About This Book
A scholar compiles and analyzes a corpus of folktales collected during fieldwork among a mountain people of northern Luzon, organizing them into three groups: a mythic cycle featuring recurring supernatural actors and a catalog of leading figures; ritual diams preserved by mediums and recited during ceremonies; and popular stories told in daily life that show more outside influence. The study compares mythic material with observed customs, traces explanatory myths for natural phenomena and rites, and discusses storytelling contexts, transmission modes, and variation across towns without attempting historical reconstruction.
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