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Document Description
Title
Storytelling
on the
Gabarus-Framboise
coast
of
Cape
Breton
-
oral
narrative
repertoire
analysis
in a
folk
community
Author
Thurgood
,
Ranald
,
1952-
Description
Thesis
(Ph.D.)
,
Memorial
University
of
Newfoundland
,
2000.
Folklore
Date
1999
Pagination
xviii, 518 leaves : ill., maps.
Subject
Storytelling--Nova
Scotia--Gabarus
Region;
Storytelling--Nova
Scotia--Framboise
Region;
Storytellers--Nova
Scotia--Gabarus
Region;
Storytellers--Nova
Scotia--Framboise
Region;
Framboise
Region
(N.S.)--History;
Gabarus
Region
(N.S.)--History
Degree
Ph.D.
Degree Grantor
Memorial University of Newfoundland. Dept. of Folklore
Discipline
Folklore
Language
Eng
Spatial Coverage
Canada--Nova Scotia--Gabarus Region
Canada--Nova Scotia--Framboise Region
Notes
Bibliography:
leaves
453-487
Abstract
The
rural
folk
community
exists.
The
Gabarus-Framboise
region
of
eastern
Cape
Breton
,
although
not
Redfield's
ideal
folk
society
,
is
,
nonetheless
, a
contemporary
folk
community
in
which
virtually
every
person
knows
every
other
and
where
all
are
connected
by a
strong
sense
of
history
,
tradition
,
kinship
, and
place.
Unlike
members
of
many
urban
communities
of
interest
,
residents
of
Gabarus-Framboise
interact
continually
at
work
and
play.
Any
individual's
social
universe
extends
well
beyond
the
immediate
area
but
is
dominated
by
relationships
with
local
people.
Here
, a
sense
of
regional
identity
is
both
shaped
and
reinforced
by
storytelling
traditions.
In
fact
,
stories
provide
roots
for the
people
of this
community
,
connecting
the
tellers
and
listeners
even
as they
entertain.
--
This
thesis
is
a
repertoire
analysis
of
contemporary
oral
narratives
in a
rural
folk
community.
A
thematic
breakdown
of
stories
shows
that
while
they
cover
a
variety
of
topics
,
most
focus
on the
community
, its
residents
, and their
physical
and
social
environment.
To
situate
current
storytelling
practices
and
themes
, they are
first
placed
within
their
historical-cultural
context.
The
region's
oral
narratives
are
enjoyable
and
comprehensible
, at a
basic
level
, to
outsiders.
However
, these
stories
are
better
understood
as
parts
of an
ongoing
community
novel
containing
both
repeating
and
overlapping
characters
and
topics
,
carrying
deeper
messages
about
identity
,
relationships
, and
values
to
insiders.
--
The
community's
narratives
cannot
be
separated
from
either
tellers
or
listeners.
Most
local
residents
share
the
ability
to
create
entertaining
narratives
about
such
subjects
as
personal
experiences
,
family
and
community
history
,
supernatural
occurrences
, and
local
characters.
Typical
conversational
storytelling
is
analyzed
by
examining
a
house
visit
involving
two
couples
, in
which
each
person
makes
an
important
contribution
to the
evening's
entertainment.
The
thesis
includes
many
stories
from
both
men
and
women.
However
, the
role
of
specialized
storyteller
is
attributed
locally
to the
elderly
,
usually
men
or
Gaelic
speakers.
The
repertoires
and
storytelling
practices
of
three
men
who
are
recognized
by their
neighbours
as the
community's
outstanding
storytellers
are
explored.
While
expressing
their
own
preferences
for
particular
narratives
and
narrative
genres
,
local
storytellers
,
whether
conversational
or
specialized
,
maintain
and
reshape
regional
identity.
Type
Text
Resource Type
Electronic
thesis
or
dissertation
Format
Image/jpeg;
Application/pdf
Source
Paper copy kept in the Centre for Newfoundland Studies, Memorial University Libraries
Local Identifier
a1477364
Rights
The author retains copyright ownership and moral rights in this thesis. Neither the thesis nor substantial extracts from it may be printed or otherwise reproduced without the author's permission.
Collection
Electronic
Theses
and
Dissertations
Scanning Status
Completed
PDF File
(74.45
MB)
--
http://collections.mun.ca/PDFs/theses/Thurgood_Ranald.pdf
CONTENTdm file name
132475.cpd