We’re finally in business! On 7th March we gave the first substantial presentation about the drut’syla tradition, to a large, lively and friendly group at GEECS in Cardiff. Huge thanks to the Centre. The abstract is below. We took photos and recorded everything so hopefully we’ll have some more content to share soon.
ABSTRACT
Shonaleigh Cumbers is a drut’syla, a storyteller in a Jewish tradition inherited from her late grandmother, Edith Marks (d.1988), by whom she was trained from childhood. The drut’syla repertoire comprises twelve interlinked cycles, each of several hundred tales. Training also involves a complex system of oral memorisation, visualisation and interpretation (midrash) of tales. Historically, following training, each drut’syla (cf. Yiddish dertseyler, “storyteller”) would act as hereditary storyteller-in-residence to her own immediate community. However, the tradition was uprooted, and came close to extinction, in the mid-twentieth century, and Shonaleigh has been active mainly as a professional storyteller to a secular public. By contrast with rabbinical and official Jewish narrative tradition, documentation of the oral drut’syla tradition is sparse, and much about it remains obscure.
This presentation is based on a pilot research project funded by Derby University. It introduces live and recorded examples of Shonaleigh’s storytelling, and places them context, giving a general survey of Jewish storytelling, and the place of the female drut’syla within it; a brief biographical notice of Edith Marks, Shonaleigh’s mentor; a survey of the drut’syla‘s repertoire, training and working methods; a closer examination of one or two typical stories, with comparison with other versions of the same tale-type; and indications of directions for future research.