A Népmesék nyomában a világ körül kihívás folytatásaként belevágtam a kisebbségek és bennszülött népek meséibe. Elsőként a kínai kisebbségek kerülnek sorra. A korábbi bejegyzéseket itt találjátok, a Facebookon pedig itt követhetitek nyomon a sorozatot.
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Monday, May 31, 2021
The beauty of kindness (Folktales of Chinese minorities 4. - Manchu)
Monday, May 24, 2021
Falling in love with Hui folktales (Folktales of Chinese minorities 3. - Hui)
As a sequel to the Following folktales around the world reading challenge, I decided to start reading minority and indigenous folktales. First up are the minority peoples who live in China. You can find previous posts here, and you can follow the challenge on Facebook here.
Shujiang Li & Karl W. LuckertMonday, May 17, 2021
StorySpotting: Weather wizards and cloud pirates (New Amsterdam)
StorySpotting is a weekly or kinda-weekly series about folktales, tropes, references, and story motifs that pop up in popular media, from TV shows to video games. Topics are random, depending on what I have watched/played/read recently. Also, THERE WILL BE SPOILERS. Be warned!
What happens?
What's the story?
Let's say up front that Dr. Frome uses the Latin incorrectly: tempestarii is the plural of tempestarius, storm-maker. We know of these strange medieval wizards from the writings of Agobard of Lyon, a 9th century archbishop who wrote a treatise titled "On Hail and Thunder." And no, that's not the title of the next Thor movie.
Conclusion
Tricksters and inventors (Folktales of Chinese minorities 2. - Zhuang)
As a sequel to the Following folktales around the world reading challenge, I decided to start reading minority and indigenous folktales. First up are the minority peoples who live in China. You can find previous posts here, and you can follow the challenge on Facebook here.
The Zhuang live in Southern China and other countries of Southeast Asia. They are the largest ethnic minority in China, with almost 20 million people.
At Grandfather's KneeZhuang wedding, image from here |
Monday, May 10, 2021
Getting started on China (Folktales of Chinese minorities 1. - Han)
As a sequel to the Following folktales around the world reading challenge, I decided to start reading minority and indigenous folktales. First up are the minority peoples who live in China. You can find previous posts here, and you can follow the challenge on Facebook here.
Note: I am aware that he Han are not a minority; they are the majority people of China, making up more than 90% of the population. I wanted to start with them anyway, because the book I previously read for China in the challenge did not contain any Han tales at all.
Chinese Folk TalesTuesday, May 4, 2021
I read a folktale collection from each country in the world, and this is what I learned
Historic moment: I finished my Following folktales around the world reading project! I started it almost exactly five years ago, in early 2016. The idea (inspired by this challenge) was to read a folktale collection from every single country around the world.
I can't believe I made it!
Let's see the numbers first:
I read folktales from 200 countries.
I started with China and arrived in Mongolia in 5 years and 1 month (I started blogging in English a little bit later in the challenge, hence the discrepancy in the posts).
I read more than 10,284 folktales (these are the ones I counted, but there were books that contained multiple tales per chapter).
There were 12 countries from where I could not find complete books. In these cases I read articles of folktales, or looked up stories on the Internet (Barbados, Guinea-Bissau, Burundi, Chad, Djibouti, North Korea, Belarus, Liechtenstein, Luxembourg, Mozambique, Tuvalu, Uruguay). If I happen to find books for them later on, I'll include them (recommendations welcome). I did find tales from all of them in the end; Burundi was the hardest one, I could only locate one single myth.
For three countries I read epics, because I could not find folktale collections (Guinea, Kosovo, Senegal)
The number of tales by continent:
Europe: 3859
Africa: 1642
Asia: 1542
Australia and Oceania: 1211
Central America and the Caribbean: 1124
South America: 756
North America: 150
I read the most stories from these individual countries:
Hungary (756) (one of our country's first folklore collections)
Papua New Guinea (602) (half of the 1001 Papua New Guinean Nights)
Dominican Republic (304) (each tale came with several variants)
Italy (200) (Calvino's classic collection)
Latvia (164)
Australia (157) (I'd like to circle back for more)
Honduras, Suriname, Argentina (150/country)
You can find the complete list of countries and posts here!
Tricksters are everywhere (even North Korea)
I barely read any collections where tricksters did not appear. They seem to be the most universal archetype of folktale characters around the world; where there are stories, there are tricksters, bringing their favorite pranks and antics over and over again, from tar dolls to tug-o'-wars to cunningly exchanged punishments. It's a trickster's world out there.
Some countries are luckier with folklore collections than others
There is an endless supply of folktales, but not all are equally fun
Monday, May 3, 2021
A to Z Reflections: Tarot Tales
I can't believe April is already over! It feels like the whole month consisted of two Saturdays. Or maybe it's just me. A to Z 2021 is done, and even though I only had half the posts written ahead of time, I managed to finish all of them. Yay!
I ended up selecting folktales and legends for 46 cards of the tarot deck (which is 78 cards total). I might finish the rest at one point. I am especially proud that I managed to include stories from six continents, although with more research the deck could get even more diverse.
You can find the page with all my Tarot Tales posts here. I had a little over 11,700 hits in April, which is pretty good. The most popular posts were A, C, B, E, and P. Every post received somewhere between 30 and 10 comments, from visitors who kept returning all through the month. I really enjoyed the visits and the comments, thank you all!
I could not visit as much or as often as I usually do. Pandemic fatigue has been hitting me hard, sometimes I can barely get up, and I had writing deadlines. I'm still catching up. I really enjoyed following several blogs this year, here are some of my favorite themes (in no particular order):
Herbal medicine embedded in a science fiction story (Tea, Sigh, Create)
Imaginary places A to Z (Black and White)
Dante's Divine Comedy (My Magick Theater)
Ludic Lexicon (Deborah Weber)
Greek mythology (with excellent book recommendations) (The Great Raven)
DC characters and their background stories (The Confusing Middle)
How to write technobabble for science fiction (Storytellergirl)
Poetic styles from A to Z, with original poetry examples (The Versesmith)
Steampunk Mythology (Alicia Hawks)
WWI (Sarah Zama)
Ichigo Ichie (My Ordinary Moments)
Thank you all for visiting, commenting, and for writing such interesting things! You made this month awesome even in the middle of the pandemic fatigue. :)
Sunday, May 2, 2021
Crocodile island (Following folktales around the world 200. - East Timor)
Timor
Legends and poems from the land of the sleeping crocodile
Cliff Morris
H.C. Morris, 1984.
A small, but super fascinating volume. It is a bilingual edition (Tetum-English), containing mirror translations, so it was only a hundred-odd pages to read. The tales have all been collected by people who were born and raised in East Timor and then moved somewhere else (Australia, Portugal, etc.). Each story came with a short introduction about the teller. The English translation was a bit odd at times, but it was still an enjoyable read.
Connections
The most interesting connection was the story of Joao the Gambler (John in English). The hero was taken to a castle by a giant bird he had to feed on the way (he used his own flesh for the last few bites). It was Master Maid story where the giant's daughter helped the hero fulfill tasks, and turn into various things during a magic flight scene. It was a common tale type, but with nice local colors: one of the "impossible tasks" was to find mangos out of season.
Where to next?
We are done! I'll take a short break, write a summary of this adventure, and start a new challenge...