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{{Short description|Branch of anthropology devoted to the study of folklore}}
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{{Short description|Branch of anthropology}}

[[File:Folklore2.jpg|thumb|upright|Front cover of ''Folklore'': "He loses his hat: Judith Philips riding a man", from: ''The Brideling, Sadling, and Ryding, of a rich Churle in Hampshire'' (1595)]]
[[File:Folklore2.jpg|thumb|upright|Front cover of ''Folklore'': "He loses his hat: Judith Philips riding a man", from: ''The Brideling, Sadling, and Ryding, of a rich Churle in Hampshire'' (1595)]]


'''Folklore studies''', less often known as '''folkloristics''', and occasionally '''tradition studies''' or '''folk life studies''' in the [[United Kingdom]],<ref>{{harv|Widdowson|2016}}</ref> is the branch of [[anthropology]] devoted to the study of [[folklore]]. This term, along with its synonyms,{{refn|group=note|According to Alan Dundes, this term was first introduced in an address by [[Charles Leland]] in 1889. He spoke in German to the Hungarian Folklore Society and referenced "Die Folkloristik".<ref>{{harv|Dundes|2005|page=386}}</ref> In contemporary scholarship, the word ''Folkloristics'' is favored by Alan Dundes, and used in the title of his publication.<ref>{{harv|Dundes|1978a}}</ref> The term ''Folklore Studies'' is defined and used by [[Simon Bronner]].<ref>{{harv|Bronner|1986|page=xi}}</ref>}} gained currency in the 1950s to distinguish the academic study of traditional culture from the [[Cultural artifact|folklore artifacts]] themselves. It became established as a field across both [[Europe]] and [[North America]], coordinating with ''Volkskunde'' ([[German language|German]]), ''folkeminner'' ([[Norwegian language|Norwegian]]), and ''folkminnen'' ([[Swedish language|Swedish]]), among others.<ref>{{harv|Brunvand|1996|page=286}}</ref>
'''Folklore studies''' (less often known as '''folkloristics''', and occasionally '''tradition studies''' or '''folk life studies''' in the United Kingdom){{sfn|Widdowson|2016}} is the branch of [[anthropology]] devoted to the study of [[folklore]]. This term, along with its synonyms,{{refn|group=note|According to Alan Dundes, this term was first introduced in an address by [[Charles Leland]] in 1889. He spoke in German to the Hungarian Folklore Society and referenced "Die Folkloristik".{{sfn|Dundes|2005|page=386}} In contemporary scholarship, the word ''Folkloristics'' is favored by Alan Dundes, and used in the title of his publication.{{sfn|Dundes|1978a}} The term ''Folklore Studies'' is defined and used by [[Simon Bronner]].{{sfn|Bronner|1986|page=xi}}}} gained currency in the 1950s to distinguish the academic study of traditional culture from the [[Cultural artifact|folklore artifacts]] themselves. It became established as a field across both Europe and North America, coordinating with {{lang|de|Volkskunde}} ([[German language|German]]), {{lang|no|folkeminner}} ([[Norwegian language|Norwegian]]), and {{lang|sv|folkminnen}} ([[Swedish language|Swedish]]), among others.{{sfn|Brunvand|1996|page=286}}


==Overview==
== Overview ==
The importance of folklore and folklore studies was recognized globally in 1982 in the [[UNESCO]] document "Recommendation on the Safeguarding of Traditional Culture and Folklore".<ref>{{cite web|url= http://portal.unesco.org/en/ev.php-URL_ID=13141&URL_DO=DO_TOPIC&URL_SECTION=201.html |title=UNESCO Recommendation 1989}}</ref> UNESCO again in 2003 published a [[Convention for the Safeguarding of the Intangible Cultural Heritage]]. Parallel to these global statements, the American Folklife Preservation Act (P.L. 94-201),<ref>{{Cite web | url=https://www.loc.gov/folklife/public_law.html | title=Public Law 94-201 (The Creation of the American Folklife Center, Library of Congress)| website=[[Library of Congress]]}}</ref> passed by the [[United States Congress]] in conjunction with the Bicentennial Celebration in 1976, included a definition of folklore, also called [[folklife]]:
The importance of folklore and folklore studies was recognized globally in 1982 in the [[UNESCO]] document "Recommendation on the Safeguarding of Traditional Culture and Folklore".<ref>{{cite web |url=http://portal.unesco.org/en/ev.php-URL_ID=13141&URL_DO=DO_TOPIC&URL_SECTION=201.html |title=UNESCO Recommendation 1989}}</ref> UNESCO again in 2003 published a [[Convention for the Safeguarding of the Intangible Cultural Heritage]]. Parallel to these global statements, the American Folklife Preservation Act (P.L. 94-201),<ref>{{Cite web |url=https://www.loc.gov/folklife/public_law.html |title=Public Law 94-201 (The Creation of the American Folklife Center, Library of Congress) |website=[[Library of Congress]]}}</ref> passed by the [[United States Congress]] in conjunction with the Bicentennial Celebration in 1976, included a definition of folklore, also called [[folklife]]:
<blockquote>"...[Folklife] means the traditional expressive culture shared within the various groups in the United States: familial, ethnic, occupational, religious, regional; expressive culture includes a wide range of creative and symbolic forms such as custom, belief, technical skill, language, literature, art, architecture, music, play, dance, drama, ritual, pageantry, handicraft; these expressions are mainly learned orally, by imitation, or in performance, and are generally maintained without benefit of formal instruction or institutional direction." </blockquote>
<blockquote>"...[Folklife] means the traditional expressive culture shared within the various groups in the United States: familial, ethnic, occupational, religious, regional; expressive culture includes a wide range of creative and symbolic forms such as custom, belief, technical skill, language, literature, art, architecture, music, play, dance, drama, ritual, pageantry, handicraft; these expressions are mainly learned orally, by imitation, or in performance, and are generally maintained without benefit of formal instruction or institutional direction." </blockquote>
This law was added to the panoply of other legislation designed to protect the natural and cultural heritage of the United States. It gives voice to a growing understanding that the cultural diversity of the United States is a national strength and a resource worthy of protection.<ref>{{harv|Hufford|1991}}</ref>
This law was added to the variety of other legislation designed to protect the natural and cultural heritage of the United States. It gives voice to a growing understanding that the cultural diversity of the United States is a national strength and a resource worthy of protection.{{sfn|Hufford|1991}}

To fully understand the term ''folklore studies'', it is necessary to clarify its component parts: the terms ''folk'' and ''lore''. Originally the word ''folk'' applied only to rural, frequently poor, frequently illiterate peasants. A more contemporary definition of ''folk'' is a social group which includes two or more persons with common traits, who express their shared identity through distinctive traditions. "Folk is a flexible concept which can refer to a nation as in [[Folklore of the United States|American folklore]] or to a [[Family folklore|single family.]]"{{sfn|Dundes|1969|page=13|loc=footnote 34}} This expanded social definition of ''folk'' supports a wider view of the material considered to be ''folklore artifacts''. These now include "things people make with words (verbal lore), things they make with their hands (material lore), and things they make with their actions (customary lore)".{{sfn|Wilson|2006|page=85}} The folklorist studies the [[traditional]] artifacts of a group. They study the groups, within which these customs, traditions and beliefs are transmitted.


