It would be difficult to imagine what human life would be like without stories — from myths recited by Pueblo Indian healers in the kiva, ballads sung in Slovenian market squares, folktales and legends told by the fireside in Italy, to jokes told at a dinner table in Des Moines — for it is chiefly through storytelling that people possess a past.
In "Homo Narrans" John D. Niles explores how human beings shape their world through the stories they tell. The book vividly weaves together the study of Anglo-Saxon literature and culture with the author's own engagements in the field with some of the greatest twentieth-century singers and storytellers in the Scottish tradition. Niles ponders the nature of the storytelling impulse, the social function of narrative, and the role of individual talent in oral tradition. His investigation of the poetics of oral narrative encompasses literary works, such as the epic poems and hymns of early Greece and the Anglo-Saxon "Beowulf", texts that we know only through written versions but that are grounded in oral technique.
That all forms of narrative, even the most sophisticated genres of contemporary fiction, have their ultimate origin in storytelling is a point that scarcely needs to be argued. Niles's claims here are more ambitious: that oral narrative is and has long been the chief basis of culture itself, that the need to tell stories is what distinguishes humans from all other living creatures.
Author(s): John D. Niles
Publisher: University of Pennsylvania Press
Year: 1999
Language: English
Pages: X+280
List of Illustrations vii
List of Abbreviations ix
1. Making Connections 1
2. Somatic Communication 33
3. Poetry as Social Praxis 66
4. Oral Poetry Acts 89
5. "Beowulf" as Ritualized Discourse 120
6. Context and Loss 146
7. The Strong Tradition-Bearer 173
Conclusion: Wordpower Wells from Deep in the Throat 194
Notes 205
Works Cited 237
Acknowledgments 265
Index 267