YAQUI MYTHS AND LEGENDS - 61 illustrated Yaqui Myths and Legends

Kids, Fiction, Fairy Tales, Fiction - YA, Fiction & Literature
Cover of the book YAQUI MYTHS AND LEGENDS - 61 illustrated Yaqui Myths and Legends by Anon E. Mouse, Retold by R Warner Giddings, Abela Publishing
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Anon E. Mouse, Retold by R Warner Giddings ISBN: 9788827501962
Publisher: Abela Publishing Publication: March 8, 2018
Imprint: Language: English
Author: Anon E. Mouse, Retold by R Warner Giddings
ISBN: 9788827501962
Publisher: Abela Publishing
Publication: March 8, 2018
Imprint:
Language: English

AS LATE AS the 1950’s no thorough collection or study has been made of Yaqui folklore. At this time only about a score of Yaqui stories were to be found in published form. The 61 Yaqui folk and fairy tales and 90 pen and ink drawings in this comprehensive volume go quite a way to correcting this.
HEREIN you will find stories like Yomumuli And The Little Surem People, The Ku Bird, The Wise Deer, Tasi'o Sewa, Yuku, When Badger Named The Sun, Mochomo, The Walking Stone, The Stick That Sang, Cho'oko Baso plus many more.
YAQUI FOLK literature also expresses the tribe's sense of the sacred and material value of their territory, and the antiquity and distinctiveness of their customs. As such, you will also find stories of War Between The Yaquis And The Pimas and The Wars Against The Mexicans. For most of the 19th C. the Mexican government baited the Yaquis, captured and sold them off as indentured workers then confiscated their land and moved settlers in. But the Yaquis fought back. There is also the story of the Peace At Pitahaya which was signed in 1909.
STORY TELLING among the Yaquis is quite informal. There is no socially determined time or place for relating the myths or tales except in the case of pascola stories, which are told at fiestas. Nor are there special persons who are supposed to tell the myths or tales. Yaquis say that stories are most often told, by men or women, in the evenings when a group happens to be gathered in the ramada or in the house by the fire. They also tell stories when working in the fields. However, some of the older Yaquis indicate that story-telling used to be more formalised in the time of their parents or in their own youth. The more the pity as there is no better way of keeping a culture alive than through story telling.
WE INVITE YOU to curl up in front of your hearth with the fire crackling and spitting. Then open this this unique sliver of Yaqui culture not seen in print for many a year; and immerse yourself in the tales and fables of the ancient American South West.
----------------------------
TAGS: fairy tales, folklore, myths, legends, children’s stories, children’s stories, bygone era, fairydom, fairy land, classic stories, children’s bedtime stories, fables, cultural, setting, Arizona, Mexico, South Western USA, storytelling, narrators, yomumuli, little surem people, ku bird, wise deer, tasi'o sewa, yuku, badger, named the sun, mochomo, wax monkey, false beggar, stick that sang, two bears, walking stone, sun, moon, five friends, takochai, man, buzzard, snake people, omteme, juan sin miedo, boy, became king, kaiman, big bird, wars against the Mexicans, war between the yaquis and the pimas, peace at pitahaya, malinero'okai, first, deer hunter, death, kutam tawi, flood, prophets, san pedro, cristo, Saint Peter, Jesus Christ, jesucristo, pedro de ordimales, san pedro and the devil, father frog, two little lambs, maisoka, hima'awikia, cricket, lion, grasshopper and cricket, turtle, coyote, rabbit, heron and fox, cat, monkey, rabbit's house, coyote, friendly dogs, black horse, duck hunter, tesak pascola,  watermelons, calabazas, funeral, suawaka, topol the clever, remain animals, coyote woman, first fiesta, bobok, five mended brothers, 5, first fire, spirit fox, 2, yaqui doctor, twins, snake of the hill of nohme, tukawiru, cho'oko baso

