to Course syllabus page
 
 

 
 

Bibliography for exam #4, 

“Course syllabus:  The Storytelling Process”
 
 

Abrahams, Roger.  1970 (1964).  Deep Down in the Jungle: Negro Narrative Folklore from the Streets of Philadelphia.  Chicago: Aldine. 

Abrahams, Roger.  1968.  “A Rhetoric of Everyday Life: Traditional Conversational Genres.”  Southern Folklore Quarterly 32: 44-59. 

Abrahams, Roger.  1968.  “Introductory Remarks to a Rhetorical Theory of Folklore.”  Journal of American Folklore 81: 143-158. 

Abrahams, Roger.  1976 (1969).  “The Complex Relations of Simple Forms.”  In Folklore Genres, D. Ben-Amos, ed., Austin: U. of Texas Press, pp. 193-214.

Abrahams, Roger.  1970.  “Creativity, Individuality, and the Traditional Singer.”  Studies in the Literary Imagination (Atlanta, GA), 3(1): 5-34.

Abrahams, Roger.  1970.  “A Performance-Centred Approach to Gossip.”  Man (The Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute) 5: 290-301.

Abrahams, Roger.  1971.  “Personal Power and Social Restraint in the Definition of Folklore.”  Journal of American Folklore 84: 16-30. 

Abrahams, Roger.  1972.  “Joking: The Training of the Man of Words in Talking Broad.”  In Rappin’ and Stylin’ Out, Thomas Kochman, ed., Urbana: U of Illinois Press, pp. 215-40.

Abrahams, Roger.  1974.  “Black Talking on the Streets.”  In Explorations in the Ethnography of Speaking, R. Bauman and J. Sherzer, eds., London: Cambridge U. Press, pp. 240-62. 

Abrahams, Roger.  1976.  Talking Black.  Rowley, Mass.: Newbury House Publishers. 

Abrahams, Roger.  1977.  “The Most Embarrassing Thing That Ever Happened: Conversational Stories in a Theory of Enactment.”  Folklore Forum 10(3): 9-15.

Abrahams, Roger.  1977.  “Toward an Enactment-centered Theory of Folklore.”  In Frontiers of Folklore, W. Bascom, ed., Boulder: Westview, pp. 79-120. 

Abrahams, Roger.  1981.  “In and Out of Performance.”  In Folklore and Oral Communication.  Special issue of Narodna Umjetnost (Zagreb, Croatia), pp. 69-78. 

Abrahams, Roger.  1982.  “Storytelling Events: Wake Amusements and the Structure of Nonsense on St. Vincent.”  Journal of American Folklore 95(378): 389-414.

Abrahams, Roger.  1983.  The Man-of-Words in the West Indies: Performance and the Emergence of Creole Culture.  Baltimore: Johns Hopkins U. Press.

Abrahams, Roger.  1984.  “Storytelling and Achieving Meaning: A West Indian Case.”  Arv Nordic Yearbook of Folklore (Lund, Sweden) 40: 57-66 

Abrahams, Roger.  1986.  “Ordinary and Extraordinary Experience.”  In The Anthropology of Experience, V. Turner and E. Bruner, eds, Urbana: U. of Illinois Press, pp. 45-72. 

Abrahams, Roger.  1986.  “Complicity and Imitation in Storytelling: A Pragmatist Folklorist’s Perspective.”  Cultural Anthropology 1: 223-37. 

Amsterdam, Anthony, and Jerome Bruner.  2000.  Minding the Law.  Cambridge, Mass. : Harvard U. Press.

Arewa, E. Ojo, and Alan Dundes.  1964.  “Proverbs and the Ethnography of Speaking Folklore.”  In The Ethnography of Communication, D. Hymes and J. Gumperz, eds. (Special publication of American Anthropologist) 66(6) (part 2): 70-85. 

Austin, J. L.  1992 (1962).  How To Do Things With Words.  Oxford: Oxford U. Press.

Azadovskii, Mark.  1974 (1926).  A Siberian Tale Teller.  Trans. by James Dow.  Austin: U. of Texas. 

Barber, Karin.  1991.  I Could Speak Until Tomorrow: Oriki, Women, and the Past in a Yoruba Town.  Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution Press. 

Batchelor, J., and G. Goethals.  1972.  “Spatial Arrangements in Freely Formed Groups.”  Sociometry 35: 270-9.

Bateson, Gregory.  1955.  “A Theory of Play and Fantasy.”  Psychiatric Research Reports, II (American Psychiatric Association).