Transmission of these artifacts is a vital part of the folklore process. Without communicating these beliefs and customs within the group over space and time, they would become cultural shards relegated to cultural archaeologists. These [[Cultural artifacts|folk artifacts]] continue to be passed along informally within the group, as a rule anonymously and always in multiple variants. For the folk group is not individualistic, it is community-based and nurtures its lore in community. This is in direct contrast to [[high culture]], where any single work of a named artist is protected by copyright law.
To fully understand the term ''folklore studies'', it is necessary to clarify its component parts: the terms '''folk''' and '''lore'''. Originally the word ''folk'' applied only to rural, frequently poor, frequently illiterate peasants. A more contemporary definition of ''folk'' is a social group which includes two or more persons with common traits, who express their shared identity through distinctive traditions. "Folk is a flexible concept which can refer to a nation as in [[Folklore of the United States|American folklore]] or to a [[Family folklore|single family.]]"<ref>{{harv |Dundes|1969|page=13|footnote=34}}</ref> This expanded social definition of ''folk'' supports a wider view of the material considered to be ''folklore artifacts''. These now include "things people make with words (verbal lore), things they make with their hands (material lore), and things they make with their actions (customary lore)".<ref>{{harv|Wilson|2006|page=85}}</ref> The folklorist studies the [[traditional]] artifacts of a group. They study the groups, within which these customs, traditions and beliefs are transmitted.


The folklorist strives to understand the significance of these beliefs, customs and objects for the group. For "folklore ''means'' something – to the tale teller, to the song singer, to the fiddler, and to the audience or addressees".{{sfn|Dundes|2007|page=273}} These cultural units{{sfn|Dundes|1972}} would not be passed along unless they had some continued relevance within the group. That meaning can however shift and morph.
'''Transmission''' of these artifacts is a vital part of the folklore process. Without communicating these beliefs and customs within the group over space and time, they would become cultural shards relegated to cultural archaeologists. These [[Cultural artifacts|folk artifacts]] continue to be passed along informally within the group, as a rule anonymously and always in multiple variants. For the folk group is not individualistic, it is community-based and nurtures its lore in community. This is in direct contrast to [[high culture]], where any single work of a named artist is protected by copyright law.


The folklorist strives to understand the '''significance''' of these beliefs, customs and objects for the group. For "folklore ''means'' something – to the tale teller, to the song singer, to the fiddler, and to the audience or addressees".<ref>{{harv|Dundes|2007|page=273}}</ref> These cultural units<ref>{{harv|Dundes|1972}}</ref> would not be passed along unless they had some continued relevance within the group. That meaning can however shift and morph.
[[File:The fairy tales of the Brothers Grimm (1916) (14596242367).jpg|thumb|upright|Brothers Grimm (1916)]]
[[File:The fairy tales of the Brothers Grimm (1916) (14596242367).jpg|thumb|upright|Brothers Grimm (1916)]]
With an increasingly theoretical sophistication of the social sciences, it has become evident that folklore is a naturally occurring and necessary component of any social group, it is indeed all around us.<ref>{{harv|Sims|Stephens|2005|page=7}}</ref> It does not have to be old or antiquated. It continues to be created, transmitted and in any group can be used to differentiate between "us" and "them". All cultures have their own unique folklore, and each culture has to develop and refine the techniques and methods of folklore studies most effective in identifying and researching their own. As an academic discipline, folklore studies straddles the space between the Social Sciences and the Humanities.<ref>{{harv|Hufford|1991}}</ref> This was not always the case. The study of folklore originated in Europe in the first half of the 19th century with a focus on the oral folklore of the rural peasant populations. The "[[Kinder- und Hausmärchen]]" of the [[Brothers Grimm]] (first published 1812) is the best known but by no means only collection of verbal folklore of the European peasantry. This interest in stories, sayings and songs, i.e. verbal lore, continued throughout the 19th century and aligned the fledgling discipline of folklore studies with Literature and Mythology. By the turn into the 20th century, European folklorists remained focused on the oral folklore of the homogeneous peasant populations in their regions, while the American folklorists, led by [[Franz Boas]], chose to consider [[Indigenous peoples of the Americas|Native American]] cultures in their research, and included the totality of their customs and beliefs as folklore. This distinction aligned American folklore studies with cultural anthropology and ethnology, using the same techniques of data collection in their field research. This divided alliance of folklore studies between the humanities and the social sciences offers a wealth of theoretical vantage points and research tools to the field of folklore studies as a whole, even as it continues to be a point of discussion within the field itself.<ref>{{harv|Zumwalt|Dundes|1988}}</ref>
With an increasingly theoretical sophistication of the social sciences, it has become evident that folklore is a naturally occurring and necessary component of any social group, it is indeed all around us.{{sfn|Sims|Stephens|2005|p=7}} It does not have to be old or antiquated. It continues to be created, transmitted and in any group can be used to differentiate between "us" and "them". All cultures have their own unique folklore, and each culture has to develop and refine the techniques and methods of folklore studies most effective in identifying and researching their own. As an academic discipline, folklore studies straddles the space between the Social Sciences and the Humanities.{{sfn|Hufford|1991}} This was not always the case. The study of folklore originated in Europe in the first half of the 19th century with a focus on the oral folklore of the rural peasant populations. The "[[Kinder- und Hausmärchen]]" of the [[Brothers Grimm]] (first published 1812) is the best known but by no means only collection of verbal folklore of the European peasantry. This interest in stories, sayings and songs, i.e. verbal lore, continued throughout the 19th century and aligned the fledgling discipline of folklore studies with Literature and Mythology. By the turn into the 20th century, European folklorists remained focused on the oral folklore of the homogeneous peasant populations in their regions, while the American folklorists, led by [[Franz Boas]], chose to consider [[Indigenous peoples of the Americas|Native American]] cultures in their research, and included the totality of their customs and beliefs as folklore. This distinction aligned American folklore studies with cultural anthropology and ethnology, using the same techniques of data collection in their field research. This divided alliance of folklore studies between the humanities and the social sciences offers a wealth of theoretical vantage points and research tools to the field of folklore studies as a whole, even as it continues to be a point of discussion within the field itself.{{sfn|Zumwalt|Dundes|1988}}


[[Public folklore]] is a relatively new offshoot of folklore studies; it started after the Second World War and modeled itself on the seminal work of [[Alan Lomax]] and [[Ben Botkin]] in the 1930s which emphasized [[applied folklore]]. Public sector folklorists work to document, preserve and present the beliefs and customs of diverse cultural groups in their region. These positions are often affiliated with museums, libraries, arts organizations, public schools, historical societies, etc. The most renowned of these is the [[American Folklife Center]] at the Smithsonian, together with its [[Smithsonian Folklife Festival]] held every summer in Washington, DC. Public folklore differentiates itself from the academic folklore supported by universities, in which collection, research and analysis are primary goals.<ref>{{harv|Hufford|1991}}</ref>
[[Public folklore]] is a relatively new offshoot of folklore studies; it started after the Second World War and modeled itself on the seminal work of [[Alan Lomax]] and [[Ben Botkin]] in the 1930s which emphasized [[applied folklore]]. Public sector folklorists work to document, preserve and present the beliefs and customs of diverse cultural groups in their region. These positions are often affiliated with museums, libraries, arts organizations, public schools, historical societies, etc. The most renowned of these is the [[American Folklife Center]] at the Smithsonian, together with its [[Smithsonian Folklife Festival]] held every summer in Washington, DC. Public folklore differentiates itself from the academic folklore supported by universities, in which collection, research and analysis are primary goals.{{sfn|Hufford|1991}}


