Tubatulabal traditional narratives
Encyclopedia
Tubatulabal traditional narratives include myths, legends, tales, and oral histories preserved by the Tubatulabal
Tübatulabal
Tübatulabal may refer to:*Tübatulabal people, Native Americans whose ancestral home was in the Kern River basin*Tübatulabal language, a Uto-Aztecan language...

 people of the Kern River basin of the southern Sierra Nevada in California.

Tubatulabal oral literature was most similar to that of the Great Basin, rather than central California. (See also Traditional narratives (Native California)
Traditional narratives (Native California)
The Traditional Narratives of Native California are the legends, tales, and oral histories that survive as fragments of what was undoubtedly once a vast unwritten literature.-History of Studies:...

.)

On-Line Examples of Tubatulabal Narratives


Sources for Tubatulabal Narratives

  • Judson, Katharine Berry. 1912. Myths and Legends of California and the Old Southwest. A. C. McClurg, Chicago. (Four "Pai Ute" narratives, pp. 48-49, 75-76, 106, 193.)
  • Luthin, Herbert W. 2002. Surviving through the Days: A California Indian Reader. University of California Press, Berkeley. (A myth on "The Contest between Men and Women," slightly revised from Voegelin 1938, pp. 363-381.)
  • Powers, Stephen. 1877. Tribes of California. Contributions to North American Ethnology, vol. 3. Government Printing Office, Washington, D.C. Reprinted with an introduction by Robert F. Heizer in 1976, University of California Press, Berkeley. (Several narratives, pp. 394-395.)
  • Voegelin, Charles F. 1935. "Tübatulabal Texts". University of California Publications in American Archaeology and Ethnology 34:191-246. Berkeley. (Assorted types of narratives, including Earth Diver and Orpheus.)
  • Voegelin, Erminie W. 1938. "Tübatulabal Ethnography". Archaeological Records 2:1-90. University of California Press, Berkeley. (One Tubatulabal myth, pp. 53-55.)
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