Epic Adventures: Heroic Narrative in the Oral Performance Traditions of Four Continents

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Jan Jansen, Hendrik M. J. Maier
LIT Verlag Münster, 2004 - Fiction - 197 pages

The many adventures of the "epic" in modern times are fascinating topics in themselves. The Romantics claimed that every self-respecting nation should, at some time, have had one and they set out to reconstruct these epics for political as well as cultural reasons. Such epics represented earlier stages in the development of nation-states and in this modern world they were, for a long time, hard to appreciate. The introduction of tape recorders, however, brought the epic back in the limelight. It became fashionable for scholars to record long oral narratives, and to present them as long written poems that reflected deeply ingrained ideas. Because of this technology, the idea of the epic was revitalized. This volume presents critical analyses of epics in Sub-Saharan Africa, the former Soviet Union, South-East Asia, Medieval Europe, and America and discusses the process of revitalization, sometimes even invention, of epics in particular historical, political, and academic contexts.

Jan Jansen is a member of the Department of Anthropology of the University of Leiden, Netherlands. Henk M.J. Maier is professor in the Department of Languages and Cultures of Southeast Asia and Oceania of the University of Leiden, Netherlands.

 

Contents

I
7
II
11
III
22
IV
34
V
46
VI
53
VII
65
VIII
71
X
89
XI
98
XII
112
XIII
128
XIV
140
XV
171
XVI
183
XVII
195

IX
81

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