Eurasian Back-Migration: Traces in Mythology?
[Obratnaia migratsiia v Afriku: sled v mifologii?]
DOI: https://doi.org/10.31857/S0869541524030094
EDN: BRCAKA
Type of publication: Research Article
Submitted: 29.02.2024
Accepted: 02.04.2024
About author(s)
Yuri Berezkin | http://orcid.org/0000-0001-6001-7339 | berezkin1@gmail.com | Peter the Great Museum of Anthropology and Ethnography (Kunstkamera), Russian Academy of Sciences (3 University Emb., St. Petersburg, 199034, Russia)
Keywords
African mythology, comparative mythology, traditional cosmology, Eurasian back-migration
Abstract
The author examines the world distribution of mythological motifs peculiar for Northeast Africa but absent in other parts of this continent. The corresponding narratives describe the events of the time of creation, objects and beings localized at the ultimate limits of the human world as well as episodes of the journeys of heroes to these limits. The motifs in question are absent in Central Asia and Siberia but found across Western, South and Southeast Asia, in Oceania and across the New World. Considering such distribution, these stories probably appeared at the early stages of the peopling of the oikumene (definitely before the peopling of the New World) and were brought to Africa by the populations engaged into the Eurasian back-migrations that were going since the Terminal Pleistocene and possibly earlier.
Citation
Berezkin, Y.E. 2024. Obratnaia migratsiia v Afriku: sled v mifologii? [Eurasian Back-Migration: Traces in Mythology?]. Etnograficheskoe obozrenie 3: 157–179. https://doi.org/10.31857/S0869541524030094 EDN: BRCAKA
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