Native American Oral Narratives in Mexico and Guatemala

Author(s)Taggart, James M.
Date Accessioned2016-09-27T21:16:55Z
Date Available2016-09-27T21:16:55Z
Publication Date2015-07-15
DescriptionState of the Art essay on Athropologyen_US
AbstractThis essay is a brief survey of anthropological and folklore scholarship on oral narratives told by contemporary speakers of indigenous languages living in Mexico and Guatemala and recorded in the indigenous language since 1900. Topics covered in this essay include a brief history of the collection of oral narratives from present-day speakers of Mesoamerican languages, and the uses of those narratives as expressions of memory, in applications of the comparative method, as expressions of cultural logic, as accounts of personal experience, in performance and dialogue, and in ethnic activism. I aim to summarize work done toward understanding how oral narratives are ways of organizing experience in story form and offer suggestions for further research.en_US
ISSN1536-1837
URLhttp://udspace.udel.edu/handle/19716/19753
Languageenen_US
PublisherLatin American Studies Program, University of Delaware, Newark, DEen_US
dc.rightsCreative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike
dc.rights.urihttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/
TitleNative American Oral Narratives in Mexico and Guatemalaen_US
TypeArticleen_US
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