- Vernacular literature
Vernacular literature is
literature written in thevernacular - the speech of the "common people".In the
Europe an tradition, this effectively means literature not written inLatin . In this context, vernacular literature appeared during theMiddle Ages ; among the earliest European vernacular literature includeIrish literature ,Welsh literature ,Anglo-Saxon literature and Gothic literature.The Italian poet
Dante Alighieri , in his "De vulgari eloquentia ", was possibly the first European writer to argue cogently for the promotion of literature in the vernacular. Important early vernacular works include Dante's "Divine Comedy ",Giovanni Boccaccio 's "Decameron " (both written in Italian) andGeoffrey Chaucer 's "Canterbury Tales " (written in English). Indeed Dante's work actually created in part the Italian language.By extension, the term is also used to describe, for example,
Chinese literature not written in classical Chinese andIndia n literature afterSanskrit .Similarly, in
Hindu culture, traditionally religious or scholarly works were written inSanskrit long after its use as a spoken language. With the rise of thebhakti movement from the 1100s onwards, religious works started being created in Tamil,Hindi , Kannada, Telugu and many other Indian languages thorought the different regions of India. For example, theRamayana , one of Hinduism's sacred epics in Sanskrit had vernacular versions such asRamacharitamanasa ", aHindi version of the Ramayana by the 16th century poetTulsidas andKambaramayanam by the poet, Kamban in Tamil.The term is applied to works not written in the standard and/or prestige language of their time and place. For example, many authors in Scotland, such as
James Kelman andEdwin Morgan have used Scots, even though English is now the prestige language of publishing inScotland .Ngugi wa Thiongo writes in his nativeGikuyu language though he previously wrote in English.In the
Philippines , the term basically any written literature in a language other than Filipino ("or Tagalog") or English. At present, it forms the second largest corpus of literature, following the literature in Tagalog. During theHispanic Colonisation, when Filipino was not yet existing as a national lingua franca, literature in this type flourished. Aside from religious literature, such as the Passiong Mahal (the Passion of Our Lord),zarzuelas were also produced using the vernacular languagesReferences
ee also
*
Medieval literature *
Ilokano Literature *
Cebuano Literature *
Waray literature *
Pasyon
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.