Bateson, Gregory.  1956.  “The Message, ‘This Is Play.’”  In Group Processes, B. Schaffner, ed., New York: Josaih Macy Foundation, pp. 145-51.

Bauman, Richard.  1977.  Verbal Art as Performance.  Rowley, Mass.: Newbury House Publications.

Bauman, Richard.  1986.  Story, Performance, and Event: Contextual Studies of Oral Narrative.  Cambridge: Cambridge U. Press. 

Bauman, Richard, ed.  1992a.  Folklore, Cultural Performances, and Popular Entertainments: A Communications-centered Handbook.  New York: Oxford U. Press.

Bauman, Richard.  1992b.  “Performance.”  In Folklore, Cultural Performances, and Popular Entertainments: A Communications-centered Handbook, R. Bauman, ed., Oxford: Oxford U. Press, pp. 41-50. 

Bauman, Richard, and Joel Sherzer, eds.  1989 (1974).  Explorations in The Ethnography of Speaking.  Cambridge: Cambridge U. Press.

Bauman, Richard, and Joel Sherzer.  1975.  “The Ethnography of Speaking.”  Annual Review of Anthropology 4: 95-119. 

Bauman, Richard, and Charles Briggs.  1990.  “Poetics and Performance as Critical Perspectives on Language and Social Life.”  Annual Review of Anthropology 19: 59-88.

Ben-Amos, Dan.  1976 (1969).  “Analytical Categories and Ethnic Genres.”  In Folklore Genres, D. Ben-Amos, ed., Austin: U. of Texas Press, pp. 215-242.

Ben-Amos, Dan.  1972a.  “The Elusive Audience of Benin Narrators.”  Journal of Folklore Institute 2: 177-84.

Ben-Amos, Dan.  1972b.  “Two Benin Storytellers.”  In African Folklore, R. Dorson, ed., New York: Anchor Books, pp. 103-114. 

Ben-Amos, Dan.  1972c.  “Toward a Definition of Folklore in Context.”  In Toward New Perspectives in Folklore, A. Paredes and R. Bauman, eds., Austin: U. of Texas Press, p. 3-15.

Ben-Amos, Dan.  1975.  Sweet Words: Storytelling Events in Benin.  Philadelphia: Institute for the Study of Human Issues.

Ben-Amos, Dan.  1976.  “Introduction.”  In Folklore Genres, D. Ben-Amos, ed., Austin: U. of Texas Press, pp. ix-xlv.

Ben-Amos, Dan.  1998.  “A Performer-centered Study of Narration Anthropos.”  International Review of Ethnology and Linguistics 93(4-6): 556-58. 

Ben-Amos, Dan, and Kenneth Goldstein, eds.  1975.  Folklore: Performance and Communication.  The Hague: Mouton. 

Benjamin, Walter.  1968.  “The Storyteller: Reflections on the Works of Nikolai Leskov.”  In Illuminations, H. Arendt, ed., New York: Harcourt, Brace and Jovanovich, pp. 83-109. 

Birch, Carol, and Melissa Heckler.  1996.  Who Says?: Essays on Pivotal Issues in Ccontemporary Storytelling.  Little Rock: August House.

Birdwhistell, Ray.  1970.  “‘Redundancy’ in Multi-Channel Communication Systems.”  In his Kinesics and Context: Essays on Body Motion Communication, Philadelphia, U. of Pennsylvania Press, pp. 85-93.

Braid, Donald.  1996.  “Personal Narrative and Experiential Meaning.”  Journal of American Folklore 109(431): 5-30.

Bright, William, ed.  1966.  Sociolinguistics.  The Hague: Mouton.

Burke, Kenneth.  1950.  A Rhetoric of Motives.  New York: Prentice-Hall.

Ciolek, T. M., and A. Kendon.  1980.  “Environment and the Spatial Arrangement of Conversational Interaction.”  Sociological Inquiry 50: 237-71. 

Dewey, John.  1959 (1934).  Art as Experience.  New York: Capricorn Books.

Dundes, Alan.  1962.  “From Etic to Emic Units in the Structural Study of Folktales.”  Journal of American Folklore 75: 102.

Dundes, Alan.  1964.  “Texture, Text, and Context.”  Southern Folklore Quarterly 28: 251-265. 

Duranti, Allesandro.  1988.  “Ethnography of Speaking: Toward a Linguistics of the Praxis.”  In Linguistics: The Cambridge Survey, IV: Language: The Socio-cultural Context, F. J. Newmeyer, ed., Cambridge: Cambridge U. Press, pp. 210-28.

Feld, Steven, and Aaron Fox.  1994.  “Music and Language.”  Annual Review of Anthropology 23: 25-53.

Foley, John Miles.  1985.  Oral-formulaic Theory and Research: An Introduction and Annotated Bibliography.  New York: Garland Publishing.

Georges, Robert.  1969.  “Toward an Understanding of Storytelling Events.”  Journal of American Folklore 82: 313-328. 

Georges, Robert.  1983.  “Do Narrators Really Digress?: A Reconsideration of Audience Asides in Narrating.”  Western Folklore 40: 215-42. 

Ginsberg, Faye.  1992.  “Indigenous Media: Faustian Contract or Global Media?”  In Revealing Cultural Anthropology, G. Marcus, ed., Durham: Duke U. Press, pp. 356-76.

Goffman, Erving.  1964.  “The Neglected Situation.”  In The Ethnography of Communication, J. Gumperz and D. Hymes, eds., Washington, D.C.: American Anthropologist Association, pp. 133-6.

Goffman, Erving.  1968.  “On Face-Work: An Analysis of Ritual Elements in Social Interaction.”  In Interpersonal Dynamics: Essays and Readings on Human Interaction, W. Bennis, ed., Homewood, Ill.: Dorsey Press, pp. 227-49. 

Goffman, Erving.  1971.  Relations in Public: Microstudies of the Public Order.  New York: Basic Books. 

Goffman, Erving.  1974.  Frame Analysis: An Essay on the Organization of Experience.  New York: Harper and Row. 

Goodwin, Charles.  1981.  Conversational Organization: Interaction between Speakers and Hearers.  New York: Academic Press. 

Goodwin, Charles.  1984.  “Notes on Story Structure and the Organization of Participation.”  In Structures of Social Action: Studies in Conversation Analysis, 
J. Atkinson, J. Heritage, eds., Cambridge: Cambridge U. Press, pp. 225-46. 

Goodwin, Charles.  1986.  “Audience Diversity, Participation, and Interpretation.”  In 
The Audience as Co-author, special issue of Text 6(3): 239-347 (pp. 283-316).

Goodwin, Charles.  1990.  “Conversation Analysis.”  Annual Review of Anthropology 19: 283-307.

Goodwin, M. H.  1982.  “‘Instigating’: Storytelling as Social Process.”  American Ethnologist 9: 799-819.

Gumperz, John.  1982.  Discourse Strategies.  Cambridge: Cambridge U. Press.

Gumperz, John.  1990.  “Conversational Cooperation in Social Perspective.”  In Proceedings of the Sixteenth Annual Meeting of the Berkeley Linguistics Society, February 16-19, 1990: General Session and Parasession on the Legacy of Grice, Kira Hall, Jean-Pierre Koenig, Michael Meacham, Sondra Reinman, and Laurel Sutton, eds., Berkeley: Berkeley Linguistic Society, pp. 429-41.

Gumperz, John.  1992.  “Contextualization and Understanding.”  In Rethinking Context: Language as an Interactive Phenomena, A. Duranti and C. Goodwin, eds.  Cambridge: Cambridge U. Press, pp. 229-52.

Gumperz, John, and Dell Hymes, eds.  1964.  The Ethnography of Communication.  Washington, D.C.: American Anthropologist Association.  (AAA Special issue, vol. 66, 
no. 6, part 2.)

Gumperz, John, and Dell Hymes, eds.  1972.  Directions in Sociolinguistics: The Ethnography of Communication.  New York: Holt, Rinehart, and Winston. 

Grice, H. Paul.  1975.  “Logic and Conversation.”  In Syntax and Semantics, III: Speech Acts, P. Cole and J. Morgan, eds., New York: Academic Press, pp. 41-58. 

Grice, H. Paul.  1978.  “Further Notes on Logic and Conversation.”  In Syntax and Semantics, IX: Pragmatics, P. Cole and J. Morgan, eds., New York: Academic Press, pp. 113-127. 

Harris, Trudier.  1995.  “Genre.”  In Common Ground: Keywords for the Study of Expresssive Culture, Journal of American Folklore 108(430): 509-27. 

Heidegger, Martin.  1977.  The Question Concerning Technology, and Other Essays, translated and with an introd. by William Lovitt.  New York: Harper and Row.

