Introduction: The European Fairy-Tale Tradition between Orality and Literacy

[...] the availability of Straparola's tales was felicitous evidence for the possible historical interdependence of oral and literate tales. Since the idea that oral tradition alone could sustain a global diffusion of tales was unfathomable in his days, he relied on the migration and translatio...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of American folklore 2010-09, Vol.123 (490), p.373-376
1. Verfasser: Ben-Amos, Dan
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description [...] the availability of Straparola's tales was felicitous evidence for the possible historical interdependence of oral and literate tales. Since the idea that oral tradition alone could sustain a global diffusion of tales was unfathomable in his days, he relied on the migration and translation of the Panchatantra, a classic Indian tale collection, as a support for his Indian origin hypothesis (Benfey 1859).
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identifier ISSN: 0021-8715
ispartof The Journal of American folklore, 2010-09, Vol.123 (490), p.373-376
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subjects Analysis
Bottigheimer, Ruth B
Cultural values
Fairy tales
Folk tales
Folklore
Historical figures
History
Influences
Literacy
Oral tradition
Oral traditions
Perrault, Charles (1628-1703)
Popper, Karl Raimund, Sir (1902-1994)
Society
Storytelling
Straparola, Giovanni Francesco
Translation
title Introduction: The European Fairy-Tale Tradition between Orality and Literacy
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