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

AS LATE AS the 1950’s no thorough collection or study has been made of Yaqui folklore. At this time only about a score of Yaqui stories were to be found in published form. The 61 Yaqui folk and fairy tales and 90 pen and ink drawings in this comprehensive volume go quite a way to correcting this.
HEREIN you will find stories like Yomumuli And The Little Surem People, The Ku Bird, The Wise Deer, Tasi'o Sewa, Yuku, When Badger Named The Sun, Mochomo, The Walking Stone, The Stick That Sang, Cho'oko Baso plus many more.
YAQUI FOLK literature also expresses the tribe's sense of the sacred and material value of their territory, and the antiquity and distinctiveness of their customs. As such, you will also find stories of War Between The Yaquis And The Pimas and The Wars Against The Mexicans. For most of the 19th C. the Mexican government baited the Yaquis, captured and sold them off as indentured workers then confiscated their land and moved settlers in. But the Yaquis fought back. There is also the story of the Peace At Pitahaya which was signed in 1909.
STORY TELLING among the Yaquis is quite informal. There is no socially determined time or place for relating the myths or tales except in the case of pascola stories, which are told at fiestas. Nor are there special persons who are supposed to tell the myths or tales. Yaquis say that stories are most often told, by men or women, in the evenings when a group happens to be gathered in the ramada or in the house by the fire. They also tell stories when working in the fields. However, some of the older Yaquis indicate that story-telling used to be more formalised in the time of their parents or in their own youth. The more the pity as there is no better way of keeping a culture alive than through story telling.
WE INVITE YOU to curl up in front of your hearth with the fire crackling and spitting. Then open this this unique sliver of Yaqui culture not seen in print for many a year; and immerse yourself in the tales and fables of the ancient American South West.
----------------------------
TAGS: fairy tales, folklore, myths, legends, children’s stories, children’s stories, bygone era, fairydom, fairy land, classic stories, children’s bedtime stories, fables, cultural, setting, Arizona, Mexico, South Western USA, storytelling, narrators, yomumuli, little surem people, ku bird, wise deer, tasi'o sewa, yuku, badger, named the sun, mochomo, wax monkey, false beggar, stick that sang, two bears, walking stone, sun, moon, five friends, takochai, man, buzzard, snake people, omteme, juan sin miedo, boy, became king, kaiman, big bird, wars against the Mexicans, war between the yaquis and the pimas, peace at pitahaya, malinero'okai, first, deer hunter, death, kutam tawi, flood, prophets, san pedro, cristo, Saint Peter, Jesus Christ, jesucristo, pedro de ordimales, san pedro and the devil, father frog, two little lambs, maisoka, hima'awikia, cricket, lion, grasshopper and cricket, turtle, coyote, rabbit, heron and fox, cat, monkey, rabbit's house, coyote, friendly dogs, black horse, duck hunter, tesak pascola,  watermelons, calabazas, funeral, suawaka, topol the clever, remain animals, coyote woman, first fiesta, bobok, five mended brothers, 5, first fire, spirit fox, 2, yaqui doctor, twins, snake of the hill of nohme, tukawiru, cho'oko baso

More books from Abela Publishing

Cover of the book Australian Legendary Tales - 31 Children's Aboriginal Stories from the Outback by Anon E. Mouse, Retold by R Warner Giddings
Cover of the book SOUTH AFRICAN FOLK-TALES - 44 African Stories for Children by Anon E. Mouse, Retold by R Warner Giddings
Cover of the book A GHOSTLY REHEARSAL - A children's ghost story from the golden age of railways by Anon E. Mouse, Retold by R Warner Giddings
Cover of the book THE LASSIE AND HER GODMOTHER - A Scandinavian Fairy Tale by Anon E. Mouse, Retold by R Warner Giddings
Cover of the book MAORI FOLKLORE or THE ANCIENT TRADITIONAL HISTORY OF THE NEW ZEALANDERS by Anon E. Mouse, Retold by R Warner Giddings
Cover of the book A PUZZLE - An Old Scottish Riddle by Anon E. Mouse, Retold by R Warner Giddings
Cover of the book SIR GUY OF WARWICK - An Ancient European Legend of a Chivalric order by Anon E. Mouse, Retold by R Warner Giddings
Cover of the book POEMS (from the Great War) - 23 of WWI's best poems by Anon E. Mouse, Retold by R Warner Giddings
Cover of the book TOLD BY UNCLE REMUS - 16 tales of Brer Rabbit and Friends by Anon E. Mouse, Retold by R Warner Giddings
Cover of the book THE STORY OF THE VIZIER WHO WAS PUNISHED - An Eastern Fairy Tale by Anon E. Mouse, Retold by R Warner Giddings
Cover of the book McALISTER'S WAY VOLUME 14 - Free Serialisation Download by Anon E. Mouse, Retold by R Warner Giddings
Cover of the book YORUBA LEGENDS - 40 myths, legends, fairy tales and folklore stories from the Yoruba of West Africa by Anon E. Mouse, Retold by R Warner Giddings
Cover of the book MIGHTY MIKKO - 29 Children's Fairy Tales from Finland by Anon E. Mouse, Retold by R Warner Giddings
Cover of the book THE CHURCH THE DEVIL STOLE and THE PARSON AND THE CLERK - Two Legends of Cornwall by Anon E. Mouse, Retold by R Warner Giddings
Cover of the book THE LITTLE BRAWL AT ALLEN – A Celtic Legend of Fin Mac Cumhail by Anon E. Mouse, Retold by R Warner Giddings
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy