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536 results for "oral tradition" — page 1 of 27
C_1_15 — Oral Tradition Fidelity: How Accurately Do Myths Preserve Historical Facts?
Oral traditions have long been treated with skepticism by historians trained in text-based source criticism, yet mounting evidence suggests that under certain conditions, oral narratives can preserve accurate information
C_5_17 — Pacific Navigation Mythology: Celestial Wayfinding in Oral Tradition
Pacific navigation mythology — the body of oral traditions, hero cycles, and cosmological narratives that encode celestial wayfinding knowledge within Polynesian, Micronesian, and Melanesian cultural frameworks — represe
G_4_19 — Oral Tradition as Historical Record — Scientific Assessment
Oral tradition — the intergenerational transmission of knowledge, narratives, law, and custom without writing — was the primary medium of human memory for >95% of our species' existence and remains vital in many living c
A_4_29 — Mongolian & Turkic Epic Traditions
The Mongolian and Turkic epic traditions constitute one of the world's great oral literary heritages, spanning from the Altai Mountains to Anatolia across more than two millennia. Central texts include the Secret History
ZG_2_04 — Oral-Formulaic Composition — Parry-Lord Theory
The oral-formulaic theory (also called the Parry-Lord theory) is one of the most influential discoveries in 20th-century humanities: the demonstration that great oral epics like Homer's Iliad and Odyssey were not compose
N_1_13 — Yazidi Tradition: Peacock Angel and the Misunderstood Religion
The Yazidis (Êzîdî) are an ethno-religious community of approximately 700,000-1,000,000 people (estimates vary widely due to dispersal), primarily concentrated in the Nineveh Plains and Sinjar Mountains of northern Iraq,
A_3_14 — West African Oral Traditions
West African oral traditions constitute one of the world's richest and most extensively documented systems of non-written knowledge transmission. The griot (or djeli in Mande languages) tradition of the Manding, Wolof, F
X_1_20 — Comparative Traditional Medicine: TCM, Ayurveda, Unani & Kampo
The world's major traditional medicine systems — Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM), Ayurveda (India), Unani (Greco-Arabic), and Kampo (Japan) — represent independent but structurally parallel attempts to systematize hea
H_3_14 — Oral History Suppression: Favoring Text Over Voice
Academic historiography has systematically privileged written texts over oral sources — treating written documents as reliable evidence and oral traditions as unreliable, distorted, or "merely" mythological. This literac
A_4_31 — Amazonian Indigenous Cosmologies: Tupi, Guarani & Their World
The Tupi-Guarani language family encompasses hundreds of indigenous peoples across a vast territory stretching from the Amazon Basin through eastern Brazil to the Río de la Plata region of Paraguay, Argentina, and Urugua
A_4_17 — Aboriginal Australian Dreaming Narratives
The Dreaming (known by various language-specific names — Jukurrpa in Warlpiri, Tjukurpa in Pitjantjatjara/Yankunytjatjara, Wongar in Yolngu) is the central cosmological, legal, and ontological framework of Aboriginal Aus
A_4_33 — Inuit Cosmology & Sedna Mythology
Inuit cosmology is the spiritual and philosophical tradition of the Inuit peoples — the indigenous inhabitants of the Arctic and Subarctic regions of North America, from Alaska through Arctic Canada (Nunavut, Nunavik, Nu
A_3_07 — Kalevala and Finnish-Baltic Mythology
The Kalevala is the Finnish national epic, compiled from oral folk poetry (runo songs) by physician-scholar Elias Lönnrot and first published in 1835 (32 poems) with an expanded edition of 50 poems in 1849. Lönnrot trave
A_3_11 — Homeric Hymns: Divine Preludes and the Gods of Olympus
The Homeric Hymns are a collection of 33 hexameter poems addressed to individual Greek deities, composed between approximately 750 and 500 BCE and attributed in antiquity to Homer — though they are the work of multiple a
A_3_20 — Dogon Cosmological Knowledge
The Dogon are a West African people numbering approximately 800,000, living primarily on the Bandiagara Escarpment and surrounding plateau in Mali. Their remarkably detailed cosmological and astronomical knowledge became
A_3_21 — West African Creation Texts: Bambara & Fulani Cosmogony
The Bambara (Bamana) and Fulani (Fula/Peul) peoples of the western Sahel (Mali, Guinea, Senegal, Burkina Faso, Nigeria, and across West Africa) possess two of the most elaborate creation mythologies in Sub-Saharan Africa
U_4_02 — Oral Literature — Epic, Myth, and Memory Before Writing
Before writing systems emerged (~3400 BCE in Sumer), all human knowledge was transmitted orally — through epic recitation, song, ritual chant, and structured narrative. The oral-formulaic theory developed by Milman Parry
ZH_4_18 — Indigenous Star Map Catalog
Indigenous star map systems — the astronomical knowledge embedded in the oral traditions, navigation practices, ceremonial calendars, and landscape relationships of non-Western cultures — represent a vast but systematica
ZF_3_15 — Tsunami Cultural Memory: Indigenous Oral Records and Ancient Warnings
Tsunami cultural memory reveals that indigenous and traditional communities have preserved remarkably accurate records of catastrophic ocean events — sometimes for centuries or millennia — through oral traditions, storie
J_4_02 — Ancient Medicine and Healing Traditions
Ancient healing traditions represent some of humanity's most sophisticated technological achievements, yet are frequently underestimated by modern observers who conflate ritual context with practical ineffectiveness. Egy
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