==Terminology==
== Terminology ==
The terms '''folklore studies''' and '''folklore''' belong to a large and confusing word family. We have already used the synonym pairs '''Folkloristics / Folklife Studies''' and '''folklore / folklife''', all of them in current usage within the field. ''Folklore'' was the original term used in this discipline. Its synonym, ''folklife'', came into circulation in the second half of the 20th century, at a time when some researchers felt that the term ''folklore'' was too closely tied exclusively to oral lore. The new term ''folklife'', along with its synonym ''folk culture'', is meant to categorically include all aspects of a culture, not just the oral traditions. [[Folk process]] is used to describe the refinement and creative change of artifacts by community members within the folk tradition that defines the folk process.<ref>{{harv|Levy|Murphy|1991|p=43}}</ref>
The terms ''folklore studies'' and ''folklore'' belong to a large and confusing word family. We have already used the synonym pairs Folkloristics / Folklife Studies and folklore / folklife, all of them in current usage within the field. ''Folklore'' was the original term used in this discipline. Its synonym, ''folklife'', came into circulation in the second half of the 20th century, at a time when some researchers felt that the term ''folklore'' was too closely tied exclusively to oral lore. The new term ''folklife'', along with its synonym ''folk culture'', is meant to categorically include all aspects of a culture, not just the oral traditions. [[Folk process]] is used to describe the refinement and creative change of artifacts by community members within the folk tradition that defines the folk process.{{sfn|Levy|Murphy|1991|p=43}} Professionals within this field, regardless of the other words they use, consider themselves to be folklorists.
Professionals within this field, regardless of the other words they use, consider themselves to be '''folklorists'''.


Other terms which might be confused with folklore are [[popular culture]] and [[Vernacular culture]], both of which vary from folklore in distinctive ways. '''Pop culture''' tends to be in demand for a limited time; it is generally mass-produced and communicated using mass media. Individually, these tend to be labeled [[fads]], and disappear as quickly as they appear. The term '''vernacular culture''' differs from folklore in its overriding emphasis on a specific locality or region. For example, [[vernacular architecture]] denotes the standard building form of a region, using the materials available and designed to address functional needs of the local economy. ''Folk architecture'' is a subset of this, in which the construction is not done by a professional architect or builder, but by an individual putting up a needed structure in the local style. In a broader sense, all folklore is vernacular, i.e. tied to a region, whereas not everything vernacular is necessarily folklore.<ref>{{harv|Sims|Stephens|2005|page=7}}</ref>
Other terms which might be confused with folklore are [[popular culture]] and [[Vernacular culture]], both of which vary from folklore in distinctive ways. Pop culture tends to be in demand for a limited time; it is generally mass-produced and communicated using mass media. Individually, these tend to be labeled [[fads]], and disappear as quickly as they appear. The term ''vernacular culture differs'' from folklore in its overriding emphasis on a specific locality or region. For example, [[vernacular architecture]] denotes the standard building form of a region, using the materials available and designed to address functional needs of the local economy. Folk architecture is a subset of this, in which the construction is not done by a professional architect or builder, but by an individual putting up a needed structure in the local style. In a broader sense, all folklore is vernacular, i.e. tied to a region, whereas not everything vernacular is necessarily folklore.{{sfn|Sims|Stephens|2005|p=7}}


There are also further cognates used in connection with folklore studies. '''Folklorism''' refers to "material or stylistic elements of folklore [presented] in a context which is foreign to the original tradition." This definition, offered by the folklorist Hermann Bausinger, does not discount the validity of meaning expressed in these "second hand" traditions.<ref>{{harv|Šmidchens|1999|page=52}}</ref> Many Walt Disney films and products belong in this category of folklorism; the fairy tales, originally told around a winter fire, have become animated film characters, stuffed animals and bed linens. Their meaning, however far removed from the original story telling tradition, does not detract from the importance and meaning they have for their young audience. '''[[Fakelore]]''' refers to artifacts which might be termed ''pseudo-folklore''; these are manufactured items claiming to be traditional. The folklorist [[Richard Dorson]] coined this word, clarifying it in his book "Folklore and Fakelore".<ref>{{harv|Dorson|1976}}</ref> Current thinking within the discipline is that this term places undue emphasis on the origination of the artifact as a sign of authenticity of the tradition. The adjective '''folkloric''' is used to designate materials having the character of folklore or tradition, at the same time making no claim to authenticity.
There are also further cognates used in connection with folklore studies. Folklorism refers to "material or stylistic elements of folklore [presented] in a context which is foreign to the original tradition." This definition, offered by the folklorist Hermann Bausinger, does not discount the validity of meaning expressed in these "second hand" traditions.{{sfn|Šmidchens|1999|page=52}} Many Walt Disney films and products belong in this category of folklorism; the fairy tales, originally told around a winter fire, have become animated film characters, stuffed animals and bed linens. Their meaning, however far removed from the original story telling tradition, does not detract from the importance and meaning they have for their young audience. [[Fakelore]] refers to artifacts which might be termed ''pseudo-folklore''; these are manufactured items claiming to be traditional. The folklorist [[Richard Dorson]] coined this word, clarifying it in his book "Folklore and Fakelore".{{sfn|Dorson|1976}} Current thinking within the discipline is that this term places undue emphasis on the origination of the artifact as a sign of authenticity of the tradition. The adjective folkloric is used to designate materials having the character of folklore or tradition, at the same time making no claim to authenticity.


==Methodology==
== Methodology ==
There are several goals of active folklore research. The first objective is to identify tradition bearers within a social group and to collect their lore, preferably in situ. Once collected, these data need to be documented and preserved to enable further access and study. The documented lore is then available to be analyzed and interpreted by folklorists and other cultural historians, and can become the basis for studies of either individual customs or comparative studies. There are multiple venues, be they museums, journals or folk festivals to present the research results. The final step in this methodology involves advocating for these groups in their distinctiveness.<ref>{{harv|Wilson|2006|pages=81–106}}</ref>
There are several goals of active folklore research. The first objective is to identify tradition bearers within a social group and to collect their lore, preferably in situ. Once collected, these data need to be documented and preserved to enable further access and study. The documented lore is then available to be analyzed and interpreted by folklorists and other cultural historians, and can become the basis for studies of either individual customs or comparative studies. There are multiple venues, be they museums, journals or folk festivals to present the research results. The final step in this methodology involves advocating for these groups in their distinctiveness.{{sfn|Wilson|2006|pages=81–106}}


