Oral Tradition Volume 17, Number 2October 2002
Table of Contents
Editor's Column |
Ubiquitous Format? What Ubiquitous Format? Chaucer’s Tale of Melibee as a Proverb Collection by Betsy Bowden |
Written on the Wind: An Introduction to Auralture by Vladimir Guerrero |
Rites of Passage and Oral Storytelling in Romanian Epic and the New Testament by Margaret Hiebert Beissinger |
Oral Tradition and Contemporary Critical Theory. II by Mark C. Amodio |
Transforming Experience into Tradition: Two Theories of Proverb Use and Chaucer’s Practice by Nancy Mason Bradbury |
The Minim-istic Imagination: Scribal Invention and the Word in the Early English Alliterative Tradition by Johnathan Watson |
The Social and Dramatic Functions of Oral Recitation and Composition in Beowulf by John M. Hill |
No One Tells You This: Secondary Orality and Hypertextuality by Michael Joyce |
Cynewulf at the Interface of Literacy and Orality: The Evidence of the Puns in Beowulf by Samantha Zacher |
About the Authors |