Honko, Lauri and Vilmos Voigt, eds.  1980.  Genre, Structure, and Reproduction in Oral Literature.  Budapest: Akadémiai Kiadó, 1980

Honko, Lauri and Vilmos Voigt, eds.  1981.  Adaptation, Change, and Decline in Oral Literature.  Helsinki: Suomalaisen Kirjallisuuden Seura.

Houtkoop, Hanneke, and Harrie Mazeland.  1985.  “Turns and Discourse Units in Everyday Conversation.”  Pragmatics 9: 595-619. 

Hufford, Mary.  1992.  Chaseworld: Foxhunting and Storytelling in New Jersey’s Pine Barrens.  Philadelphia: U. of Pennsylvania Press.

Hufford, Mary.  1995.  “Context.”  In Common Ground: Keywords for the Study of Expresssive Culture, Journal of American Folklore 108(430): 528-49.

Hymes, Dell.  1962.  “The Ethnography of Speaking.”  In Anthropology and Human Behavior, T. Gladwin and W. Sturtevant, eds., Washington: Anthropological Society of Washington, pp. 15-53. 

Hymes, Dell.  1974.  “Ways of Speaking.”  In Explorations in the Ethnography of Speaking, R. Bauman and  J. Scherzer, eds., Cambridge: Cambridge U. Press, pp. 433-51.

Hymes, Dell.  1974.  Foundations of Sociolinguistics.  Philadelphia: U.of Pennsylvania Press.

Hymes, Dell.  1972.  “Models of the Interaction of Language and Social Life.”  In Directions in Sociolinguistics: The Ethnography of Communication, J. Gumperz and D. Hymes, eds., Oxford: Blackwell, pp. 35-71. 

Hymes, Dell.  1975.  “Breakthrough into Performance.”  In Folklore: Performance and Communication, D. Ben-Amos and K. Goldstein, eds., The Hague: Mouton, pp. 11-74.

Hymes, Dell.  1981.  “In Vain I Tried to Tell You”: Essays in Native Americam Ethnopoetics.  Philadelphia: U. of Pennsylvania Press.

Jakobson, Roman.  1960.  “Linguistics and Poetics.”  In Style in Language, Thomas Sebeok, ed., Cambridge, Mass.: Massachussetts Institute of Technology, pp 350-377. 

Jakobson, Roman.  1966.  “Grammatical Parallelism and Its Russian Facet.”  Language 42: 399-429. 

Jefferson, Gail.  1978.  “Sequential Aspects of Storytelling in Conversation.”  In Studies in the Organization of Conversational Interaction, J. Schenkein, ed., New York: Academic, pp. 219-48.

Johnstone, Barbara.  2000.  “The Individual Voice in Language.”  Annual Review of Anthropology 29: 405-24.

Keil, Charles.  1987.  “Participatory Discrepancies and the Power of Music.”  Cultural Anthropology 2(3): 275-283.    

Keil, Charles.  1995.  “The Theory of Participatory Discrepancies: A Progress Report.”  Ethnomusicology 39(1) (Winter): 1-17.

Kendon, Adam.  1973.  “The Role of Visible Behavior in the Organization of Face-to-face Interaction.”  In Social Communication and Movement: Studies of Interaction and Expression in Man and Chimpanzee, M. von Cranach and I. Vine, eds., London: Academic Press, pp. 29-74.

Kendon, Adam.  1985.  “The Behavioural Foundations for the Process of Frame Attunement in Face-to-face Interaction.”  In Discovery Strategies in the Psychology of Action, G. Ginsburg, M. Brenner, and M. von Cranach, eds., London: Academic Press, pp. 229-53. 

Kendon, Adam.  1992.  “The Negotiation of Context in Face-to-Face Interaction.”  In Rethinking Context: Language as an Interactive Phenomena, A. Duranti and C. Goodwin, eds., Cambridge: Cambridge U. Press, pp. 323-34. 

Kendon, Adam.  1993.  “Gesture.”  Annual Review of Anthropology 26: 109-28.

Kirshenblatt-Gimblett, Barbara.  1974.  “The Concept and Varieties of Narrative Perfromance in East European Jewish Culture.”  In Explorations in the Ethnography of Speaking, R. Bauman and J. Sherzer, eds., Cambridge: Cambridge U. Press, pp. 283-310. 

Kirshenblatt-Gimblett, Barbara.  1975.  “A Parable in Context: A Social Interactional Analysis of Storytelling Performance.”  In Folklore: Performance and Communication, D. Ben-Amos and K. Goldstein, eds., The Hague and Paris: Mouton, pp. 105-30. 

