عنوان المقال عربي
السرد الجيلي والإلهام من تقاليد الهجرة العائلية
Abstract
Although the term folk tale seems loose because it includes a huge crowd of narrative stories that have accumulated over the course of generations, the pattern of (family estrangement) remains specific to the elements of the popular formation of the birth of the hero and the estrangement of the tribe from its first places. Perhaps the most famous example of this is (the Hilali epic). The modern novelist has represented the components of Arab heritage in the nights, biographies, epics, and news, and tried to absorb their echoes: to benefit from the innovation of the new narrative form, aided by the achievements of magical realism and expressive realism, which requires engagement between the poetics of history and the fictional imagination, and benefiting from the literary genres (maqamat), (journey), (the Hilali estrangement), and (folk epics). The modern novel does not express reality with its complexities except through the representation of the past, its narrative forms, and its narrative methods. If the folk narratives, in their multiplicity, are drawn from reality and the popular imagination, then the methods of oral performance of folk narratives may result from historical events and mix with the popular consciousness to become connected to an ancient event transmitted through the narrative. It is transmitted orally from one generation to the next, or it is a free creation of the popular imagination that is woven around important events, historical figures and sites, or it is a story that the people believe as a fact and it develops with the ages and is passed on by its people. It may also be related to historical events or heroes who make history.
Keywords
exile, inspiration, family migration
Recommended Citation
Youssef, Hamza Fadel and Karim, Hassan Majad Abdul
(2025)
"Generational narration and inspiration from family migration traditions,"
Uruk for Humanities: Vol. 9:
Iss.
2, Article 2.
Available at:
https://muthuruk.mu.edu.iq/journal/vol9/iss2/2