18 page PDF for the publication "Archive of Turkish Oral Narrative Preliminary Catalogue No. 1" edited by Dr. Warren S. Walker and Professor Ahmet E. Uysal. Publication date is thought to be 1975.
154 page PDF of the publication titled "Preliminary Catalogue II: The First Thousand Tales" by the Archive of Turkish Oral Narrative (ATON), compiled by Dr. Warren S. Walker, Michael D. Felker, and Elizabeth K. Brandt. It is a finding aid to the Turkish folktales collected by ATON staff as of 1988.
278 page PDF of the publication titled "Preliminary Catalogue IV: The First 2,000 Tales" by the Archive of Turkish Oral Narrative (ATON), compiled by Dr. Warren S. Walker, Michael D. Felker, and Elizabeth K. Brandt. It is a finding aid to the Turkish folktales collected by ATON staff as of 1998.
12 page PDF for the publication "Some Tales Behind the Tales" written by Dr. Warren S. Walker in 2000 as "Occasional Papers: 3" for the Archive of the Turkish Oral Narrative (ATON). In this paper, Dr. Walker, one of the three original founders of ATON, authors an account how he, his wife and Professor Uysal came up with their oral folktale narrative project, how they went about the process, issues encountered while collecting the tales, political upheaval and safety concerns they encountered while travel across Turkey in the 1960s-1970s, and issues with technology in both collecting the tales and making the tales accessible to researchers.
78 page document compiled by Barbara K. Walker, one of the original three creators of the Archive of the Turkish Oral Narrative (ATON), that serves as a subject index for the first 2,000 Turkish folktales acquired for the oral narrative project.
Two page transcript of Turkish oral narrative story No. 876 titled "'As a Christian I Saved Myself; as a Moslem I Saved You.'" The folktale was narrated in August of 1964 and is part of the Archive of Turkish Oral Narrative.Oral narrative of a Turkish folktale collected by Professor Ahmet Edip Uysal, Dr. Waren Walker and Barbara Walker (Mrs. Warren Walker). Each narrative was translated into English by native Turkish speakers (mostly students), paid for by the Walkers, who then edited the translations.
Four page transcript of Turkish oral narrative story No. 86 titled "'Do Not Do Anything without Considering Its End.'" The folktale was narrated in February of 1962 and is part of the Archive of Turkish Oral Narrative.Oral narrative of a Turkish folktale collected by Professor Ahmet Edip Uysal, Dr. Waren Walker and Barbara Walker (Mrs. Warren Walker). Each narrative was translated into English by native Turkish speakers (mostly students), paid for by the Walkers, who then edited the translations.
Two page transcript of Turkish oral narrative story No. 1549 titled "'Eat, My Fur Coat, Eat!'" The folktale was narrated in 1993 and is part of the Archive of Turkish Oral Narrative.Oral narrative of a Turkish folktale collected by Professor Ahmet Edip Uysal, Dr. Waren Walker and Barbara Walker (Mrs. Warren Walker). Each narrative was translated into English by native Turkish speakers (mostly students), paid for by the Walkers, who then edited the translations.
One page transcript of Turkish oral narrative story No. 137 titled "'Either You Sell These Pickles or Let Me Sell Them.'" The folktale was narrated in February of 1962 and is part of the Archive of Turkish Oral Narrative.Oral narrative of a Turkish folktale collected by Professor Ahmet Edip Uysal, Dr. Waren Walker and Barbara Walker (Mrs. Warren Walker). Each narrative was translated into English by native Turkish speakers (mostly students), paid for by the Walkers, who then edited the translations.
Two page transcript of Turkish oral narrative story No. 170 titled "'Have You Seen My Donkey?'" The folktale was narrated in July of 1970 and is part of the Archive of Turkish Oral Narrative.Oral narrative of a Turkish folktale collected by Professor Ahmet Edip Uysal, Dr. Waren Walker and Barbara Walker (Mrs. Warren Walker). Each narrative was translated into English by native Turkish speakers (mostly students), paid for by the Walkers, who then edited the translations.
Four page transcript of Turkish oral narrative story No. 150 titled "'I Came a Girl and I Am Leaving a Girl.'" The folktale was narrated in April of 1962 and is part of the Archive of Turkish Oral Narrative.Oral narrative of a Turkish folktale collected by Professor Ahmet Edip Uysal, Dr. Waren Walker and Barbara Walker (Mrs. Warren Walker). Each narrative was translated into English by native Turkish speakers (mostly students), paid for by the Walkers, who then edited the translations.
Two page transcript of Turkish oral narrative story No. 1924 titled "'I Have the Key!'" The folktale was narrated on August 13, 1995 and is part of the Archive of Turkish Oral Narrative.Oral narrative of a Turkish folktale collected by Professor Ahmet Edip Uysal, Dr. Waren Walker and Barbara Walker (Mrs. Warren Walker). Each narrative was translated into English by native Turkish speakers (mostly students), paid for by the Walkers, who then edited the translations.
