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  • Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://ecde.aau.edu.et/jspui/handle/123456789/538
    Title: Folktales, Reality, and Childhood in Ethiopia: How Children Construct Social Values through Performance of Folktales
    Authors: Dr. Tadesse Jaleta Jirata
    Keywords: Research Report
    Issue Date: 2018
    Abstract: The aim is analyzing how children in Guji-Oromo society perform and interpret folktales so as to construct and reconstruct their meanings against the social and cultural practices of their society.
    Description: This article examines how Oromo-speaking children in Ethiopia construct social values in multiple ways through their participation in storytelling and the subsequent meaning making discussions. By presenting children as actors in the re-contextualization of folktales, the article argues that participation in a folkloric performance is not a mere play practice for children, but is a social and artistic forum through which they acquire survival skills and grow connected to values of their society. This indicates that in the processes of storytelling and meaning-making, children draw an analogical relationship between imagined situations in folklore and living realities in their local environment. The article is based on data generated through ten months of ethnographic fieldwork with children among an Oromo-speaking society in Ethiopia.
    URI: http://ecde.aau.edu.et/jspui/handle/123456789/538
    Appears in Collections:Research report/ journal article, book/ proceeding chapter,

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