KABA AND NOVEL AND MINANGKABAU SOCIETY : HISTORY OF IDEAS'
Umar Junus(1*)
(1) 
(*) Corresponding Author
Abstract
It is assumed that a folktale is what we inherit from the past, narrating a remote or an a-historical past event . However, a kaba, a traditional Minang(kabau) storytelling 2. which is generally and generically classified as a folktale 3 . shows a different picture. Some kabas might be inherited from the past as they are available in manuscript form and/or are supposed to be recorded from an oral tradition, relating an event in a-historical past narrated by an anonymous storyteller. However, there are also kabas with different character. They are neither inherited from the past nor recorded from the traditional oral tradition . Some appeared, for the first time, in printed form while others were commercially published in audio-cassette - a new kind of orally transmitted storytelling, benefiting the introduction of the new technologies, the printing since 1920s and the audio since 70s - flourishing since 70s - respectively . Although some kabas in printed or audiocassette form might relate events supposed to take place in a remote past, re-narrating the story of old kabas, however most of them are relating contemporary or immediate past events . They are no longer author-less as authors' names - in kabas in audio-cassette it is replaced by the name of the storyteller - are printed on the cover of the printed kabas or on the label of audio cassettes . Although a kaba - its form resembles that of a pantun - is formally and stylistically a traditional literature . supposed to be inherited from the oral tradition - it is per- * Pakar Sastra . pernah menjadi guru besar di Universitas Malaya . Humaniora Volume Xll. No . 2/2000 petuated by kabas published in cassette form after an intermezzo with kabas in printed form - it however has an ability to express new ideas, relating either the contemporary or the past events . It is then proper to treat it, its history and its "message" 4 as the history of ideas of Minang intellectuals 5 . As they might also express their idea in Malay or Indonesian novels 6 , we can assume that there is a possible "confrontation" between the idea expressed in kabas and that in novels . However, nobody so far thought in that direction as they ,simply took for granted the presentness of a novel and the pastness of a kaba. A kaba is simply regarded as belonging to the past, dealing with a past phenomenon . A novel, on the other hand, is regarded as belonging 'to the present, dealing with a present phenomenon .
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PDFDOI: https://doi.org/10.22146/jh.688
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