Two page transcript of Turkish oral narrative story No. 169 titled "'I Love You as Much as Salt.'" The folktale was narrated in July of 1970 and is part of the Archive of Turkish Oral Narrative.Oral narrative of a Turkish folktale collected by Professor Ahmet Edip Uysal, Dr. Waren Walker and Barbara Walker (Mrs. Warren Walker). Each narrative was translated into English by native Turkish speakers (mostly students), paid for by the Walkers, who then edited the translations.
Eight page transcript of Turkish oral narrative story No. 2135 titled "Keloğlan and the Sheep in the Sea." The folktale was narrated on December 14, 1984 and is part of the Archive of Turkish Oral Narrative.Oral narrative of a Turkish folktale collected by Professor Ahmet Edip Uysal, Dr. Waren Walker and Barbara Walker (Mrs. Warren Walker). Each narrative was translated into English by native Turkish speakers (mostly students), paid for by the Walkers, who then edited the translations.
Five page transcript of Turkish oral narrative story No. 1087 titled "'Time within Time' and the Different Aging of Three Brothers." The folktale was narrated on December 31, 1976 and is part of the Archive of Turkish Oral Narrative.Oral narrative of a Turkish folktale collected by Professor Ahmet Edip Uysal, Dr. Waren Walker and Barbara Walker (Mrs. Warren Walker). Each narrative was translated into English by native Turkish speakers (mostly students), paid for by the Walkers, who then edited the translations.
Two page transcript of Turkish oral narrative story No. 2180 titled "'Where Are You Going, My Commander?'" The folktale was narrated on February 17, 1999 and is part of the Archive of Turkish Oral Narrative.Oral narrative of a Turkish folktale collected by Professor Ahmet Edip Uysal, Dr. Waren Walker and Barbara Walker (Mrs. Warren Walker). Each narrative was translated into English by native Turkish speakers (mostly students), paid for by the Walkers, who then edited the translations.
One page transcript of Turkish oral narrative story No. 1294 titled "'Who Is Calling, Please?'" The folktale was narrated on January 6, 1989 and is part of the Archive of Turkish Oral Narrative.Oral narrative of a Turkish folktale collected by Professor Ahmet Edip Uysal, Dr. Waren Walker and Barbara Walker (Mrs. Warren Walker). Each narrative was translated into English by native Turkish speakers (mostly students), paid for by the Walkers, who then edited the translations.
Three page transcript of Turkish oral narrative story No. 124 titled "'You Shouldn't Say That, Karagӧz!'" The folktale was narrated in May of 1962 and is part of the Archive of Turkish Oral Narrative.Oral narrative of a Turkish folktale collected by Professor Ahmet Edip Uysal, Dr. Waren Walker and Barbara Walker (Mrs. Warren Walker). Each narrative was translated into English by native Turkish speakers (mostly students), paid for by the Walkers, who then edited the translations.
One page transcript of Turkish oral narrative story No. 252 titled "'Let Us Not Go Too Deeply into That.'" The folktale was narrated in September of 1964 and is part of the Archive of Turkish Oral Narrative.Oral narrative of a Turkish folktale collected by Professor Ahmet Edip Uysal, Dr. Waren Walker and Barbara Walker (Mrs. Warren Walker). Each narrative was translated into English by native Turkish speakers (mostly students), paid for by the Walkers, who then edited the translations.
Twelve page transcript of Turkish oral narrative story No. 916 titled "' What God May Neglect, the Fish Will Not Forget.'" The folktale was narrated in 1964 and is part of the Archive of Turkish Oral Narrative.Oral narrative of a Turkish folktale collected by Professor Ahmet Edip Uysal, Dr. Waren Walker and Barbara Walker (Mrs. Warren Walker). Each narrative was translated into English by native Turkish speakers (mostly students), paid for by the Walkers, who then edited the translations.
One page transcript of Turkish oral narrative story No. 611 titled "1,000 Hamsi Dishes." The folktale was narrated in summer of 1966 and is part of the Archive of Turkish Oral Narrative.Oral narrative of a Turkish folktale collected by Professor Ahmet Edip Uysal, Dr. Waren Walker and Barbara Walker (Mrs. Warren Walker). Each narrative was translated into English by native Turkish speakers (mostly students), paid for by the Walkers, who then edited the translations.
Four page transcript of Turkish oral narrative story No. 2146 titled "A Bargain with the Devil." The folktale was narrated on July 18, 1999 and is part of the Archive of Turkish Oral Narrative.Oral narrative of a Turkish folktale collected by Professor Ahmet Edip Uysal, Dr. Waren Walker and Barbara Walker (Mrs. Warren Walker). Each narrative was translated into English by native Turkish speakers (mostly students), paid for by the Walkers, who then edited the translations.
Two page transcript of Turkish oral narrative story No. 399 titled "A Bektashi and Allah as Partners." The folktale was narrated in 1972 and is part of the Archive of Turkish Oral Narrative.Oral narrative of a Turkish folktale collected by Professor Ahmet Edip Uysal, Dr. Waren Walker and Barbara Walker (Mrs. Warren Walker). Each narrative was translated into English by native Turkish speakers (mostly students), paid for by the Walkers, who then edited the translations.