Oral Literature and Globalization: The Case of Mbum Land

  • Doreen Mekunda University of Buea, Cameroon
  • Mereal Njamnsi Nkfunji University of Buea, Cameroon
Keywords: Globalization, Oral Literature, communicative tools, cultural practices, and oral tradition

Abstract

In Cameroonian societies like elsewhere in Africa, people narrate their history of origin linked to myths and legends. Mbum history of ancestry have been written using oral tradition as the memories of the past are embedded in the songs, folktales and proverbs of the people.  The work explores the multi-faceted relationship between oral literature and globalization, examining how globalization impacts the preservation, adaptation and cross-cultural exchange of the Mbum oral tradition. While Globalization poses challenges to the authenticity and continuity of the Wimbum oral literature, it also presents opportunities for revitalization and wider dissemination, and it is built around the contention that, while oral literature is rooted in the people’s cultural practices, its only medium of transmission is by word of mouth. Ethno-criticism and cultural materialism have been used in understanding and navigating the complex dynamics between oral literature and globalization. The intersection of oral literature and globalization in Wimbum land presents both challenges and opportunities for the preservation and promotion of Wimbum cultural heritage, thus the questions:  What challenges does oral literature face in the era of globalization? How can oral literature be preserved so as to continue to serve in the globalized era? How effective are folklore in the face of these global threats? What strategies can be put in place for survival of Mbum Oral tradition? These researchers went to the field, collected and analyzed the effectiveness of some folklore elements (folktales, proverbs, and folksongs) as communicative tools. The findings revealed that, the continuity of the performance of Mbum oral literature has changed and its aesthetic qualities have been innovated due to the effects of globalization.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

References

1. Akindele et al. (2002). “Globalization, its Implications and Consequences for Africa,” Obafemi Awolowo University,
2. Alembong, N. (2011). Standpoints in African Orature, Yaounde: Les Presses Universitaires.
3. Emmanuel N. O. (1975). Culture, tradition, and Society in the West African Novel, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
4. Finnegan, R. (1970). Oral Literature in Africa, Oxford: Clarendon Press,
5. Finnegan, R. (2007). The Oral and Beyond; Doing Things with Words in Africa. Oxford and Chicago: University of Chicago Press,
6. Gikandi, S. (2003). Encyclopedia of African Literature, New Fetter Lane London, Routledge
7. Harris, M. (1979). Cultural Materialism: The Struggle for a Science of Culture. Altamira: Press, Rowman and Littlefield Publishers.
8. Harris, M. and Orna J. (2007) Cultural Anthropology, 7th ed., Boston: Pearson,
9. Ikeji, F.I (2010). African Oral Literature and the Challenges of the 21st Century, Journal of Humanities and Social Sciences, https://www.globalacademicgroup.com
10. Jick, H. et al. (2009). Language, Literature, and Social Discourse in Africa, Bamenda, Agwecams
11. Jick, H. and Ngeh A.T. (2009), “Globalization and Non-Verbal Communication Symbols in Mbum Land: Issues, Dilemmas and Challenges” Language, Literature and Social Discourse in Africa: Essays in Honor of Emmanuel Nges Chia. (pp.268-292). Tanda V. A., Jick H. K. and Akumbu P. (Eds.), Bamenda: Agwecams Publishers
12. Jick, H. and Ngeh, A.T. (2015), Mbum (Cameroon) Oral Poetry as a Changing Activity of Recreation and Redemption Journal of Educational Policy and Entrepreneurial Research, ISSN: 2408- 6231, https:// www.academia.edu.
13. Jick, H. and Ngeh, A. T. (2002).The Moral Concept of Violence in African Literature: Bole Butake's Vision in 'Lake God' and 'And Palm Wine Will Flow in Humanities Review Journal. Vol. 2; No. 2. pp. 32-43.
14. Joseph, K. (1990). “Educate or Perish: Africa’s Impasse and Prospects”, Paris, UNESCO- UNICEF
15. Mbunda, Frida. (2005). “The Oral Poet: Entertainer and Educator in Contemporary Cameroonian Society” in Chia, E.N. Tala K.I. and Jick H.K. (Eds.) Globalisation and the African Experience: Implications for Language, Literature and Education. Limbe: Anucam, pp.116 – 142. Medium.com/@anasgainutdin/Cultural Preservation and Globalisation. de8bc31eb2023
16. Mekunda, D.N. (2014). Orature and the Education of the Girl Child: The Case of Bakundu,Balong, and Bafaw of the South West Region of Cameroon. Thesis, University of Yaoundé 1,
17. Mekunda, D.N. (2023). Socio-Political Crisis in the North West and South West Regions of Cameroon and the Emergence of New Cultures, In Arts, Language, and Social Cohesion in a Multicultural Cameroon Blasius A. C., Kelvin N. T., and Fonyuy E.F.F (Eds.) Nyaa Publishers, Yaoundé, pp. 54-67.
18. Mbembe, A. (2001). On the Post Colony, University of California Press,
19. Merriam-Webster's Dictionary of English Usage (1994) Springfield, Mass.: Merriam-Webster, Inc.
20. Nandwa J. and Bukenya A. (1983). African and Oral Literature for Schools, Longman Kenya,
21. Nformi, K. (2015). Drinking the Gospel in African Cups: Case Study the Wimbum People. Bamenda, Cameroon Baptist Convention Printing Press,
22. Ngogu, K. (2010). Rekindling Efficacy: Storytelling for Health, in Kimani Ngogu and John Middleton (Eds.) in Media and Identity in Africa. Bloomington: Indiana University Press,
23. Obioha, U. P. (2010). Globalization and the Future of African Culture in Philosophical Papers and Reviews Vol. 2(1) pp. 1-8. https://ww.academicjournals.org/PPR.
24. Okoh, N. (2008). Preface to Oral Literature. Onitsha, African First Publishers Ltd.
25. Rothenberg, A. (2003). Digital Preservation Summary, Yale University Press
26. Tala, K.I. (1999). Orature in Africa, Canada: Saskatchewan Press
Published
2025-05-08
How to Cite
Mekunda, D., & Nkfunji, M. N. (2025). Oral Literature and Globalization: The Case of Mbum Land. European Scientific Journal, ESJ, 41, 22. Retrieved from https://eujournal.org/index.php/esj/article/view/19474
Section
ESI Preprints