (Waltham, Mass.: African Studies Association, 1972) list any collection of Pidgin narratives anywhere from Africa, let alone the Cameroon. Hence the significance of the present collection of tales. Yet its import extends beyond the sheer textual documentation of narrative in a language, the use of which, it has been generally assumed, is reserved to trade and commerce situations. T...
In 1962 the Ethnological Museum and Folklore Archives of Israel initiated a new series of folktale c...
When Ruth Finnegan published her book Oral Literature in Africa (Oxford: The Clarendon Press, 1970),...
Review of African Literatures and Beyond: A Florilegium by Bernth Lindfors and Geoffrey V. Davi
Neither the general bibliography on African oral literature by Harold Scheub, African Oral Narrative...
It has long been evident that folklore research in literate societies cannot rely exclusively on ora...
It is possible to distinguish three groups of writers on African folklore: first, amateurs, like mis...
Until recently, it was still possible for Godfrey Lienhardt, one of the general editors of The Oxfor...
From the end of 1972 until the middle of 1974, Mrs. Mabel H. Ross, a missionary, traveled in Central...
The ten essays that comprise this volume deal with the ritual symbols of the Ndembu people of Zambia...
International audienceToday, the Kordofanian family of the Niger-Congo phylum remains one of the mos...
From time to time, collections of modern African short stories like the collection here noted should...
A Catalogue of Khoisan Folktales of Southern Africa. Part I: Introduction, Types, Indices, Sources; ...
Folklorists should have special interest in this volume. The Hausa people comprise one of the larges...
The complex and important relationship between African American folklore and African American litera...
The African past certainly speaks, but in what language? Is it the language of testimonies and accou...
In 1962 the Ethnological Museum and Folklore Archives of Israel initiated a new series of folktale c...
When Ruth Finnegan published her book Oral Literature in Africa (Oxford: The Clarendon Press, 1970),...
Review of African Literatures and Beyond: A Florilegium by Bernth Lindfors and Geoffrey V. Davi
Neither the general bibliography on African oral literature by Harold Scheub, African Oral Narrative...
It has long been evident that folklore research in literate societies cannot rely exclusively on ora...
It is possible to distinguish three groups of writers on African folklore: first, amateurs, like mis...
Until recently, it was still possible for Godfrey Lienhardt, one of the general editors of The Oxfor...
From the end of 1972 until the middle of 1974, Mrs. Mabel H. Ross, a missionary, traveled in Central...
The ten essays that comprise this volume deal with the ritual symbols of the Ndembu people of Zambia...
International audienceToday, the Kordofanian family of the Niger-Congo phylum remains one of the mos...
From time to time, collections of modern African short stories like the collection here noted should...
A Catalogue of Khoisan Folktales of Southern Africa. Part I: Introduction, Types, Indices, Sources; ...
Folklorists should have special interest in this volume. The Hausa people comprise one of the larges...
The complex and important relationship between African American folklore and African American litera...
The African past certainly speaks, but in what language? Is it the language of testimonies and accou...
In 1962 the Ethnological Museum and Folklore Archives of Israel initiated a new series of folktale c...
When Ruth Finnegan published her book Oral Literature in Africa (Oxford: The Clarendon Press, 1970),...
Review of African Literatures and Beyond: A Florilegium by Bernth Lindfors and Geoffrey V. Davi