According to the standard classifications of African languages, the Baoulé language is a Kwa language and belongs to the Niger-Congo family which covers the territory from the western tip of Africa in Senegal to the southern tip of South Africa. Variation in the use of tones in Baoulé is a major component of dialectal variation. The Baoulé are the most populous group of the West African Côte d\u27Ivoire. Like the overwhelming majority of cultures around the world, they use oral transmission to pass their cultural traditions from person to person, and from generation to generation. The art of speaking well is highly prized, and those who have this gift are respected in the society. The present study first presents an introduction into geogra...
This research discusses the analysis of the concept of speech among some ethnic groups in West Afric...
This paper provides some information on the island of Sumba and its people. As a cultural community ...
ABSTRACT: This article discusses a documentation of spoken texts, sung texts, and dances of the Daga...
This article is devoted to the problem of the Manden oral literature genres’ classification. The fi...
Oral and history literature : the Nyabwa's Yaka poems. Stories of origin, migrations and wars are fa...
One of the most significant traditions of African artists is that of the storyteller. This tradition...
The Horn of Africa has a traditional oral literature which is rich and varied as the rest of the con...
Ruth Finneganâ s Oral Literature in Africa was first published in 1970, and since then has been wid...
The paper discusses my eight months fieldwork experience of documenting endangered Gurenɛ (Mabia, Ni...
As religious systems are intertwined with social systems, change and continuity in thought and pract...
This article examines the Iban oral literature (traditions) of the Iban society which includes fable...
In this article I deal with the problem of division into genres and genre designation in the oral tr...
La Corne de l’Afrique comme le reste du continent noir possède une littérature orale traditionnelle ...
African village traditionally was a small unit where every inhabitant knew and was interested in the...
The Bulsa are an ethnic group of about 70,000 people in the dry Savannah zone of Northern Ghana, pra...
This research discusses the analysis of the concept of speech among some ethnic groups in West Afric...
This paper provides some information on the island of Sumba and its people. As a cultural community ...
ABSTRACT: This article discusses a documentation of spoken texts, sung texts, and dances of the Daga...
This article is devoted to the problem of the Manden oral literature genres’ classification. The fi...
Oral and history literature : the Nyabwa's Yaka poems. Stories of origin, migrations and wars are fa...
One of the most significant traditions of African artists is that of the storyteller. This tradition...
The Horn of Africa has a traditional oral literature which is rich and varied as the rest of the con...
Ruth Finneganâ s Oral Literature in Africa was first published in 1970, and since then has been wid...
The paper discusses my eight months fieldwork experience of documenting endangered Gurenɛ (Mabia, Ni...
As religious systems are intertwined with social systems, change and continuity in thought and pract...
This article examines the Iban oral literature (traditions) of the Iban society which includes fable...
In this article I deal with the problem of division into genres and genre designation in the oral tr...
La Corne de l’Afrique comme le reste du continent noir possède une littérature orale traditionnelle ...
African village traditionally was a small unit where every inhabitant knew and was interested in the...
The Bulsa are an ethnic group of about 70,000 people in the dry Savannah zone of Northern Ghana, pra...
This research discusses the analysis of the concept of speech among some ethnic groups in West Afric...
This paper provides some information on the island of Sumba and its people. As a cultural community ...
ABSTRACT: This article discusses a documentation of spoken texts, sung texts, and dances of the Daga...