Verbal Arts in Madagascar: Performance in Historical PerspectiveVerbal Arts in Madagascar combines a history of the encounter between Europeans and colonized people with a groundbreaking analysis of four types of Malagasy folklore: riddles, proverbs, hainteny (dialogic exchanges of traditional metaphors), and oratory. In this richly textured study, Lee Haring has collected several hundred witty, imaginative texts and translated them into English for the first time. Verbal Arts in Madagascar contains the first history of the collecting of folklore in Madagascar from 1820 to the present. Haring contends that when European investigators recorded this "native culture" they created a vision of "folklore" which served French domination by trivializing Malagasy reality. Now, through comparison and analysis of texts gathered during a century and a half by foreigners, Haring shows that the four types of folklore examined make use of a pervasive two-sided dialogic structure. Although Haring works from texts transcribed and published at least seventy years ago, his analysis always highlights the performance of folklore in actual social settings. By drawing upon the observations of collectors and upon information presented in chronicles, ethnographies, reports, and other historical documents, Haring successfully reconstructs the performances of the texts and the social context in which the performances took place. Verbal Arts in Madagascar pioneers an integrated approach to past folklore studies into contemporary theory. It will especially interest students and scholars in folklore, history, African studies, and anthropology. |
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Page 30
nity , is limited to a single way of speaking , ” but instead has access to several
different ways of speaking ( Hymes 1972 : 38 ) . The Merina group these ways
into a characteristically binary division , classifying their registers of speaking into
two ...
nity , is limited to a single way of speaking , ” but instead has access to several
different ways of speaking ( Hymes 1972 : 38 ) . The Merina group these ways
into a characteristically binary division , classifying their registers of speaking into
two ...
Page 73
Trying to apply proverbs , he would change them , complete them , or adapt them
to particular speaking situations . This attempt , so natural to a nascent European
writer , brought him only failure . Despite its utter dependence on the particulars ...
Trying to apply proverbs , he would change them , complete them , or adapt them
to particular speaking situations . This attempt , so natural to a nascent European
writer , brought him only failure . Despite its utter dependence on the particulars ...
Page 153
Among the Merina , formal speaking is especially practiced by men ( Keenan
1974 ) . Within that general conception , kabary could also mean ( 2 ) the formal
debate between heads of families at the time of a proposed marriage , during
which ...
Among the Merina , formal speaking is especially practiced by men ( Keenan
1974 ) . Within that general conception , kabary could also mean ( 2 ) the formal
debate between heads of families at the time of a proposed marriage , during
which ...
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Contents
Question and Answer | 34 |
Dialogue in Monologue | 63 |
The Merina Hainteny | 98 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
acceptance African ancestors answer assert audience authority balance called choice collected connection contest continues conversation created culture Dahle dead death debate deliverer dialect dialogue Domenichini-Ramiaramanana European example expressive fixed folklore folklorists followed formal French funeral genre give hainteny hianao Houlder importance interaction island kabary kind king language linguistic living Madagascar Malagasy marriage means Merina metaphor missionaries monologic observed ohabolana oral oration oratory origin pattern Paulhan performance person petitioner phrases pieces play poems poetic poetry political present printed proverbs question quotation quoted raha Rasamuel reference relations reported riddle says separate single situation social society speaker speaking speech structure style symbolic tale texts tradition trans translated Turn verbal voices wife woman words writing