The specific tools needed by folklorists to do their research are manifold.
The specific tools needed by folklorists to do their research are manifold.
* The researchers must be comfortable in '''fieldwork'''; going out to meet their informants where they live, work, and perform.
* The researchers must be comfortable in fieldwork; going out to meet their informants where they live, work, and perform.
* They need to access '''archives''' housing a vast array of unpublished folklore collections.
* They need to access archives housing a vast array of unpublished folklore collections.
* They will want work with '''folk museums''', to both view the collections, and present their own findings.
* They will want work with folk museums, to both view the collections, and present their own findings.
* '''Bibliographies''' maintained by libraries and on line contain an important trove of articles from around the world.
* Bibliographies maintained by libraries and on line contain an important trove of articles from around the world.
* The use of '''indexes''' allow them to view and use the categorization of artifacts which have already been established.
* The use of indexes allow them to view and use the categorization of artifacts which have already been established.
* All work by a folklorist must be appropriately '''annotated''' in order to provide identifiable sources of the work.
* All work by a folklorist must be appropriately annotated in order to provide identifiable sources of the work.
* For all folklorists '''terminology''' becomes a skill to master as they rub elbows not only with related academic fields but also with the colloquial understanding (what exactly is a fairy tale?). This shared vocabulary, with varying and sometimes divergent shades of meaning, needs to be used thoughtfully and consistently.
* For all folklorists terminology becomes a skill to master as they rub elbows not only with related academic fields but also with the colloquial understanding (what exactly is a fairy tale?). This shared vocabulary, with varying and sometimes divergent shades of meaning, needs to be used thoughtfully and consistently.
* The use of '''printed sources''' to locate and identify further variants of a folk tradition is a necessary adjunct to the field research.
* The use of printed sources to locate and identify further variants of a folk tradition is a necessary adjunct to the field research.
* Because the transmission of folk artifacts preceded and ignored the establishment of national and political boundaries, it is important to cultivate '''international connections''' to folklorists in neighboring countries and around the world to compare both the artifacts researched and the methodology used.
* Because the transmission of folk artifacts preceded and ignored the establishment of national and political boundaries, it is important to cultivate international connections to folklorists in neighboring countries and around the world to compare both the artifacts researched and the methodology used.
* A knowledge of the '''history of folklore studies''' is called for to identify the direction and more importantly the biases which the field has taken in the past, enabling us to temper the current analysis with more impartiality.<ref>{{harv|Dorson|1972|page=6}}</ref><ref group=note>In a more dramatic and less technical approach, Henry Glassie describes the tools of the folklore trade: "[Folklorists were the] hunters and gatherers of academe…still rooting about in reality, hunting down and gathering up facts that we brought back alive. In those days [the 1960s] … we were delighted to be allowed to enter the university, set up camp, and practice our humble, archaic trade. They had let us in and we honored the established disciplines around us by stealing all we could. While the more advanced people around us slept, we slid in the shadows past their fires, rifled their baggage, stole their books, learned their language, and came to be able to ape their culture in a way that we at least found convincing. In our excitement we did not stop to ponder whether their theories sorted well with our traditional preoccupations. We learned the schemes of those we perceived to be higher in the academic hierarchy than ourselves, then applied those schemes to our own topics. We felt mature.{{harv|Glassie|1983|page=128}}</ref>
* A knowledge of the history of folklore studies is called for to identify the direction and more importantly the biases which the field has taken in the past, enabling us to temper the current analysis with more impartiality.{{sfn|Dorson|1972|page=6}}{{refn|group=note|In a more dramatic and less technical approach, Henry Glassie describes the tools of the folklore trade: "[Folklorists were the] hunters and gatherers of academe…still rooting about in reality, hunting down and gathering up facts that we brought back alive. In those days [the 1960s] … we were delighted to be allowed to enter the university, set up camp, and practice our humble, archaic trade. They had let us in and we honored the established disciplines around us by stealing all we could. While the more advanced people around us slept, we slid in the shadows past their fires, rifled their baggage, stole their books, learned their language, and came to be able to ape their culture in a way that we at least found convincing. In our excitement we did not stop to ponder whether their theories sorted well with our traditional preoccupations. We learned the schemes of those we perceived to be higher in the academic hierarchy than ourselves, then applied those schemes to our own topics. We felt mature.{{sfn|Glassie|1983|page=128}}}}


The folklorist also rubs shoulders with researchers, tools and inquiries of neighboring fields: literature, anthropology, cultural history, linguistics, geography, musicology, sociology, psychology. This is just a partial list of the fields of study related to folklore studies, all of which are united by a common interest in subject matter.<ref>{{harv|Bauman|Paredes|1972|page=xx}}</ref>
The folklorist also rubs shoulders with researchers, tools and inquiries of neighboring fields: literature, anthropology, cultural history, linguistics, geography, musicology, sociology, psychology. This is just a partial list of the fields of study related to folklore studies, all of which are united by a common interest in subject matter.{{sfn|Bauman|Paredes|1972|page=xx}}


==History==
== History ==


===From antiquities to lore===
=== From antiquities to lore ===
It is well-documented that the term "folklore" was coined in 1846 by the Englishman [[William Thoms]]. He fabricated it for use in an article published in the August 22, 1846 issue of [[The Athenaeum (British magazine)|''The Athenaeum'']].<ref>{{harv|Georges|Jones|1995|page=35}}</ref> Thoms consciously replaced the contemporary terminology of "popular antiquities" or "popular literature" with this new word. Folklore was to emphasize the study of a specific subset of the population: the rural, mostly illiterate peasantry.<ref>{{harv|Sims|Stephens|2005|page=23}}</ref> In his published call for help in documenting antiquities, Thoms was echoing scholars from across the European continent to collect artifacts of older, mostly oral cultural traditions still flourishing among the rural populace. In Germany the [[Brothers Grimm]] had first published their "[[Kinder- und Hausmärchen]]" in 1812. They continued throughout their lives to collect [[Volkskunde|German folk tales]] to include in their collection. In [[Danish folklore#History|Scandinavia]], intellectuals were also searching for their authentic [[Teutons|Teutonic roots]] and had labeled their studies ''Folkeminde'' (Danish) or ''Folkermimne'' (Norwegian).<ref>{{harv|Sims|Stephens|2005|pages=22–23}}</ref> Throughout Europe and America, other early collectors of folklore were at work. [[Thomas Crofton Croker]] published fairy tales from southern Ireland and, together with his wife, documented [[keening]] and other Irish funereal customs. [[Elias Lönnrot]] is best known for his collection of epic Finnish poems published under the title [[Kalevala]]. [[John Fanning Watson]] in the United States published the "Annals of Philadelphia".<ref>{{harv|Watson|1850–1860|p={{pn|date=November 2021}}}}</ref>
It is well-documented that the term ''folklore'' was coined in 1846 by the Englishman [[William Thoms]]. He fabricated it for use in an article published in the August 22, 1846 issue of [[The Athenaeum (British magazine)|''The Athenaeum'']].{{sfn|Georges|Jones|1995|page=35}} Thoms consciously replaced the contemporary terminology of ''popular antiquities'' or ''popular literature'' with this new word. Folklore was to emphasize the study of a specific subset of the population: the rural, mostly illiterate peasantry.{{sfn|Sims|Stephens|2005|page=23}} In his published call for help in documenting antiquities, Thoms was echoing scholars from across the European continent to collect artifacts of older, mostly oral cultural traditions still flourishing among the rural populace. In Germany the [[Brothers Grimm]] had first published their "[[Kinder- und Hausmärchen]]" in 1812. They continued throughout their lives to collect [[Volkskunde|German folk tales]] to include in their collection. In [[Danish folklore#History|Scandinavia]], intellectuals were also searching for their authentic [[Teutons|Teutonic roots]] and had labeled their studies ''Folkeminde'' (Danish) or ''Folkermimne'' (Norwegian).{{sfn|Sims|Stephens|2005|pages=22–23}} Throughout Europe and America, other early collectors of folklore were at work. [[Thomas Crofton Croker]] published fairy tales from southern Ireland and, together with his wife, documented [[keening]] and other Irish funeral customs. [[Elias Lönnrot]] is best known for his collection of epic Finnish poems published under the title [[Kalevala]]. [[John Fanning Watson]] in the United States published the "Annals of Philadelphia".{{sfn|Watson|1850–1860|p={{page needed|date=November 2021}}}}


