Journal of American Folklore, Svazek 79American Folk-lore Society, 1966 |
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Strana 158
... perhaps the theories may be enriched a little by future fieldworkers noting how the apparently numskull jests and the people they are told about fit into the larger social scheme . Perhaps it is unscientific to admit that the funny ...
... perhaps the theories may be enriched a little by future fieldworkers noting how the apparently numskull jests and the people they are told about fit into the larger social scheme . Perhaps it is unscientific to admit that the funny ...
Strana 186
... perhaps as ancestors , of whom a myth is told to explain the connection . Vakano and Waitambu are tauvu because their gods met and married . On the other hand , Thekena clan uses this type of myth to justify , not a tauvu relationship ...
... perhaps as ancestors , of whom a myth is told to explain the connection . Vakano and Waitambu are tauvu because their gods met and married . On the other hand , Thekena clan uses this type of myth to justify , not a tauvu relationship ...
Strana 190
... perhaps once part of an anec dote , is " " That bird is mine , the bill is pierced , ' says Waawaa iki the fool . " Another saying that sounds like a remnant of a forgotten numskull incident refers to a hilly locality on Kauai , perhaps ...
... perhaps once part of an anec dote , is " " That bird is mine , the bill is pierced , ' says Waawaa iki the fool . " Another saying that sounds like a remnant of a forgotten numskull incident refers to a hilly locality on Kauai , perhaps ...
Obsah
Mythology as a Reflection | 3 |
Psychological Symbolism | 52 |
A Reconstructed Myth from Eastern | 84 |
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American Folklore American Folklore Society anthropologists Aonuka appear Arnhem Land asked aunt Aymara ballad behavior belief bird Blue Mud Bay Borongan brother called canoe characters child Child ballads clan coconut collection culture dance dead death Discoverer-of-the-Sun eastern Samar example false face father fish folklorists folktales girl Groote Eylandt Guerrehés Guingamor Guiuan hero husband Igsabod informants Iolofath island Jātaka killed king kinihera knight linguistic living looked magic Maka-andog marriage married masks mentioned Moros mother motif Mud Bay myth narrative narrator native Negro numskull oral literature paperbark person población Ponape Ponapean Pusong Rasim recorded reference riddles rite ritual Samaran segments sister social society songs spear spirit story structure style symbolic tale tell tion tobacco told tradition tree Ulithi Ulithian variants village wife woman women Wuradilagu young