1 / 12

ORAL AND WRITTEN LITERATURE

ORAL AND WRITTEN LITERATURE. African Oral And Written Literature. Introduction Traditional Literature Fables, Folktales, Myths & Legends Poetry The Novel Conclusion. Introduction. Western definition Imaginative or critical writings whether in the form of prose or verse

abiba
Download Presentation

ORAL AND WRITTEN LITERATURE

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. ORAL AND WRITTEN LITERATURE

  2. African Oral And Written Literature • Introduction • Traditional Literature • Fables, Folktales, Myths & Legends • Poetry • The Novel • Conclusion

  3. Introduction • Western definition • Imaginative or critical writings whether in the form of prose or verse • To become literature, stories, proverbs, legends, etc. must to recorded • For a long time, there was not written language in most of Africa (literature is Latin for “written”) • Attempts were made by colonists to document oral literature

  4. Traditional Or Oral Literature • Used interchangeably to refer to stories that have become the cultural heritage of the community • Most African stories have moral endings, however, many are composed for entertainment • Stories have been revised by the teller and tailored to the audience of a particular place or time

  5. Fables • Seen as fiction as designed to teach • Straight out instruction and open ended for interpretation • What is in print is only a small part of the storytelling event and make the lessons memorable • Fables usually use animal characters to educate the reader or listener • Aimed at children to teach them the values of the community • Community knows that the story is fiction, but the message is considered important

  6. Myths • Considered sacred stories that deal with origins and explanations of natural phenomenon and human institutions • Original tellers thought the stories to be true and treated them as sacred • Myths are not usually fictitious stories

  7. Folktales • Seen as fiction as in fables and also used to teach indirectly, but also to express the individual and communities hopes and fears, to provide entertainment and to create a role model of desirable conduct for the community • Brothers Grimm made the folktale famous • Characters tend to be humans who encounter adventures and problems but can contain animals

  8. Legends • Unverified stories, more closely related to history or biography • Reflect peoples ideals as embodied in the actions of heroes • Tell a people’s history as recalled thorough oral tradition and used frequently to create a cultural or political identify for the group • Some legends tell the significance of specific landmarks like mountains and waterfalls

  9. Group Assignment • Break into groups • Each person read your example • Select one example • Try to determine if it is a myth, fable, legend or folktale • Determine if there is a moral or lesson involved • Select a team member to read the story to the class and present your findings

  10. Poetry • More contemporary than traditional literature • Family rites connected with birth, death, marriage, religious ceremonies were all occasions to recite poetry • Part of every day life • Hunting, harvesting, preparing meals • Poets, like griots can be esteemed or distained based on the culture • The larger the poets repertoire, the more respected they are • Modern poetry is concerned with cultural, social, political or economic life • Themes could deal with spirits, death, oppression

  11. The Novel • The African novel in new • Most novels were an outgrowth of the society in which the author lived • Moving from a limited view to a global view of life • Wrote of traditional life, religion and colonial oppression • Novelists have gained worldwide recognition since independence

  12. Conclusion • Long journey to develop its own written literature and to preserve the oral traditions • Themes must go beyond colonial past and focus on the future and provide a sense of direction

More Related