With increasing industrialization, urbanization, and the rise in literacy throughout Europe in the 19th century, folklorists were concerned that the oral knowledge and beliefs, the [[Oral traditions|lore]] of the rural folk would be lost. It was posited that the stories, beliefs and customs were surviving fragments of a cultural mythology of the region, pre-dating Christianity and rooted in pagan peoples and beliefs.<ref>{{harv|Sims|Stephens|2005|pages=23–24}}</ref> This thinking goes in lockstep with the rise of [[nationalism]] across Europe.<ref>{{harv|Georges|Jones|1995|page=40}}</ref> Some British folklorists,{{which|date=August 2018}} rather than lamenting or attempting to preserve rural or pre-industrial cultures, saw their work as a means of furthering industrialization, scientific rationalism, and [[disenchantment]].<ref>{{harv|Josephson-Storm|2017|page=129}}</ref>
With increasing industrialization, urbanization, and the rise in literacy throughout Europe in the 19th century, folklorists were concerned that the oral knowledge and beliefs, the [[Oral traditions|lore]] of the rural folk would be lost. It was posited that the stories, beliefs and customs were surviving fragments of a cultural mythology of the region, pre-dating Christianity and rooted in pagan peoples and beliefs.{{sfn|Sims|Stephens|2005|pages=23–24}} This thinking goes in lockstep with the rise of [[nationalism]] across Europe.{{sfn|Georges|Jones|1995|page=40}} Some British folklorists,{{which|date=August 2018}} rather than lamenting or attempting to preserve rural or pre-industrial cultures, saw their work as a means of furthering industrialization, scientific rationalism, and [[disenchantment]].{{sfn|Josephson-Storm|2017|page=129}}


As the need to collect these vestiges of rural traditions became more compelling, the need to formalize this new field of cultural studies became apparent. The British ''[[Folklore Society]]'' was established in 1878 and the ''[[American Folklore Society]]'' was established a decade later. These were just two of a plethora of academic societies founded in the latter half of the 19th century by educated members of the emerging middle class.<ref>{{harv|Bronner|1986|page=17}}</ref> For literate, urban intellectuals and students of folklore the '''folk''' was someone else and the '''past''' was recognized as being something truly different.<ref>{{harv|Georges|Jones|1995|page=32}}</ref> Folklore became a measure of the [[Social progress|progress of society]], how far we had moved forward into the industrial present and indeed removed ourselves from a past marked by poverty, illiteracy and superstition. The task of both the professional folklorist and the amateur at the turn of the 20th century was to collect and classify cultural artifacts from the pre-industrial rural areas, parallel to the drive in the life sciences to do the same for the natural world.<ref group=note>[[Charles Darwin]] published ''[[On the Origin of Species]]'' in 1859.</ref> "Folk was a clear label to set materials apart from modern life…material specimens, which were meant to be classified in the natural history of civilization. Tales, originally dynamic and fluid, were given stability and concreteness by means of the printed page."<ref>{{harv|Bronner|1986|page=11}}</ref>
As the need to collect these vestiges of rural traditions became more compelling, the need to formalize this new field of cultural studies became apparent. The British ''[[Folklore Society]]'' was established in 1878 and the ''[[American Folklore Society]]'' was established a decade later. These were just two of a plethora of academic societies founded in the latter half of the 19th century by educated members of the emerging middle class.{{sfn|Bronner|1986|page=17}} For literate, urban intellectuals and students of folklore the folk was someone else and the past was recognized as being something truly different.{{sfn|Georges|Jones|1995|page=32}} Folklore became a measure of the [[Social progress|progress of society]], how far we had moved forward into the industrial present and indeed removed ourselves from a past marked by poverty, illiteracy and superstition. The task of both the professional folklorist and the amateur at the turn of the 20th century was to collect and classify cultural artifacts from the pre-industrial rural areas, parallel to the drive in the life sciences to do the same for the natural world.{{refn|group=note|[[Charles Darwin]] published ''[[On the Origin of Species]]'' in 1859.}} "Folk was a clear label to set materials apart from modern life…material specimens, which were meant to be classified in the natural history of civilization. Tales, originally dynamic and fluid, were given stability and concreteness by means of the printed page."{{sfn|Bronner|1986|page=11}}


Viewed as fragments from a pre-literate culture, these stories and objects were collected without context to be displayed and studied in museums and anthologies, just as bones and potsherds were gathered for the life sciences. [[Kaarle Krohn]] and [[Antti Aarne]] were active collectors of folk poetry in Finland. The Scotsman [[Andrew Lang]] is known for his 25 volumes of [[fairy tales|Andrew Lang's Fairy Books]] from around the world. [[Francis James Child]] was an American academic who collected English and Scottish popular ballads and their American variants, published as the [[Child Ballads]]. In the United States, both [[Mark Twain]] and [[Washington Irving]] drew on folklore to write their stories.<ref>{{harv|Bronner|1986|page=5}}</ref><ref>{{harv|Bronner|1986|pages=21–22}}</ref> One [[Samuel Clemens]] was also a charter member of the American Folklore Society.<ref>{{harv|Dundes|2005|page=402}}</ref>
Viewed as fragments from a pre-literate culture, these stories and objects were collected without context to be displayed and studied in museums and anthologies, just as bones and potsherds were gathered for the life sciences. [[Kaarle Krohn]] and [[Antti Aarne]] were active collectors of folk poetry in Finland. The Scotsman [[Andrew Lang]] is known for his 25 volumes of [[fairy tales|Andrew Lang's Fairy Books]] from around the world. [[Francis James Child]] was an American academic who collected English and Scottish popular ballads and their American variants, published as the [[Child Ballads]]. In the United States, [[Mark Twain]] was a charter member of the American Folklore Society.{{sfn|Dundes|2005|page=402}} Both he and [[Washington Irving]] drew on folklore to write their stories.{{sfn|Bronner|1986|page=5}}{{sfn|Bronner|1986|pages=21–22}} The 1825 novel ''[[Brother Jonathan (novel)|Brother Jonathan]]'' by [[John Neal (writer)|John Neal]] is recognized as the most extensive literary use of American folklore of its time.{{sfn|Morgan|1988|p=156}}


===Aarne–Thompson and the historic–geographic method===
=== Aarne–Thompson and the historic–geographic method ===
By the beginning of the 20th century these collections had grown to include artifacts from around the world and across several centuries. A system to organize and categorize them became necessary.<ref>{{harv|Georges|Jones |1995|page=54}}</ref> Antti Aarne published a first classification system for folktales in 1910. It was later expanded into the [[Aarne–Thompson classification system]] by [[Stith Thompson]] and remains the standard classification system for European folktales and other types of oral literature. As the number of classified artifacts grew, similarities were noted in items which had been collected from very different geographic regions, ethnic groups and epochs.
By the beginning of the 20th century these collections had grown to include artifacts from around the world and across several centuries. A system to organize and categorize them became necessary.{{sfn|Georges|Jones|1995|page=54}} Antti Aarne published a first classification system for folktales in 1910. It was later expanded into the [[Aarne–Thompson classification system]] by [[Stith Thompson]] and remains the standard classification system for European folktales and other types of oral literature. As the number of classified artifacts grew, similarities were noted in items which had been collected from very different geographic regions, ethnic groups and epochs.


