Category:Oral Tradition
Once, before Film, before printing, before even writing, all stories were spread by word of mouth alone. All the oldest stories have their roots in this ancient tradition.
Oral storytelling has distinctive features, shaping the tropes it uses. Speech is not nearly as fast as reading, so a evening's worth of story is shorter, it is not possible to page back through the story, and the story itself needs the kind of repetitive features that aid memorization. Even with memorization, stories often became distorted over long periods as the details of the original telling fell victim to the ravages of time.
Much of the oral tradition falls somewhere on the myth-legend-fairytale spectrum. Myths deal with gods, demigods, and the shaping of the world. Legends are on a slightly smaller scale, dealing with great heroes, the founding of nations, and other history shaking events. Fairy tales, for all their princes, are on a smaller scale still.
The oral tradition also includes such things as nursery rhymes and folk songs.
There are various tropes stemming from classical myths and European fairytales used to mark written stories as belonging in these genres. For obvious reasons, every trope here is one of The Oldest Ones in the Book, if they haven't been forgotten.
Subcategories
This category has the following 3 subcategories, out of 3 total.
Pages in category "Oral Tradition"
The following 130 pages are in this category, out of 130 total.
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- Mabinogion
- Magnificent Bastard/Oral Tradition
- Memetic Badass/Oral Tradition
- Merlin
- Mind Rape/Oral Tradition
- Misaimed Fandom/Oral Tradition
- Moment of Awesome (Sugar Wiki)/Oral Tradition
- Moral Event Horizon/Oral Tradition
- Ms. Fanservice/Oral Tradition
- Mugging the Monster/Oral Tradition
- Murder Ballad
- Myth, Legend and Folklore
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- What an Idiot!/Oral Tradition
- What Do You Mean It Wasn't Made on Drugs?/Oral Tradition
- What Happened to the Mouse?/Oral Tradition
- What the Hell, Hero?/Oral Tradition
- The White Witch of Rose Hall
- Wild Mass Guessing/Oral Tradition
- William Tell
- Wolverine Publicity/Oral Tradition
- The Woobie/Oral Tradition