|
Advanced search
Previous page
|
Title
Capturing Socio-cultural Diversity And Change Through Oral Literature |
Full text
http://erepository.uonbi.ac.ke/11295/38933 |
Date
2012 |
Author(s)
Muchiri, Jennifer |
Abstract
Oral literature is dynamic. It changes and grows to accommodate the changing times and trends in the human world. The onset of digital technology has meant that oral literature has to adopt it if it is to retain its functional and aesthetic place in society. Some oral literature scholars and researchers have argued that the advent of technology and other changes in society are killing oral literature. My argument in this paper is that oral literature is not a dying art; instead, it is taking different and more resilient forms in this digital age. My focus will be on various digital texts including two VCD recordings of an interethnic (Gikuyu and Samburu) wedding ceremony and a modern day (Gikuyu) thanksgiving ceremony. My essay assesses how digitization of oral literature reveals dynamism in terms of style, content, performers, and dissemination. |
Language
en |
Publisher
University of Nairobi |
Type of publication
Article |
Format
application/pdf |
Identifier
The Global South Volume 5, Number 2, Fall 2012 pp. 77-92 | 10.1353/gbs.2012.0010; muse.jhu.edu/login?auth=0&type=summary&url=/journals/the_global_south/v005/5.2.muchiri.html |
Repository
Nairobi - University of Nairobi
|
Added to C-A: 2023-09-20;12:06:09 |
© Connecting-Africa 2004-2024 | Last update: Saturday, July 6, 2024 |
Webmaster
|