In an effort to understand and explain the similarities found in tales from different locations, the Finnish folklorists Julius and Kaarle Krohne developed the [[Julius Krohn#Scientific work|Historical-Geographical method]], also called the Finnish method.<ref>{{harv|Wolf-Knuts|1999}}</ref> Using multiple variants of a tale, this investigative method attempted to work backwards in time and location to compile the original version from what they considered the incomplete fragments still in existence. This was the search for the "Urform,"<ref>{{harv|Sims|Stephens|2005|page=23}}</ref> which by definition was more complete and more "authentic" then the newer, more scattered versions. The historic-geographic method has been succinctly described as a "quantitative mining of the resulting archive, and extraction of distribution patterns in time and space". It is based on the assumption that every text artifact is a variant of the original text. As a proponent of this method, [[Walter Anderson (folklorist)|Walter Anderson]] proposed additionally a '''Law of Self-Correction''', i.e. a feedback mechanism which would keep the variants closer to the original form.<ref>{{harv|Dorst|2016|page=131}}</ref><ref group=note>Anderson is best known for his monograph ''[[King John and the Bishop|Kaiser und Abt]]'' (Folklore Fellows' Communications 42, Helsinki 1923) on folktales of type AT 922.</ref>
In an effort to understand and explain the similarities found in tales from different locations, the Finnish folklorists Julius and Kaarle Krohne developed the [[Julius Krohn#Scientific work|Historical-Geographical method]], also called the Finnish method.{{sfn|Wolf-Knuts|1999}} Using multiple variants of a tale, this investigative method attempted to work backwards in time and location to compile the original version from what they considered the incomplete fragments still in existence. This was the search for the "Urform",{{sfn|Sims|Stephens|2005|p=23}} which by definition was more complete and more "authentic" than the newer, more scattered versions. The historic-geographic method has been succinctly described as a "quantitative mining of the resulting archive, and extraction of distribution patterns in time and space". It is based on the assumption that every text artifact is a variant of the original text. As a proponent of this method, [[Walter Anderson (folklorist)|Walter Anderson]] proposed additionally a Law of Self-Correction, i.e. a feedback mechanism which would keep the variants closer to the original form.{{sfn|Dorst|2016|page=131}}{{refn|group=note|Anderson is best known for his monograph ''[[King John and the Bishop|Kaiser und Abt]]'' (Folklore Fellows' Communications 42, Helsinki 1923) on folktales of type AT 922.{{sfn|Anderson|1923}}}}


It was during the first decades of the 20th century that Folklore Studies in Europe and America began to diverge. The Europeans continued with their emphasis on oral traditions of the pre-literate peasant, and remained connected to literary scholarship within the universities. By this definition, folklore was completely based in the European cultural sphere; any social group that did not originate in Europe was to be studied by [[Ethnology|ethnologists]] and [[cultural anthropologists]]. In this light, some twenty-first century scholars have interpreted European folkloristics as an instrument of [[internal colonialism]], in parallel with the imperialistic dimensions of early 20th century cultural anthropology and [[Orientalism]].<ref>{{harv|Josephson-Storm|2017|page=128}}</ref> Unlike contemporary anthropology, however, many early European folklorists were themselves members of the prioritized groups that folkloristics was intended to study; for instance, Andrew Lang and [[James George Frazer]] were both themselves Scotsmen and studied rural folktales from towns near where they grew up.<ref>{{harv|Josephson-Storm|2017|pages=128–130}}</ref>
It was during the first decades of the 20th century that Folklore Studies in Europe and America began to diverge. The Europeans continued with their emphasis on oral traditions of the pre-literate peasant, and remained connected to literary scholarship within the universities. By this definition, folklore was completely based in the European cultural sphere; any social group that did not originate in Europe was to be studied by [[Ethnology|ethnologists]] and [[cultural anthropologists]]. In this light, some twenty-first century scholars have interpreted European folkloristics as an instrument of [[internal colonialism]], in parallel with the imperialistic dimensions of early 20th century cultural anthropology and [[Orientalism]].{{sfn|Josephson-Storm|2017|page=128}} Unlike contemporary anthropology, however, many early European folklorists were themselves members of the prioritized groups that folkloristics was intended to study; for instance, Andrew Lang and [[James George Frazer]] were both themselves Scotsmen and studied rural folktales from towns near where they grew up.{{sfn|Josephson-Storm|2017|pages=128–130}}


In contrast to this, American folklorists, under the influence of the German-American [[Franz Boas]] and [[Ruth Benedict]], sought to incorporate other cultural groups living in their region into the study of folklore. This included not only customs brought over by northern European immigrants, but also African Americans, [[Acadians]] of eastern Canada, [[Cajuns]] of Louisiana, [[Hispanics]] of the American southwest, and [[Indigenous peoples of the Americas|Native Americans]]. Not only were these distinct cultural groups all living in the same regions, but their proximity to each other caused their traditions and customs to intermingle. The lore of these distinct social groups, all of them Americans, was considered the bailiwick of American folklorists, and aligned American folklore studies more with ethnology than with literary studies.<ref>{{harv|Zumwalt|Dundes|1988|pages=16–20}}</ref>
In contrast to this, American folklorists, under the influence of the German-American [[Franz Boas]] and [[Ruth Benedict]], sought to incorporate other cultural groups living in their region into the study of folklore. This included not only customs brought over by northern European immigrants, but also African Americans, [[Acadians]] of eastern Canada, [[Cajuns]] of Louisiana, [[Hispanics]] of the American southwest, and [[Indigenous peoples of the Americas|Native Americans]]. Not only were these distinct cultural groups all living in the same regions, but their proximity to each other caused their traditions and customs to intermingle. The lore of these distinct social groups, all of them Americans, was considered the bailiwick of American folklorists, and aligned American folklore studies more with ethnology than with literary studies.{{sfn|Zumwalt|Dundes|1988|pages=16–20}}
[[File:Federal Writers' Project Presentation.jpg|thumb|Federal Writers Project]]
[[File:Federal Writers' Project Presentation.jpg|thumb|Federal Writers Project]]


