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Professor Pointer is the first person to offer an English translation of the Epic of Kambili, an African heroic myth. The book is careful to point out that this text deserves to be read by myth scholars and shows that the literary tradition of epic myth-telling extends to Africa through its oral folklore. The author argues that the story should be treated as an epic myth that was pieced together by different authors over several centuries, which may or may not have been the result of observing real events. It may have been an imaginative narrative representing cultural norms with verbal symbol
Epic poetry, African. --- Epic poetry, Mandingo. --- Griots -- Africa, West. --- Heroes -- Mythology -- Africa, West. --- Mandingo poetry -- Translations into English. --- Oral tradition -- Africa, West. --- Epic poetry, Mandingo --- Epic poetry, African --- Mandingo poetry --- Oral tradition --- Griots --- Heroes --- Languages & Literatures --- African Languages & Literatures --- Heroism --- Persons --- Antiheroes --- Apotheosis --- Courage --- Historians --- Storytellers --- Tradition, Oral --- Oral communication --- Folklore --- Oral history --- Mandingo literature --- African epic poetry --- African poetry --- Mandingo epic poetry --- Mythology
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Epic poetry [Mandingo ] --- Epische poëzie [Mandingo ] --- Malinke (African people) --- Mande (African people) --- Manding (African people) --- Mandingo (African people) --- Mandingo (Afrikaans volk) --- Mandingo (Afrikaans volk)--Epische poëzie --- Mandingo (Peuple africain) --- Mandingo epic poetry --- Mandingue (African people) --- Mandinka (African people) --- Mandino (African people) --- Maninkaalu (African people) --- Poésie épique mandingo --- Soce (African people) --- Sosse (African people) --- Epic poetry, Mandingo --- Mandé (African people) --- Maninka (African people) --- Ethnology --- Mandingo poetry --- History and criticism --- Social life and customs
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