Narrative Poetry - Oral Tradition

Oral Tradition

Literature
Major forms
  • Novel
  • Poem
  • Drama
  • Short story
  • Novella
Genres
  • Comedy
  • Drama
  • Epic
  • Erotic
  • Nonsense
  • Lyric
  • Mythopoeia
  • Romance
  • Satire
  • Tragedy
  • Tragicomedy
Media
  • Performance (play)
  • Book
Techniques
  • Prose
  • Verse
History and lists
  • Outline of literature
  • Index of terms
  • History
  • Modern history
  • Books
  • Writers
  • Literary awards
  • Poetry awards
Discussion
  • Criticism
  • Theory
  • Magazines

Much of poetry has its source in an oral tradition: the Scots and English ballads, the tales of Robin Hood, of Iskandar, and various Baltic and Slavic heroic poems all were originally intended for recitation, rather than reading. In many cultures, there remains a lively tradition of the recitation of traditional tales in verse formativeness. It has been suggested that some of the distinctive features that distinguish poetry from prose, such as metre, alliteration, and kennings, at one time served as memory aids that allowed the bards who recited traditional tales to reconstruct them from memory.

A Narrative Poem usually tells a story using a poetic theme. Epic poems are very vital to narrative poems, although it is thought that narrative poems were created to explain oral traditions. The focus of narrative poetry is often the pros and cons of life.

Read more about this topic:  Narrative Poetry

Famous quotes containing the words oral and/or tradition:

    The Americans are violently oral.... That’s why in America the mother is all-important and the father has no position at all—isn’t respected in the least. Even the American passion for laxatives can be explained as an oral manifestation. They want to get rid of any unpleasantness taken in through the mouth.
    —W.H. (Wystan Hugh)

    And hereby hangs a moral highly applicable to our own trustee-ridden universities, if to nothing else. If we really wanted liberty of speech and thought, we could probably get it—Spain fifty years ago certainly had a longer tradition of despotism than has the United States—but do we want it? In these years we will see.
    John Dos Passos (1896–1970)