===Great Depression and the Federal Writers' Project===
=== Great Depression and the Federal Writers' Project ===
Then came the 1930s and the worldwide [[Great Depression]]. In the United States the [[Federal Writers' Project]] was established as part of the [[Works Progress Administration|WPA]]. Its goal was to offer paid employment to thousands of unemployed writers by engaging them in various cultural projects around the country. These white collar workers were sent out as field workers to collect the oral folklore of their regions, including stories, songs, idioms and dialects. The most famous of these collections is the [[Slave Narrative Collection]]. The folklore collected under the auspices of the Federal Writers Project during these years continues to offer a goldmine of primary source materials for folklorists and other cultural historians.<ref>{{harv|Sims|Stephens|2005|pages=10, 25}}</ref>
Then came the 1930s and the worldwide [[Great Depression]]. In the United States the [[Federal Writers' Project]] was established as part of the [[Works Progress Administration|WPA]]. Its goal was to offer paid employment to thousands of unemployed writers by engaging them in various cultural projects around the country. These white collar workers were sent out as field workers to collect the oral folklore of their regions, including stories, songs, idioms and dialects. The most famous of these collections is the [[Slave Narrative Collection]]. The folklore collected under the auspices of the Federal Writers Project during these years continues to offer a goldmine of primary source materials for folklorists and other cultural historians.{{sfn|Sims|Stephens|2005|pages=10, 25}}


As chairman of the Federal Writers' Project between 1938 and 1942, [[Benjamin A. Botkin]] supervised the work of these folklore field workers. Both Botkin and [[John Lomax]] were particularly influential during this time in expanding folklore collection techniques to include more detailing of the interview context.<ref>{{harv|Sims|Stephens|2005|page=25}}</ref> This was a significant move away from viewing the collected artifacts as isolated fragments, broken remnants of an incomplete pre-historic whole. Using these new interviewing techniques, the collected lore became embedded in and imbued with meaning within the framework of its contemporary practice. The emphasis moved from the lore to the folk, i.e. the groups and the people who gave this lore meaning within contemporary daily living.
As chairman of the Federal Writers' Project between 1938 and 1942, [[Benjamin A. Botkin]] supervised the work of these folklore field workers. Both Botkin and [[John Lomax]] were particularly influential during this time in expanding folklore collection techniques to include more detailing of the interview context.{{sfn|Sims|Stephens|2005|page=25}} This was a significant move away from viewing the collected artifacts as isolated fragments, broken remnants of an incomplete pre-historic whole. Using these new interviewing techniques, the collected lore became embedded in and imbued with meaning within the framework of its contemporary practice. The emphasis moved from the lore to the folk, i.e. the groups and the people who gave this lore meaning within contemporary daily living.


===German folklore in the Third Reich ===
=== German folklore in the Third Reich ===
In Europe during these same decades, folklore studies were drifting in a different direction. Throughout the 19th century folklore had been tied to romantic ideals of the soul of the people, in which folk tales and folksongs recounted the lives and exploits of ethnic folk heroes. Folklore chronicled the mythical origins of different peoples across Europe and established the beginnings of [[nationalism|national pride]]. By the first decade of the 20th century there were scholarly societies as well as individual folklore positions within universities, academies, and museums. However, the study of German ''Volkskunde'' had yet to be defined as an academic discipline.{{Citation needed |date= May 2021}}
In Europe during these same decades, folklore studies were drifting in a different direction. Throughout the 19th century folklore had been tied to romantic ideals of the soul of the people, in which folk tales and folksongs recounted the lives and exploits of ethnic folk heroes. Folklore chronicled the mythical origins of different peoples across Europe and established the beginnings of [[nationalism|national pride]]. By the first decade of the 20th century there were scholarly societies as well as individual folklore positions within universities, academies, and museums. However, the study of German {{lang|de|Volkskunde}} had yet to be defined as an academic discipline.{{Citation needed |date= May 2021}}
[[File:Greater Germanic Reich.png|thumb|Greater Germanic Reich]]
[[File:Greater Germanic Reich.png|thumb|Greater Germanic Reich]]
In the 1920s this originally apolitical movement{{Citation needed |date= May 2021}} was coopted by nationalism in several European countries, including Germany,<ref>{{harv|Dorson|1972|page=15}}</ref><ref>{{harv|Bendix|1998|page=240}}</ref> where it was absorbed into emerging [[Nazi]] ideology. The vocabulary of German ''Volkskunde'' such as ''Volk'' (folk), ''Rasse'' (race), ''Stamm'' (tribe), and ''Erbe'' (heritage) were frequently referenced by the Nazi Party. Their expressed goal was to re-establish what they perceived as the former purity of the Germanic peoples of Europe. The German anti-Nazi philosopher [[Ernst Bloch]] was one of the main analysts and critics of this ideology.<ref group=note>In his study ''Erbschaft dieser Zeit'' (1935) (translation ''Heritage of Our Times'', Polity, 1991) Ernst Bloch examined how the mythological way of scholarly thought of the 19th century was revived by the National Socialists.</ref> "Nazi ideology presented racial purity as the means to heal the wounds of the suffering German state following World War I. Hitler painted the ethnic heterogeneity of Germany as a major reason for the country's economic and political weakness, and he promised to restore a German realm based on a cleansed, and hence strong, German people. Racial or ethnic purity" was the goal of the Nazis, intent on forging a [[Greater Germanic Reich]].<ref>{{harv|Bendix|1997|page=163}}</ref>
In the 1920s this originally apolitical movement{{Citation needed |date= May 2021}} was coopted by nationalism in several European countries, including Germany,{{sfn|Dorson|1972|page=15}}{{sfn|Bendix|1998|page=240}} where it was absorbed into emerging [[Nazi]] ideology. The vocabulary of German {{lang|de|Volkskunde}} such as {{lang|de|Volk}} (folk), {{lang|de|Rasse}} (race), {{lang|de|Stamm}} (tribe), and {{lang|de|Erbe}} (heritage) were frequently referenced by the Nazi Party. Their expressed goal was to re-establish what they perceived as the former purity of the Germanic peoples of Europe. The German anti-Nazi philosopher [[Ernst Bloch]] was one of the main analysts and critics of this ideology.{{refn|group=note|In his study ''Erbschaft dieser Zeit'' (1935) (translation ''Heritage of Our Times'', Polity, 1991) Ernst Bloch examined how the mythological way of scholarly thought of the 19th century was revived by the National Socialists.}} "Nazi ideology presented racial purity as the means to heal the wounds of the suffering German state following World War I. Hitler painted the ethnic heterogeneity of Germany as a major reason for the country's economic and political weakness, and he promised to restore a German realm based on a cleansed, and hence strong, German people. Racial or ethnic purity" was the goal of the Nazis, intent on forging a [[Greater Germanic Reich]].{{sfn|Bendix|1997|page=163}}
In the postwar years, departments of folklore were established in multiple German universities. However an analysis of just how folklore studies supported the policies of the Third Reich did not begin until 20 years after World War II in West Germany.<ref name=":0" /> Particularly in the works of Hermann Bausinger and Wolfgang Emmerich in the 1960s, it was pointed out that the vocabulary current in ''Volkskunde'' was ideally suited for the kind of ideology that the National Socialists had built up.<ref>{{harv|Lixfeld|Dow|1994|page=11}}</ref> It was then another 20 years before convening the 1986 Munich conference on folklore and National Socialism. This continues to be a difficult and painful discussion within the German folklore community.<ref name=":0">{{harv|Lixfeld|Dow|1994}}</ref>
In the postwar years, departments of folklore were established in multiple German universities. However an analysis of just how folklore studies supported the policies of the Third Reich did not begin until 20 years after World War II in West Germany.{{sfn|Lixfeld|Dow|1994}} Particularly in the works of Hermann Bausinger and Wolfgang Emmerich in the 1960s, it was pointed out that the vocabulary current in {{lang|de|Volkskunde}} was ideally suited for the kind of ideology that the National Socialists had built up.{{sfn|Lixfeld|Dow|1994|page=11}} It was then another 20 years before convening the 1986 Munich conference on folklore and National Socialism. This continues to be a difficult and painful discussion within the German folklore community.{{sfn|Lixfeld|Dow|1994}}