Knapp, Mark.  1978.  Nonverbal Communication in Human Interaction.  New York: Holt, Rinehart, and Winston.

Labov, William.  1972.  Language in the Inner City: Studies in the Black English Vernacular.  Philadelphia: U. of Pennsylvania Press.

Livo, Norma, ed.  Joining In: An Anthology of Audience Participation Stories and How To Tell Them.  Yellow Moon Press. 

Lockard, J., D. Allen, B. Schiele, and M. Wierner.  1978.  “Human Postural Signals: Stance, Weight Shifts, and Social Distance as Intention Movements to Depart.”  Animal Behavior 26: 219-24. 

Lord, Albert, and Milman Parry.  1960.  The Singer of Tales.  Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard U. Press. 

Malinowski, Bronislav.  1923.  “The Problem of Meaning in Primitive Languages.”  In The Meaning of Meaning: A Study of the Influence of Language Upon Thought and of The Science of Symbolism, C. Ogden and I. Richards, eds., London: K. Paul, Trench, Trubner & Co., pp. 296-336. 

Mason, Jeffrey.  1982.  “From Speech Acts to Conversation.”  Journal of Literary Semantics 11(2) (Oct.): 96-103. 

McCarthy, William, ed.  1994.  Jack in Two Worlds: Contemporary North American Tales and Their Tellers.  Chapel Hill: U. of North Carolina Press. 

McDowell, John.  1985.  “The Poetic Rites of Conversation.”  Journal of Folklore Research 22: 113-32. 

McNeil, David.  1992.  Hand and Mind: What Gestures Reveal about Thought.  Chicago: U. of Chicago Press.

Mlama, Penina.  1995.  “Oral Art and Contemporary Cultural Nationalism.”  In Power, Marginality and African Oral Literature, G. Furniss and L. Gunner, eds., Cambridge: Cambridge U. Press, pp. 23-34.

Moerman, Michael.  1988.  Talking Culture: Ethnography and Conversation Analysis.  Philadelphia: U. of Pennsylvania Press.

Morrow, Phyllis, and William Schneider, eds.  1995.  When Our Words Return: Hearing and Remembering Oral Traditions of Alaska and the Yukon.  Logan: Utah State U. Press. 

Myerhoff, Barbara.  1994 (1978).  Number Our Days: Culture and Community Among Elderly Jews in an American Ghetto.  New York: Meridian.

Narayan, Kirin.  1986.  “Birds on a Branch: Girlfriends and Wedding Songs in Kangra."  Ethos 14: 47-75. 

Nichols, Patricia.  1989.  “Storytelling in Carolina: Continuities and Contrasts.”  Anthropology and Education Quarterly 20(3): 232-45.

Ochs, Elinor, and Lisa Capps.  1996.  “Narrating the Self.”  Annual Review of Anthropology 25:19-43.

Ong, Walter.  1982.  Orality and Literacy: The Technologizing of the Word.  London: Methuen & Co. 

Paredes, Américo, and Richard Bauman, eds.  1972.  Towards New Perspectives in Folklore.  Austin: U. of Texas Press.

Peiffer, Karen Spitulnik.  1994.  Kris Porter: A Storyteller in Performance.  Dissertation, U. of Pennsylvania. 

Pelose, G. C.  1987.  “The Functions of Behavioral Synchrony and Speech Rhythm in Conversation.”  Research on Language and Social Interaction 20: 171-220. 

Philips. Susan U.  1986.  “Reported Speech as Evidence in an American Trial.”  In Languages and Linguistics: The Interdependence of Theory, Data, and Application, ed. Deborah Tannen and James Alatis (Washington DC, 1986).

Ray, Benjamin.  1973.  “Performative Utterances in African Rituals.”  History of Religions 13(1) (August): 16-35.

Reynolds, Dwight.  1998.  “From the Delta to Detroit: Packaging a Folk Epic for a New Folk.”  Visual Anthropology 10: 145-64.

Rosaldo, Renato.  1986.  “Ilongot Hunting as Story and Experience.”  In The Anthropology of Experience, V. Turner and E. Bruner, eds., Urbana: U. of Illinois Press, pp. 97?137.

Sacks, Harvey, Emanuel Schegloff, and Gail Jefferson.  1974.  “A Simplest Systematics for the Organization of Turn-Taking for Conversation.”  Language 50: 696-735. 

Saville-Troike, Muriel.  1989 (1982).  The Ethnography of Communication.  Oxford: Basil Blackwood.

