Oral Poetry

Ruth Finnegan
Open Book Publishers
2025-05-28

This book offers a comprehensive introduction to the vast field of 'oral poetry,' encompassing everything from American folksongs, contemporary pop songs, and Inuit lyrics, to the heroic epics of Homer, biblical psalms, and epic traditions in Asia and the Pacific. Taking a broad comparative approach, it explores oral poetry across Africa, Asia, Oceania, Europe, and the Americas. Drawing on global research, Ruth Finnegan, the author of the seminal Oral Literature in Africa, sheds light on key debates such as the nature of oral tradition, the relationship between poetry and society, the differences between oral and written forms, and the role of poets in predominantly non-literate contexts.

Written from a primarily anthropological and literary perspective, this study contributes to the socio-cultural aspects of verbal art while also engaging with the literary dimensions of poetry which happens at any given moment to be unwritten. Finnegan's clear, non-technical language and extensive use of translated examples make this work accessible to a wide audience, appealing not only to sociologists and anthropologists but also to those with an interest in poetry, in comparative literature, and in global folk traditions.

The re-issue of this classic study is now augmented by further illustrations and a newly written Introduction and Conclusion, situating it in the context of the contemporary study of literature.

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Keywords

  • Social and cultural anthropology
  • Folklore, myths and legends
  • Literary theory
  • Comparative literature
  • Folklore, myths and legends
  • Sociology
  • Social and cultural anthropology
  • Comparative Analysis
  • Cultural Context
  • Literary Tradition
  • Oral Poetry
  • Transmission
  • Social Phenomenon
  • Comparative literature
  • Literature: history and criticism
  • Anthropology
  • Folklore and Ethnology
  • Literature

Oral Poetry

Ruth Finnegan

Open Book Publishers

2025-05-28

CC BY-NC

This book offers a comprehensive introduction to the vast field of 'oral poetry,' encompassing everything from American folksongs, contemporary pop songs, and Inuit lyrics, to the heroic epics of Homer, biblical psalms, and epic traditions in Asia and the Pacific. Taking a broad comparative approach, it explores oral poetry across Africa, Asia, Oceania, Europe, and the Americas. Drawing on global research, Ruth Finnegan, the author of the seminal Oral Literature in Africa, sheds light on key debates such as the nature of oral tradition, the relationship between poetry and society, the differences between oral and written forms, and the role of poets in predominantly non-literate contexts.

Written from a primarily anthropological and literary perspective, this study contributes to the socio-cultural aspects of verbal art while also engaging with the literary dimensions of poetry which happens at any given moment to be unwritten. Finnegan's clear, non-technical language and extensive use of translated examples make this work accessible to a wide audience, appealing not only to sociologists and anthropologists but also to those with an interest in poetry, in comparative literature, and in global folk traditions.

The re-issue of this classic study is now augmented by further illustrations and a newly written Introduction and Conclusion, situating it in the context of the contemporary study of literature.

Download Formats

Included in Packages

Topics

  • Social and cultural anthropology
  • Folklore, myths and legends
  • Literary theory
  • Comparative literature
  • Folklore, myths and legends
  • Sociology
  • Social and cultural anthropology
  • Comparative Analysis
  • Cultural Context
  • Literary Tradition
  • Oral Poetry
  • Transmission
  • Social Phenomenon
  • Comparative literature
  • Literature: history and criticism
  • Anthropology
  • Folklore and Ethnology
  • Literature