This volume of folktales from the Far North of European Russia
features seventeen works by five narrators of the Russian tale, all
recorded in the twentieth century. The tales, distinguished by
their extraordinary length and by the manner in which they were
commonly told, appear to have flourished only in the twentieth
century and only in Russian Karelia. Although the tales are easily
recognized as wondertales, or fairy tales, their treatment of the
traditional matter is anything but usual. In these tales one
encounters such topics as regicide, matricide, patricide,
fratricide, premarital relations between the sexes and more, all
related in the typical manner of the Russian folktale. The
narrators were not educated beyond a rudimentary level. All were
middle-aged or older, and all were men. Crew members of a fishing
or hunting vessel plying the White Sea or lumberjacks or trappers
in the vast northern forests, they frequently began the narration
of a tale in an evening, then broke off at an appropriate moment
and continued at a subsequent gathering. Such tales were thus told
serially. Given their length, their thematic and narrative
complexity, and their stylistic proficiency, one might even refer
to them as orally delivered Russian short stories or novellas
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