老鼠鹿是菲律宾民间故事中的骗子

T. Tsuji
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引用次数: 2

摘要

本研究探讨了来自菲律宾的鼠鹿民间故事。在这些故事中,鼠鹿(pilanduk)以骗子的身份出现。本研究旨在探索这些民间故事,并调查为什么这些动物以这种方式被描绘。研究方法为材料研究法,旨在收集民间故事,以分析和收集、阅读和检查有关动物民间故事的文献细节,特别是关于菲律宾鼠鹿的民间故事。在图书馆研究之前,在巴拉望省的巴拉巴克岛进行了实地调查。结果表明,尽管鼠鹿是巴拉望省巴拉巴克岛的本土物种,但在棉兰老岛上至少有4个穆斯林和土著群体存在鼠鹿民间故事。研究了五个特定的鼠鹿民间故事。在每一种情况下,鼠鹿都扮演了一个骗子的角色,杀死别人,嘲笑他们的不幸,掠夺他们的婚姻。本文考察了这些民间故事的特点,并探讨了鼠鹿出现在以棉兰老岛为主的各民族民间故事中的原因。在印度尼西亚和马来西亚也发现了各种各样的鼠鹿民间故事。鼠鹿的民间故事可能来自东南亚的伊斯兰社区,它们可能显示了穆斯林社会的文化规范。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The mouse deer as a trickster in Philippine folktales
This study explores mouse deer folktales from the Philippines. In these tales, mouse deer, called pilanduk, appear as tricksters. This study aims to explore such folktales and investigate why these animals are depicted in this way. The research method involved material studies designed to collect folktales for analysis and collecting, reading, and examining the details of literature about animal folktales, especially folktales about mouse deer in the Philippines. Prior to the library research, fieldwork was conducted on Balabac Island in Palawan Province. Results indicate that mouse deer folktales exist among at least four Muslim and indigenous groups on Mindanao Island, although mouse deer are a species native to Balabac Island of Palawan Province. Five specific mouse deer folktales were examined. In each case, the mouse deer functioned as a trickster, killing others, ridiculing their misfortunes, and plundering marriages. This article examines the characteristics of these folktales and discusses why mouse deer appear in folktales of ethnic groups, mainly on Mindanao Island. Variant mouse deer folktales are also found in Indonesia and Malaysia. It is possible that mouse deer folktales came from Islamic communities in Southeast Asia and that they may show cultural norms among Muslim societies.
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