Epic Tales
Epic tales could take days to perform and storytellers told them from memory. David Hendy explains how ancient tales were remembered and passed down.
Episode Six of a thirty-part series made in collaboration with the British Library Sound Archive.
In 1933, a young classics scholar called Milman Parry made a journey through the hill villages of the Balkans to record poets and singers. He captured an oral tradition that has all but died out - peasant performers who recited epic tales over days without any form of prompt.
Professor David Hendy of the University of Sussex explains how ancient tales were remembered and passed down, and travels to the ancient Theatre of Epidaurus in Greece to find out what the audience would have made of it all up in the 'gods'.
Featuring archive extracts of traditional stories from the Balkans, Kyrgyzstan, West Africa, and India.
Series producer: Matt Thompson.
A Rockethouse production for 91热爆 Radio 4.