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Die volksvertelling as kultuuruiting met besondere verwysing na AfrikaansGrobbelaar, Pieter W. (Pieter Willem) January 1981 (has links)
Thesis (PhD)--Stellenbosch University, 1981. / Some digitised pages may appear illegible due to the condition of the microfiche copy. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: no abstract available / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: geen opsomming
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Engendering children: from folk tales to fairy tales何倬榮, Ho, Cheuk-wing. January 2002 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Comparative Literature / Master / Master of Philosophy
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Lidová slovesnost v předškolní výchově / Folklore and preschool educationSchreiberová, Kateřina January 2011 (has links)
Annotation: Thesis demonstrates the importance of folklore in content of preschool education. Deals with main terms used, shows, how folklore is declared in legislative and explains the role of preschool education in the folk culture protection and preservation. Uses many examples to show how folclore can develop personality of preschool children. Key words: Traditional folk culture; folklore; folk literature; preschool education; children personality development
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The social function of Setswana folktales03 September 2015 (has links)
M.A. / The object of this work is to investigate and identify the social function of Setswana folktales. Folktales are known as stories which were told to entertain people. These were told through performance. Without performance it would be impossible to identify the basic functions of folktales which are entertainment and education. This work was done through reference to relevant sources. Interviews with informants were conducted. Although many of the informants co-operated during the interviews, some were doubtful about talking to a stranger who recorded their voices and even demanded to know their names. Most informants supplied folktales (told stories) rather than discussing their functions...
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A critical literacy and narrative analysis of African Storybook folktales for early readingTreffry-Goatley, Lisa Anne January 2017 (has links)
Thesis (M.A. (Applied Language and Literacy Education))--University of the Witwatersrand, Faculty of Humanities, 2017 / This study critically analyses a set of folktales from the African Storybook website, which is an open licence digital publishing platform supporting early reading in Africa (www.africanstorybook.org). The selected folktales were mostly written by educators and librarians working in the African Storybook project pilot sites. The folktales were illustrated and published as indigenous African language and English storybooks during 2014 to 2015. The analysis is centrally concerned with the settings in which the folktales take place (with a distinction made between space, place and time), and the age and gender associated with central characters. The analytical tools used and the perspectives applied are drawn predominantly from post-colonial studies, African feminism, critical literacy, broad folktale scholarship, and theory from local – as opposed to global – childhoods. The analysis is interested in the conventions of the folktale genre, as it is constructed in the narratives by the writers. The three central findings with regards to the settings of folktales are as follows: (i) 90% of the folktales are set in rural environments in or near villages or small settlements. The somewhat idealised villages and settlements appear to have been relatively untouched by modern communications and infrastructure, and represent a “nostalgic, imagined past”. (ii) The study found that 75% of the folktales are set in the remote past, indexical of the folktale genre’s oral roots. (iii) Supernatural characters, objects and events occur in nearly 75% of the folktales. This suggests a possible interpretive space of intersecting temporalities and dimensions of existence, as well as possibilities for imaginative problem-solving. In addition, it raises challenging questions about the limits of human agency. The study also found that the ASb folktales, perhaps somewhat unsurprisingly for a genre that tends to employ archetypes and stereotypes, seemingly offer no characterisation outside of heteronormative family roles. But despite the heteronormativity and narrowly-defined family roles, especially for women characters, the folktales also present other positions for female gendered characters, and by extension for girl child readers – courageous, interesting, clever and unconventional female characters are in no shortage in these narrative populations. The findings suggest that the ASb folktales provide a range of identity positions for both girls and boys in African contexts, and my study reflects on how educators might navigate this complex territory. In particular, the findings point to how teachers and other adult caregivers might balance the moral and cultural lessons in folktales with the need for children to imagine and construct different worlds and positions for themselves. / MT2017
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The shapeshifter fox : the imagery of transformation and the transformation of imagery in Japanese religion and folklore /Bathgate, Michael R. January 2001 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Chicago, Faculty of the Divinity School, June 2001. / Includes bibliographical references. Also available on the Internet.
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Elâzığ masalları inceleme /Günay, Umay. January 1975 (has links)
Thesis--Atatürk Üniversitesi.
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Folk literature and the Zaju (Northern drama) of the YuanDynasty, 1279-1368譚達先, Tam, Tat-sin. January 1989 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Chinese / Doctoral / Doctor of Philosophy
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HONG MAI AND THE "YI JIAN ZHI" (SUNG LITERATURE, CHINA, CHIH-KUAI)Lam, Bonita Mei-Hua Soohoo January 1986 (has links)
No description available.
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Beyond traditional literature : towards oral theory as aural linguistics.Alant, Jacob Willem. January 1996 (has links)
Oral Theory, which is the discipline that studies the oral tradition, has been characterized as
a literary anthropology, centered on essentially two notions: tradition on the one hand,
literature on the other. Though emphasis has moved from an initial preoccupation with oral textual
form (as advocated by Parry and Lord) to concerns with the oral text as social
practice, the anthropological / literary orientation has generally remained intact. But through
its designation of a traditional 'other' Oral Theory is, at best, a sub-field of anthropology; the
literature it purports to study is not literature, but anthropological data. This undermines the
existence of the field as discipline. In this study it is suggested that the essence of orality
as subject matter of Oral Theory - should be seen not in the origins of its creativity (deemed
'traditional'), nor in its aesthetic process / product itself ('literature'), but in its use of
language deriving from a different 'auditory' conception of language (as contrasted with the
largely 'visualist' conception of language at least partly associated with writing). In other
words, the study of orality should not be about specific oral 'genres', but about verbalization
in general. In terms of its auditory conception, language is primarily defined as existing in
sound, a definition which places it in a continuum with other symbolical / meaningful sounds,
normally conceptualized as 'music'. Linguistics, being fundamentally scriptist (visualist) in
orientation, fails to account for the auditory conception of language. To remedy this, Oral
Theory needs to set itself up as an 'aural linguistics' - implying close interdisciplinary
collaboration with the field of musicology - through which the linguistic sign of orality could
be studied in all its particularity and complexity of meaning. / Thesis (Ph.D.)-University of Natal, Durban, 1996.
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