Folk stories of the Hmong peoples of Laos, Thailand, and Vietnam

Hmong culture has had an oral tradition for millennia, but the language itself did not even exist in written form until the 1950s. Compiled by famed author and storyteller Norma Livo and coauthor, Dia Cha, this is the first collection of authentic Hmong tales to be published commercially in the Engl...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Otros Autores: Livo, Norma J., 1929- (-), Cha, Dia, 1962-
Formato: Libro electrónico
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: Englewood, Colo. : Libraries Unlimited 1991.
Colección:EBSCO Academic eBook Collection Complete.
Acceso en línea:Conectar con la versión electrónica
Ver en Universidad de Navarra:https://innopac.unav.es/record=b32111162*spi
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • The Hmong and their culture. History of the Hmong
  • Traditional beliefs and customs. Animal symbols ; Farming ; Houses ; Birth and death ; The shaman (tu-ua-neng) ; New Year's festival ; Marriage customs
  • Hmong folk arts. Jewelry ; Clothing ; Pa ndau (flower cloth) ; Storycloths
  • Cultural conflicts
  • Preserving a cultural heritage.
  • Folk stories : in the beginning. The beginning of the world
  • Legend of the rice seed
  • How seeds came again into the world and why dogs eat feces droppings
  • The origin of the shaman
  • Another age of happiness
  • Creation, flood, naming story.
  • How/why folk stories. Why monkey and man do not live together
  • Why animals cannot talk
  • Why people eat three meals a day and why doodle bugs roll balls of dung
  • Why farmers have to work so hard
  • Why birds are never hungry
  • Why Hmong are forbidden to drink mother's milk
  • Why the Hmong live on mountains
  • Shoa and his fire
  • The story of the owl.
  • Folk stories of love, magic, and fun. A bird couple's vow
  • The monkeys and the grasshoppers
  • Sister-in-law Yer and the tiger : how a wise woman tricked the tiger
  • Zeej Choj Kim, the lazy man
  • Pumpkin Seed and the snake
  • The handsome husband
  • Ngao Nao and Shee Na
  • The tiger steals Nkauj Ncoom
  • The orphan and the monkeys
  • The orphan boy and his wife
  • The tigers steal Nou Plai's wife, Ntxawm
  • Gwa and Uo and their two fish wives.