This article examines the ways and conditions under which shona oral art has adapted itself to the realities of globalization. The paper argues that shona oral art has been preserved and will survive the destructive forces of globalization because it has been captured and recorded on paper using the written word. Also, much of this oral art, especially the folktale, has survived because religious institutions have become new popular centres for artistic creativity. In addition, shona oral art has been transformed from a local community art and has become global art through the use of electronic media. Local musicians have also taken shona oral art to the global stage through international tours using the shona language accompanied by music,...
The complexity and dynamism of human society bring about innovation in the production, transmission...
“Taarab” may simply be defined as a popular form of Swahili music that combines the singing of poetr...
Contemporary Shona society in Zimbabwe has witnessed the mushrooming of organisations meant to prote...
This article examines the ways and conditions under which shona oral art has adapted itself to the r...
The article seeks to bring out some oral traditional art forms which are prevailing in some contempo...
This article looks at the role played by Shona oral art forms in conditioning the girl child for a l...
The article investigates the relationship between orality and literacy with special reference to the...
The main scope of the paper is to analyze modern oral art forms in view of their functions, the way ...
Text in EnglishThe study is a sociolinguistic exploration of the pedagogical value of Shona children...
In Nigeria, cultural contents have continued to be explored in relation to their typologies, taxonom...
Africa left behind two ambiguous legacies of invented traditions. One is the body of ‘invented tradi...
Over 50 years ago, Marshall McLuhan (2003), a specialist in communication issues, said that the worl...
This paper was presented at a Seminar held in the Department of African Languages and Literature, Un...
The article seeks to explore the role of African oral traditional art forms and governance in Zimbab...
University of Technology, Sydney. Faculty of Design, Architecture and Building.NO FULL TEXT AVAILABL...
The complexity and dynamism of human society bring about innovation in the production, transmission...
“Taarab” may simply be defined as a popular form of Swahili music that combines the singing of poetr...
Contemporary Shona society in Zimbabwe has witnessed the mushrooming of organisations meant to prote...
This article examines the ways and conditions under which shona oral art has adapted itself to the r...
The article seeks to bring out some oral traditional art forms which are prevailing in some contempo...
This article looks at the role played by Shona oral art forms in conditioning the girl child for a l...
The article investigates the relationship between orality and literacy with special reference to the...
The main scope of the paper is to analyze modern oral art forms in view of their functions, the way ...
Text in EnglishThe study is a sociolinguistic exploration of the pedagogical value of Shona children...
In Nigeria, cultural contents have continued to be explored in relation to their typologies, taxonom...
Africa left behind two ambiguous legacies of invented traditions. One is the body of ‘invented tradi...
Over 50 years ago, Marshall McLuhan (2003), a specialist in communication issues, said that the worl...
This paper was presented at a Seminar held in the Department of African Languages and Literature, Un...
The article seeks to explore the role of African oral traditional art forms and governance in Zimbab...
University of Technology, Sydney. Faculty of Design, Architecture and Building.NO FULL TEXT AVAILABL...
The complexity and dynamism of human society bring about innovation in the production, transmission...
“Taarab” may simply be defined as a popular form of Swahili music that combines the singing of poetr...
Contemporary Shona society in Zimbabwe has witnessed the mushrooming of organisations meant to prote...