ABSTRACT

Originally published in 1992, Turkic Oral Poetry provides an expert introduction to the oral epic traditions of the Turkic peoples of central Asia. The book seeks to remedy the problem of non-specialists’ lack of access to information on the Turkic traditions, and in the process, it provides scholars in various disciplines with material for comparative investigation. The book focuses on "central traditions" of this region, specifically those of the Uzbeks, Kazakhs, Karakalpak’s, and Kirghiz and looks at the historical and linguistic background to a survey of the earliest documents, portraits of the singers and of performance considerations of genre, story-patterns, and formulaic diction, and discussions of "composition in performance", memory, rhetoric and diffusion.

chapter |12 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|24 pages

Turkic Epic Poetry: The Earliest Documents

chapter 3|36 pages

The Singer: Shaman, Minstrel, Poet

chapter 4|26 pages

Performance

chapter 5|24 pages

Genre

chapter 6|28 pages

Story-Patterns

chapter 7|48 pages

The Varieties of Formulaic Diction

chapter 9|46 pages

Rhetoric, Style, Narrative Technique

chapter 10|38 pages

Transformations in Space and Time