Abstract

Oral narratives are the earliest forms of storytelling as they exist in every culture as a part of religious rituals, folk music and songs. They include ritual texts, curative chants, epic poems, musical genres, folk tales, creation stories, songs, myths, spells, legends, proverbs, riddles, tongue twisters, word games, recitations and other narratives not recorded in writing. With the invention of writing, the ancient forms of oral narratives have undergone a lot of changes and have become valuable works of literature. However, the charm of oral narratives often told by improvisation and even gestures as a part of tradition cannot be transcribed into literature. As oral stories are brought down from generation to generation and are committed only to the memory, the various stages of the growth of such narratives give an account of the culture of the people. These are the sources of popular entertainment and are closely associated with festivals and religious ceremonies. At present, our society feels the need to safeguard and protect these indigenous forms of arts from the danger of extinction due to the impacts of globalisation and commercial entertainments. The exploration of the meanings and themes of ancient narratives, in a broader social context, and the significant role of the variant folklore genres in maintaining collective wisdom, national identity, solidarity and traditional moral values are points of great concern in this study.

Highlights

  • Literature is concerned with the written language

  • The process of creativity and literary development within the context of innate modernity mean, we view ourselves in the contemporary world regarding our social environment, and preserve those values and norms which are culturally and socially relevant to us

  • Ancient Meitei literature illustrates a value using which they declare themselves as part of the cultural history of the land

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Summary

Introduction

Literature is concerned with the written language. But a world without writing and free of writers will be a very inhospitable place as we cannot even imagine a situation where we have nothing to read or write. It is a fact that people used to live for many thousands of years and established remarkable civilisations throughout the world without writing. As we all know writing came to the world much later during the period of ancient civilisations in Mesopotamia, Egypt, India and China. Many historians believe that this strange phenomenon of writing, developed in many parts of the world independently, constitutes a complex society, and this system is crucial to a society’s evolution towards more complexity. It seems that we have reached the zenith of sophistication as we miss the jungle for the trees

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