Mexican Folk Narrative from the Los Angeles Area: Introduction, Notes, and Classification

Mexican Folk Narrative from the Los Angeles Area: Introduction, Notes, and Classification

by Elaine K. Miller
Mexican Folk Narrative from the Los Angeles Area: Introduction, Notes, and Classification

Mexican Folk Narrative from the Los Angeles Area: Introduction, Notes, and Classification

by Elaine K. Miller

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Overview

Urban Los Angeles is the setting in which Elaine Miller has collected her narratives from Mexican-Americans. The Mexican folk tradition, varied and richly expressive of the inner life not only of a people but also of the individual as each lives it and personalizes it, is abundantly present in the United States. Since it is in the urban centers that most Mexican-Americans have lived, this collection represents an important contribution to the study of that tradition and to the study of the changes urban life effects on traditional folklore.

The collection includes sixty-two legendary narratives and twenty traditional tales. The legendary narratives deal with the virgins and saints as well as with such familiar characters as the vanishing hitchhiker, the headless horseman, and the llorona. Familiar characters appear in the traditional tales—Juan del Oso, Blancaflor, Pedro de Ordimalas, and others. Elaine Miller concludes that the traditional tales are dying out in the city because tale telling itself is not suited to the fast pace of modern urban life, and the situations and characters in the tales are not perceived by the people to be meaningfully related to the everyday challenges and concerns of that life. The legendary tales survive longer in an urban setting because, although containing fantastic elements, they are related to the beliefs and hopes of the narrator—even in the city one may be led to buried treasure on some dark night by a mysterious woman.

The penchant of the informants for the fantastic in many of their tales often reflects their hopes and fears, such as their dreams of suddenly acquiring wealth or their fears of being haunted by the dead. Miller closely observes the teller's relation to the stories—to the duendes, the ánimas, Death, God, the devil—and she notes the tension on the part of the informant in his relation to their religion.

The material is documented according to several standard tale and motif indices and is placed within the context of the larger body of Hispanic folk tradition by the citation of parallel versions throughout the Hispanic world. The tales, transcribed from taped interviews, are presented in colloquial Spanish accompanied by summaries in English.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780292741430
Publisher: University of Texas Press
Publication date: 01/01/1973
Series: American Folklore Society Memoir Series , #56
Pages: 414
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.93(d)
Language: Spanish

About the Author

Elaine K. Miller has taught at several universities and produces videos about political cartoons.

Table of Contents

  • Preface
  • Introduction
  • I. Legendary Narratives
    • Religious Narratives
      • 1. El Señor del Encino
      • 2. La Virgen de San Vicente
      • 3. La Virgen de Talpa
      • 4. La Virgen de Talpa
      • 5. La Virgen del Rosario
      • 6. Los Santos Reyes
      • 7. La Virgen de Zapopan
      • 8. El Santo Niño de Atocha
      • 9. El Santo Niño de Plateros
    • Devil Narratives
      • 10. El diablo y el preso
      • 11. El diablo y el guitarrista
      • 12. El diablo e Isabel Ramírez
      • 13. El diablo en San José del Carmen
      • 14. El diablo en forma de mujer
      • 15. El jinete sin cabeza
      • 16. El diablo que cantaba
      • 17. El diablo jorobado
      • 18. El diablo en la bodega
    • The Return of the Dead
      • 19. El ánima y la manda
      • 20. El ánima y la señorita que se enfermó
      • 21. El ánima y los frijoles
      • 22. El ánima y la manda
      • 23. El ánima y las sobras
      • 24. La muchacha que espiaba las ánimas
      • 25. Los espíritus en la casa
      • 26. Los espíritus maliciosos
      • 27. La casa de los espíritus
      • 28. La muerta en el baile
      • 29. La muerta en el baile
      • 30. La muerta y el chofer de taxi
      • 31. Las tres muertas en el camino
      • 32. La muerta en el baile
      • 33. El jinete sin cabeza
      • 34. La Xtabay
      • 35. María la llorona
      • 36. La llorona
      • 37. La llorona, la Malinche, y la Infeliz María
      • 38. La Infeliz María
      • 39. La llorona y el susto
      • 40. La llorona y sus tres hijos
      • 41. La llorona y sus seis hijos
      • 42. La llorona y el caballo
    • Buried Treasures
      • 43. El tesoro encantado
      • 44. El tesoro desaparecido
      • 45. El jinete y el tesoro
      • 46. El tesoro en la cupina de un caballo
      • 47. El tesoro y el esqueleto
      • 48. El ánima y el tesoro
      • 49. El tesoro guardado por una ánima
      • 50. El tesoro de la Cueva de la Fábrica, y el tesoro y las campanas
    • Duendes
      • 51. Los duendes que tiraban piedras
      • 52. Los duendes maliciosos
      • 53. Los duendes en el rancho
      • 54. Los duendes que se mudaron con la familia
      • 55. Los duendes y el padre
      • 56. Los duendes y el padre
      • 57. Los duendes en el rancho
    • Miscellaneous Legendary Narratives
      • 58. El nahual
      • 59. Una bruja
      • 60. La Condenada
      • 61. La historia del anillo
      • 62. El papá que quería novia
  • II. Traditional Tales
    • Animal Tales
      • 63. El Ratoncito Pérez
      • 64. Un bien con un mal se paga
    • Tales of Magic
      • 65. La sierpe de siete cabezas
      • 66. Juan del Oso
      • 66a. El oso que se robó a una señora
      • 66b. Juan el Oso
      • 67. El buen pescador
      • 68. El señor y la gallinita
      • 69. El señor pobre y la Muerte
      • 70. El señor y la gallina
      • 71. La Reina Isabel
      • 72. Antoñito Malverde
      • 73. Blancaflor
      • 74. La esposa infiel
      • 75. Los dos compadres
      • 76. El rancherito y las tres piedras
      • 77. El hermano rico y el hermano pobre
      • 78. El pájaro que habla
    • Religious Tales
      • 79. El muchacho y la hostia
    • Romantic Tales
      • 80. Como la sal y el agua
    • The Stupid Ogre
      • 81. Juan Tonto
      • 82. Pedro de Ordimalas y Juan de Buen Alma
  • III. Biographies of Informants
  • IV. Appendixes
    • 1. Index of Tale Types Represented
    • 2. Index of Motifs Represented
    • 3. Vocabulary
  • Bibliography
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