Tales from the Basotho

Front Cover
University of Texas Press, Jan 1, 1974 - Social Science - 204 pages

"They say that the eldest of the chief's daughters..." So begins a tale from the Basotho, unfolded by the meager light of a dung fire that burns smokily behind the reed screen sheltering the entrance of the hut. The old ones of the tribe wait until dark before telling their stories, for everyone knows horns will grow from the head of one who tells a story during daylight hours. Tales from the Basotho abounds with elements familiar to folk narrative. The heroes and heroines are the chiefs and their wives, their sons and their daughters. Fantastic creatures frequent the narratives. exhibiting their awful powers.

Rustic peace and beauty pervade the stories, as Minnie Postma amply demonstrates in her versions of the tales. Something fearful may be occurring—the dreaded Koeoko pulling the only son of the chief under water—but, at the same time, girls with babies tied to their backs are searching for edible bulbs in the veld, and an old woman dreams in the gentle sunlight in front of the huts.

These tales from the Basotho are for entertainment only. There is a tabu against telling tales while the sun shines, because daylight hours must be saved for work. The telling itself is the· reason the story exists, for the audience is already aware of the outcome of each tale. As Wm. Hugh Jansen emphasizes in his foreword, "text" and "context" are often easily interpreted and made accessible in a translation, but Tales from the Basotho is ultimately successful for its rendering of "texture." And texture is doubly hard to convey when the telling itself is of primary importance. Minnie Postma and Susie McDermid have transferred the art of the Basotho raconteur onto the printed page. All the simple, understandable formulas, exclamations, and repetitions used so skillfully by the native storyteller are present. Rhythm is an important element in the tales, and a word, a phrase, even a whole paragraph will be repeated until the rhythm satisfies the storyteller, in tum increasing the appreciation of the listeners.

 

Contents

The Giant Bird Mothemelle
3
Wolf and Jackal and the Beautiful Girl
12
The Outcast
17
Fenyafenyane
23
Hen Hawk and the Needle
37
Roaqo the Woman Who Ate People
42
Tortoise and Dove
50
The Guilty Woman
53
The Dove the Heron and Jackal
92
The MotherinLaw and the Clear Water
96
The Milk Tree
105
Jackal and Hen
115
The Whirlwind and the Land of the Halfmen
118
Nanabolele Who Shines in the Night
124
Sheep and Baboon
132
Tsananapa
142

Monyohe the Great Snake of the Deep Waters
58
Maliane and the Water Snake
71
Molaetsane
78
Obe the Monster of the Dark Canyon
84
The Bride of Chief Bulane
152
Index of motifs of tale types and comparable
165
Bibliography
175
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About the author (1974)

Minnie Postma was born in the Orange Free State on a farm bordering Lesotho. She grew up speaking the Sesotho language as well as Afrikaans, and as a child she heard many of the tales she has recaptured so vividly here. Through her many publications she h

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