Communicating words and more-A study of oral traditions of Radh Bengal (original) (raw)

Oral literature of Tribal in Southern Rajasthan

Folklore of Vagad is unfathomable, encompassing the rich cultural heritage of legends, songs, customs, history, artifacts, music, proverbs, tales and myths etc. and is a marked with regularity and dynamism. This paper includes the outreached and unheard topic of Vagad region which has very diversified and unexplored field need to identified and recognized by several prestigious entity of academics and historians. Folklore of Vagad is unfathomable, encompassing the rich cultural heritage of legends, songs, customs, history, artifacts, music, herbal and myths etc. and is a marked with regularity and dynamism. It also includes the Scattered Genre of Vagad's folklore where proverbs and riddles are likely to be heard and situated in each and every person's tongue around the region. We will discuss the majority of sayings, riddles and idioms present in the vast and diversified area of Vagad which are many in numbers and have very little or can say, still finding its glory to understand or looking for its inclusion in mainstreams of Modern ethnographic Literature.

From Oral tradition to digital media- Folklore in West Bengal

Literature for children in India draws heavily on mythological themes. This literature has been translated into various forms with the advance of mass media in India. As digital technology takes over, stories in particular collections of children’s stories from Bengal, like the 100-years-old Thakurmar Jhuli (Grandmother’s Bag of Tales) are not exempt from change. Through the changes in time and modes of expression and the changes through transcribing and digitisation, however, one distinct quality makes these stories resemble their ancestors from the days of oral tradition—they continue the same process of learning and training of the younger generation.

WEEKLY VILLAGE MARKET IN THE FOLKLORE OF THE RADH REGION OF BENGAL: A VENTURE THROUGH RHYMES AND RIDDLES

Weekly Village markets have been at the centre of village life of the Radh region of Bengal through ages. These markets have been the places of confluence of different types of people of village society. The days these markets become operative are usually waited for with lots of expectations and with great excitement by village people even today. All the limitations of village life are attempted to be overcome through them. Hence these markets are having almost innumerable references and depictions in folklores, to be specific in oral traditions, especially in rhymes and riddles which are usually secular in nature but in some cases they are quasi-religious. These folklores are social texts bearing specific anthropological nuances that do often depict the predominant trend of social evolution. These village markets are having direct links with the lives and livelihoods of village artisans. They are quite significant instruments for depiction of village life, its evolution rather mobility and for having a psychoanalytic view of village life.

Complimentary disciplines and their significance in India- Oral traditions, folklore and archaeology

The paper is an attempt towards understanding the importance of the disciplines of folklore and culture studies, especially those pertaining to oral tradition which forms an important part of the intangible heritage of man and his environment and the discipline of archaeology in India. Both are complimentary disciplines and needs to be studied for a holistic understanding of the term culture and folk traditions in a society. The paper traces a brief background of both the disciplines of folklore studies as well as archaeology as it developed in the sub-continent and thereby attempts to highlight the need to perceive and understand both. A cumulative study is an imperative necessity in the recent global world where the term ‘culture’ denotes a much wider definition than was connoted decades ago as part of the civilisation of man.

‘The Sacred and the Mystique’: A Study of the Leitmotifs of Hills and Rivers in Tribal Folklores from India’s Northeast

Sahitya Setu, 2021

India’s northeast is an amalgamation of varied cultures and traditions. A study of the folklores of various tribes of the region highlight the prominence of nature in the lives of these simple people of the hilly terrains. A recurrent theme in the folktales, folk songs, legends and other forms of oral tradition is the significance of hills and rivers in the lives of the people. These hills and rivers take the form of gods or spirits and through these narratives influence the lives of common human beings. Usually, such stories are replete with moral themes and thereby, have become important documents for the tribes. Hills and rivers in these folklores are regarded as sacred objects of nature and are related to the mystique as well. This study is an attempt to explore folklores of different tribes living in India’s northeast, particularly from Nagaland, Meghalaya, Sikkim, and Arunachal Pradesh and analyze the leitmotifs of hills and rivers. While doing so, parallels will be drawn to the representation of hills and rivers in the poetry and fictional narratives of contemporary writers of the region. The purpose of the study is to reflect on the significance of nature in ancient oral tradition and investigate if tribal culture has any association with modern day ecological concerns.

RELIGION, FOLKLORE AND ORAL TRADITIONS: SPECIAL REFERENCE TO EASTERN INDIA

Acme International Journal of Multidisciplinary Research, 2017

A large number of folklore related to religious groups, cults, personality based cults, exists these days in every region of the Indian sub continent. In India religious diversity is respected and encouraged. People from diverse cultures and backgrounds have always accommodated and amalgamated in Indian society. The growth of the folklore provides an interesting window to study the mixing of the legends, oral traditions, religious beliefs, culture and the actual history of the region. For instance in Eastern India there exists variety of folklore , folk literature, Mangal-Kavyas (Panchali) that deals generally with the religious cults, sects, traditions and stories of gods and goddesses , various forms of worship, it's beliefs, rituals and variety of practices etc. The folklore also shows how and why we worship Trees, Sacred Animals, Birds, Emblems, Pictures, Signs, and Motifs etc. The main reason to worship these manifestations is to show devotions to god and goddesses. It symbolizes the religious and cultural practices of both Aryan and non-Aryan traditions. It shows cultural synthesis and ongoing process of socio-anthropological development of the society. Therefore an assessment of Indian culture is possible through a careful study of the religion and folklore .

The Aesthetics of the Oral traditions in the Jaunsari Tribe of Central Himalayas

2019

This paper attempts to understand the aesthetic aspect of Oral tradition in the Jaunsari tribe of Central Himalayas. Language plays a vital role in the literature as it is the only medium to understand the beauty of literature. But when there is no proper medium to enhance the knowledge of any particular community, Oral tradition plays an important part in transmitting all the hidden treasure of human civilization to the next generation. Especially in the tribal society oral narratives are the only source to know about the particular tribe. As tribes are the creator, preserver and transmitter of their culture. Tribal societies are the real transmitter of the oral tradition as they assimilate the traditions in the life. For tribals, orality is not only a means of expressing the experiences of life, but it is the way of unique representation in the literate society. It is the medium through which one can understand the essence of any culture. The present paper discusses the importance...