Sawyer, Keith.  1997.  Pretend Play as Improvisation: Conversation in the Preschool Classroom.  Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.

Scheflen, A. E.  1964.  “The Significance of Posture in Communication Systems.”  Psychiatry 27: 315-31. 

Scheflen, A. E., and N. Ashcraft.  1976.  Human Territories: How We Behave in Space-Time.  Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall. 

Schegloff, Emanuel.  1968.  “Sequencing in Conversational Openings.”  American Anthropologist 70: 1075-95. 

Scheub, Harold.  1972.  “Fixed and Nonfixed Symbols in Xhosa and Zulu Oral Narrative Traditions.”  Journal of American Folklore 85: 267-73.

Scheub, Harold.  1977.  “Performance of Oral Narrative.”  In Frontiers of Folklore, W. Bascom, ed., Boulder: Westview, pp. 54-77.

Schiffrin, Deborah.  1984.  “Jewish Argument as Sociability.”  Language in Society 13(3) (Sept.): 311-335. 

Schiffrin, Deborah.  1988.  “Conversation Analysis.”  In Linguistics: The Cambridge Survey, IV: Language: The Socio-cultural Context, F. Newmeyer, ed., Cambridge: Cambridge U. Press, pp. 251-276. 

Schiffrin, Deborah.  1985.  “Everyday Argument: The Organization of Diversity in Talk.”  In Handbook of Discourse Analysis, III: Discourse and Dialogue, T. A. Van Dijk, ed., London, Academic Press, pp. 35-46. 

Schrager, Sam.  1999.  The Trial Lawyer’s Art.  Philadelphia: Temple U. Press.

Sherzer, Joel.  1974.  “Namakke, Sumakke, Koirmakke: Three Types of Speech Event.”  In Explorations in the Ethnography of Speaking, R. Bauman and J. Sherzer, eds., Cambridge: Cambridge U. Press, pp. 263-282. 

Shuman, Amy.  1986.  Storytelling Rights: The Uses of Oral and Written Texts by Urban Adolescents.  Cambridge: Cambridge U. Press.

Sobol, Joseph Daniel.  1999.  The Storytellers’ Journey: An American Revival. Urbana: U. of Illinois Press. 

Spekman, Nancy.  1983.  “Verbal Communication and Role-Taking: An Analysis of the Use of Deictics.”  In The First Delaware Symposium on Language Studies: Selected Papers, R. Di Pietro, W. Frawley, and W. Alfred, eds., Newark: U. of Delaware Press, pp. 168-86. 

Sturm, Brian.  2000.  “The ‘Storylistening’ Trance Experience.”  Journal of American Folklore 113(449) (Summer): 287-304.

Tannen, Deborah.  1981.  “New York Jewish Conversational Style.”  International Journal of the Sociology of Language 30: 133-49. 

Tannen, Deborah.  1983.  “When Is an Overlap Not an Interruption? One Component of Conversational Style.”  In The First Delaware Symposium on Language Studies: Selected Papers, R. Di Pietro, W. Frawley, and W. Alfred, eds., Newark: U. of Delaware Press, pp. 119-129. 

Tannen, Deborah.  1986.  That’s Not What I Meant: How Conversational Style Makes or Breaks Relationships.  New York: Ballantine. 

Tannen, Deborah.  1989.  Talking Voices: Repetition, Dialogue, and Imagery in Conversational Discourse.  Cambridge: Cambridge U. Press. 

Tedlock, Dennis.  1992.  “Ethnopoetics.”  In Folklore, Cultural Performances, and Popular Entertainments: A Communications-centered Handbook, R. Bauman, ed., New York: Oxford U. Press.

Tedlock, Dennis.  1999 (1972).  Finding the Center: Narrative Poetry of the Zuñi Indians.  Dennis Tedlock, trans.; from performances in the Zuñi by Andrew Peynetsa and Walter Sanchez.  New York: Dial Press.

Tedlock, Dennis.  1983.  The Spoken Word and the Work of Interpretation.  Philadelphia: U. of Pennsylvania Press.

Young, Katherine.  1987 (1983).  Taleworlds and Storyrealms: The Phenomenology of Narrative.  Hingham, Mass.: Kluwer Academic Publishers.

Zeitlin, Amanda Dargan.  1992.  American Talkers: The Art of the Sideshow Carnival Pitchman and Other Itinerant Showmen and Vendors.  Dissertation, U. of Pennsylvania.
 

***