Political socialization scholarship has long mapped the formal pathways through which citizens absorb civic values — schools, media, electoral campaigns, and family discussion. What this literature has periodically underplayed is the durability and reach of an older, less visible channel: oral tradition. Long before constitutions were drafted or ballots printed, communities transmitted their political understandings through story, song, praise poetry, mythic narrative, and ceremonial speech. This manuscript examines oral tradition and community storytelling as an unwritten curriculum of political socialization — one that operates beneath the institutional surface of formal democracy but profoundly shapes the civic dispositions, authority perceptions, and collective identities that democratic participation eventually draws upon. Drawing on peer-reviewed and institutional sources available online, the paper argues that oral tradition performs at least four politically socializing functions: it transmits norms of legitimate authority and political accountability; it encodes collective memory of injustice and resistance that informs present civic identity; it creates spaces for culturally sanctioned political dissent; and it cultivates narrative civic agency — the capacity to tell one's own political story. The paper also addresses the challenges oral traditions face in the twenty-first century from curriculum marginalization, language extinction, and digital displacement, and closes with a set of recommendations for integrating oral tradition meaningfully into contemporary civic education.
Abhisek Khan (Fri,) studied this question.