Oral repositories are people who have been trusted with mentally recording information constituting oral tradition within a society. They serve an important role in oral cultures and illiterate societies as repositories of their culture's traditional knowledge, values, and morals.[1][2][3][4]
Roles
editPeople termed as "oral repositories" have been likened to "walking libraries", leading to the saying "whenever an old man dies, it is as though a library were burning down".[5][6][7] Roles vary, and can be titular, formal or informal, some professional specialists such as the Caucasian ashik, or more commonly amateurs and knowledgeable generalists such as the bulaam of the Kuba people.[8]: 36–39
Types of information held by oral repositories includes lineages, oral law, mythology, oral literature and oral poetry (of which oral history is often entwined), folk songs and aural tradition, and traditional knowledge. In many indigenous societies, such as Native American and San, these roles are fulfilled in a general sense by elders.[9][10] In some societies anyone could become a generalist or traditionalist regardless of their social class, and acquisition depends solely on individual aptitude, while in others the roles are hereditary and dependent on class or caste.[11]: 192–193
These people usually hold authority within their respective societies, although musicians sometimes constitute a low caste/class. They can be religious figures playing roles in rituals and ceremonies.[12] With regard to narrative traditions, they usually perform from their repertoire and apply their distinct style while innovating on a well-known tale or work, seeking to create an experience by leading, involving, and responding to the audience.[8]: 34 Some participate in improvised poetry competitions such as the Central Asian aytysh, the North African Kabyle people's amusnaw, the Spanish repentismo , or the African Ewe people's halo.[13][14] In parts of the world they remain as custodians of culture despite rising literacy rates.[15]
Africa
editAsia
editEurope
editNorth America
editTerm | Type/s of information | Society/ies | Period | Sources |
---|---|---|---|---|
Calypsonian | Songs | Trinidadian | [137] | |
Iyalawo | Religious knowledge | Afro-Cuban | To present | [138] |
Medicine man | Religious knowledge | Native American | To present | [139] |
North American Indigenous elder | General | North American Indigenous | To present | [140] |
Oungan and Manbo | Religious lore | Afro-Haitian | To present | [141][142] |
Paleros | Religious lore | Afro-Cuban | [143] |
South America
editTerm | Type/s of information | Society/ies | Period | Sources |
---|---|---|---|---|
Amauta | General | Incan | Until ? | [144] |
Yatiri | Religious knowledge | Aymara | To present | [145] |
Oceania
editTerm | Type/s of information | Society/ies | Period | Sources |
---|---|---|---|---|
Australian Aboriginal elder | General | Australian Aboriginal | To present | [146][147] |
Fāgogo | Literature | Samoan | To present | [148] |
Ha'atufunga | Royal rituals | Tongan | To present | [149][150] |
Haku mo'olelo | Literature | Hawaiian | [151] | |
Kahuna | Religious lore | Polynesian, eg. Hawaiian | [152] | |
Mea hula | Literature | Hawaiian | To present | [153] |
Tulafale | General | Samoan | To present | [154] |
Wānanga | General | Māori | To present | [155] |
See also
edit- Troubador - Occitan poet, until the 14th century
- Shadow play
- Rakugoka - Japanese performer of verbal comedy
- Bharatanatyam - Tamil traditional dance and literature
- Katha (storytelling format) - Indian religious storytelling
References
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Manghaniyars, like Langas, are sedentary Muslims whose home extends over the border into Pakistan, but their patrons are mostly Hindu Rajputs (a high caste) and Hindu Charans (a caste of poets, bards, and historians).
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The Manganiyars and Langhas are Muslim musicians and are quite different from the Bhopas of Pabuji, as they do not claim to be bards but musicians in a real sense. Using instruments like rabab, kamayacha, pyaledar sarangi, chautaro, sirimandal etc., they not only sing songs of birth, marriages and death, but are also entitled to sing in the kacheris of the patrons. It is in these assemblies that they sing ballads like Dhola-Maru, Umar-Marvi, Moomal-Rano and Sassi-Punnu. Manganiyars sing classical compositions like mota git (bada khayal) and chota git (chota khayal). Some of their ragas have originated in the Thar and are not found in north Indian classical tradition.
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