Tale of the Nisan Shaman

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The Tale of the Nisan Shaman (also spelled "Nishan";

Manchu folk tale about a female shaman who resurrects the son of a rich landowner.[1]

Versions

Variants of the tale are also found among the Evenks, Daurs, and Nanais.[2][3] The tale was transmitted orally, and manuscripts were rare; Soviet ethnographer Alexander Grebenshchikov managed to purchase two during his early research trips to Northeast China in 1908 and 1909, the first near Qiqihar, and the second at Aigun. He had a third manuscript given to him in Vladivostok in 1913 by a man named Dekdenge. The Qiqihar manuscript shows some unusual features in its orthography; in particular, the verbal tense markers therein are written separately from their base verbs, whereas the standard practise in written Manchu is to write them attached to the base verb.[4] A 1930s ethnographic survey by Johnson Ling of the Academia Sinica (Ling 1934) recorded eighteen different versions of the tale among Nanai tribes on the Songhua River.[5] Volkova (1961), based on Grebenshchikov's manuscript, was the first Russian translation.[6] In 1969, an English translation was made by George Meszoly, a Harvard University undergraduate; however, it was never published. Seong Baek-in (then of Myongji University) made a Korean translation five years later (Seong 1974). The first published English translation, Nowak & Durrant 1977, relied on the annotations in Volkova's and Seong's works but did not refer to Ling's study.[7] A Hungarian translation came out in 1987.[8]

See also

References

Notes

  1. ^ Durrant 1979, p. 339
  2. ^ Richtsfeld 1989, p. 117
  3. ^ Heissig 1997, p. 200
  4. ^ Volkova 1961, p. 1
  5. ^ Yen 1980, p. 88
  6. ^ Pang 1995, p. 34
  7. ^ Yen 1980, p. 88
  8. ^ Melles 1987

Sources

  • Durrant, Stephen W. (Winter 1979), "The Nišan Shaman Caught in Cultural Contradiction", Signs, 5 (2): 338–347,
    JSTOR 3173565
  • Yen, Alsace (1980), "Book Review: The Tale of the Nišan Shamaness", The Journal of American Folklore, 93 (1): 88–90,
  • Richtsfeld, Bruno (1989), "Die Mandschu-Erzählung "Nisan saman-i bithe" bei den Hezhe", Münchner Beiträge zur Völkerkunde, 2: 117–155
  • Pang, T. A. (1995), "Rare Manchu manuscripts from the collection of the St. Petersburg branch of the Institute of Oriental Studies, Russian Academy of Sciences" (PDF), Manuscripta Orientala, 1 (3): 33–46
  • Heissig, Walther (1997), "Zu zwei evenkisch-daghurischen Varianten des mandschu Erzählstoffes "Nisan saman-i bithe"", Central Asiatic Journal (41): 200–230,

Translations

Further reading