Afshar, Iraj. (2002). Ancient Iranian Tales. Tehran: Elmi-Farhangi. ]in Persian[
Erasmus, Yusef M. (1999). Iranian Languages, translated by Ali Ashraf Sadeghi. Tehran: Sokhan. ]in Persian[
Ardestani Rostami, Hamidreza (2025). "Manifestations of Myth in the Story of Gayōmart." Kohan-Nāmeh-ye Adab-e Pārsi, Institute for Humanities and Cultural Studies, Biannual Research Article, Vol. 16, No. 1, pp. 1–42. ]in Persian[
Amozgar, Zhaleh. (2006). Mythical Tradition in Ancient Iran. Zhaleh Amozgar, Bukhara Journal, Nos. 53, July and August. ]in Persian[
Pourdavoud, Ebrahim. (2015). Avesta (Gathas): Hymns of Zarathustra. Tehran: Negah Publishing. ]in Persian[
Fazeli, Ahmad. (1997). History of Iranian Literature before Islam, edited by Zhaleh Amozgar. Tehran: Sokhan. ]in Persian[
Jalali Naini, Mohammad Reza. (2005). Zoroastrian Religion in the Sassanid Era. Tehran: Toos. ]in Persian[
Al-Jahiz, Abu Uthman Amr ibn Bahr (d. 868). (1948). Al-Bayan wa al-Tabyin, edited by Abdul-Salam Muhammad Harun. Cairo: Lajnat al-Ta’lif wa al-Tarjama wa al-Nashr. ]in Arabic[
Sasanian, Atefeh. (2011). Gathas: Hymns of Zarathustra. Edited by Henda Haat, accompanied by the Avestan text and linguistic reports, researched and written by Dr. Atefeh Sasanian. Tehran: Behesht. ]in Persian[
Olavi Kheirabadi, Reza Ali. (2011). From Myth to History: The Mythical Tradition of Iranian Epic Tales, with Emphasis on Oral Narratives and Written Reports. Comparative Literature Journal, 2(2), p. 4. ]in Persian[
Ghaemi, Farzaneh. (2013). Analysis of the Historical Process of Epic Storytelling: The Role of Oral Narration in the Evolution of Iranian Epics. Journal of Research in Iranian Literature, Nos. 30–31, pp. 57–25. ]in Persian[
Karim al-Khazraji, Mohammad. (2002). Kalam Allah al-Majid: Oral Tradition in Qur’anic Phenomena. Beirut: Dar al-Saqi. ]in Arabic[
Christensen, Arthur. (1979). Nawruz and the Iranian Myths. Translated by Abolhassan Najafi. Tehran: Institute for Communications and Development of Iran. ]in Persian[
Behzad, Farid. (2005). Comparative Study of Old Iranian Languages and Indo-European Languages. Journal of Human Sciences, Cultural Studies, Autumn and Winter, Nos. 165–166, pp. 145–165. ]in Persian[
………………….. (2017). Zarathustra and Gathas: A Syntactic and Semantic Study of Chapters 47 and 48. Tehran: Institute for Humanities and Cultural Studies. ]in Persian[
Dewey, J. (1902). Interpretation of savage mind. Psychological Review, 9(3), 217.
Insler, S. (1975). The Gāthās of Zarathustra. E.J. Brill.
Kreyenbroek, P. G. (1996). The Zoroastrian tradition from an oralist’s point of view. In given) KR Cama Oriental Institute, Second International Congress Proceedings (5th to 8th January 1995), Bombay: KR Cama Oriental Institute (pp. 221-235).
Kreyenbroek, P. G. (2022). Early Zoroastrianism and Orality. Journal Oral Tradition, 35(2), 199-210.
Humbach, H. (1959). Die Gathas des Zarathustra (Vols. 1-2). Heidelberg: C. Winter.
Humbach, H. (1991). The Gāthās of Zarathushtra and the other Old Avestan texts.
Humbach, H., & Ichaporia, P. (1994). The heritage of Zarathushtra: a new translation of his Gāthās. Winter.
Humbach, H., & Faiss, K. (2010). Zarathushtra and his antagonists: a sociolinguistic study with English and German translations of his Gāthās. Dr. Ludwig Reichert Verlag.
Humbach, H., & Faiss, K. (2016). Avestica. (No Title).
Guillemin, J ; Henning, M. (1963) The Hymns of Zarathustra: Being A Translation of the Gāthās Together with Introduction and Commentary
Author(s).
Walter, O. (1982). Orality and literacy: the technologizing of the word. London and New York: Taylor and Francis Group.