===After World War II===
=== After World War II ===
Following World War II, the discussion continued about whether to align folklore studies with literature or ethnology. Within this discussion, many voices were actively trying to identify the optimal approach to take in the analysis of folklore artifacts. One major change had already been initiated by Franz Boas. Culture was no longer viewed in evolutionary terms; each culture has its own integrity and completeness, and was not progressing either toward wholeness or toward fragmentation. Individual artifacts must have meaning within the culture and for individuals themselves in order to assume [[Cultural relativism|cultural relevance]] and assure continued transmission. Because the European folklore movement had been primarily oriented toward oral traditions, a new term, [[folklife]], was introduced to represent the full range of traditional culture. This included [[music]], [[dance]], [[storytelling]], [[crafts]], [[costume]], [[foodways]] and more.
Following World War II, the discussion continued about whether to align folklore studies with literature or ethnology. Within this discussion, many voices were actively trying to identify the optimal approach to take in the analysis of folklore artifacts. One major change had already been initiated by Franz Boas. Culture was no longer viewed in evolutionary terms; each culture has its own integrity and completeness, and was not progressing either toward wholeness or toward fragmentation. Individual artifacts must have meaning within the culture and for individuals themselves in order to assume [[Cultural relativism|cultural relevance]] and assure continued transmission. Because the European folklore movement had been primarily oriented toward oral traditions, a new term, ''[[folklife]]'', was introduced to represent the full range of traditional culture. This included [[music]], [[dance]], [[storytelling]], [[crafts]], [[costume]], [[foodways]] and more.


In this period, folklore came to refer to the event of doing something within a given context, for a specific audience, using artifacts as necessary props in the communication of traditions between individuals and within groups.<ref>{{harv|Bauman|Paredes|1972|page=xv}}</ref> Beginning in the 1970s, these new areas of folklore studies became articulated in [[performance studies]], where traditional behaviors are evaluated and understood within the context of their performance. It is the meaning within the social group that becomes the focus for these folklorists, foremost among them [[Richard Bauman]]n<ref>{{harv|Bauman|1975}}</ref> and [[Barbara Kirshenblatt-Gimblett]].<ref>{{harv|Kirshenblatt-Gimblett|1999}}</ref> Enclosing any performance is a framework which signals that the following is something outside of ordinary communication. For example, [[Joke#Telling jokes|"So, have you heard the one…"]] automatically flags the following as a joke. A performance can take place either within a cultural group, re-iterating and re-enforcing the customs and beliefs of the group. Or it can be performance for an outside group, in which the first goal is to set the performers apart from the audience.<ref>{{harv|Bauman|1971|page=45}}</ref>
In this period, folklore came to refer to the event of doing something within a given context, for a specific audience, using artifacts as necessary props in the communication of traditions between individuals and within groups.{{sfn|Bauman|Paredes|1972|page=xv}} Beginning in the 1970s, these new areas of folklore studies became articulated in [[performance studies]], where traditional behaviors are evaluated and understood within the context of their performance. It is the meaning within the social group that becomes the focus for these folklorists, foremost among them [[Richard Bauman]]n{{sfn|Bauman|1975}} and [[Barbara Kirshenblatt-Gimblett]].{{sfn|Kirshenblatt-Gimblett|1999}} Enclosing any performance is a framework which signals that the following is something outside of ordinary communication. For example, [[Joke#Telling jokes|"So, have you heard the one…"]] automatically flags the following as a joke. A performance can take place either within a cultural group, re-iterating and re-enforcing the customs and beliefs of the group. Or it can be performance for an outside group, in which the first goal is to set the performers apart from the audience.{{sfn|Bauman|1971|page=45}}

This analysis then goes beyond the artifact itself, be it dance, music or story-telling. It goes beyond the performers and their message. As part of performance studies, the audience becomes part of the performance. If any folklore performance strays too far from audience expectations, it will likely be brought back by means of a negative feedback loop at the next iteration.{{sfn|Dorst|2016|page=139}} Both performer and audience are acting within the "Twin Laws" of [[Folk process|folklore transmission]], in which novelty and innovation is balanced by the conservative forces of the familiar.{{sfn|Toelken|1996|pages=39–40}} Even further, the presence of a [[Participant observation#Impact of researcher involvement|folklore observer]] at a performance of any kind will influence the performance itself in subtle and not-so-subtle ways. Because folklore is firstly an act of communication between parties, it is incomplete without inclusion of the reception in its analysis. The understanding of folklore performance as communication leads directly into [[Linguistics#Anthropology|modern linguistic theory]] and [[communication studies]]. Words both reflect and shape our worldview. Oral traditions, particularly in their stability over generations and even centuries, provide significant insight into the ways in which insiders of a culture see, understand, and express their responses to the world around them.{{sfn|Toelken|1996|page=226}}{{refn|group=note|In his chapter "Folklore and Cultural Worldview", Toelken provides an illuminating comparison of the worldview of European Americans with Navajos. In the use of language, the two cultural groups express widely differing understandings of their spatial and temporal place in the universe.}}


This analysis then goes beyond the artifact itself, be it dance, music or story-telling. It goes beyond the performers and their message. As part of performance studies, the audience becomes part of the performance. If any folklore performance strays too far from audience expectations, it will likely be brought back by means of a negative feedback loop at the next iteration.<ref>{{harv|Dorst|2016|page=139}}</ref> Both performer and audience are acting within the "Twin Laws" of [[Folk process|folklore transmission]], in which novelty and innovation is balanced by the conservative forces of the familiar.<ref>{{harv|Toelken|1996|pages=39–40}}</ref> Even further, the presence of a [[Participant observation#Impact of researcher involvement|folklore observer]] at a performance of any kind will influence the performance itself in subtle and not-so-subtle ways. Because folklore is firstly an act of communication between parties, it is incomplete without inclusion of the reception in its analysis. The understanding of folklore performance as communication leads directly into [[Linguistics#Anthropology|modern linguistic theory]] and [[communication studies]]. Words both reflect and shape our worldview. Oral traditions, particularly in their stability over generations and even centuries, provide significant insight into the ways in which insiders of a culture see, understand, and express their responses to the world around them.<ref>{{harv|Toelken|1996|page=226}}</ref><ref group=note>In his chapter "Folklore and Cultural Worldview", Toelken provides an illuminating comparison of the worldview of European Americans with Navajos. In the use of language, the two cultural groups express widely differing understandings of their spatial and temporal place in the universe.</ref>
[[File:2015 Smithsonian folklife festival DC - Cusco Weavers - 10.jpg|thumb|upright|2015 Smithsonian Folklife Festival]]
[[File:2015 Smithsonian folklife festival DC - Cusco Weavers - 10.jpg|thumb|upright|2015 Smithsonian Folklife Festival]]
Three major approaches to folklore interpretation were developed during the second half of the 20th century. [[Structuralism#Structuralism in anthropology|Structuralism]] in folklore studies attempts to define the structures underlying oral and customary folklore.<ref group=note>For example, a [[joke]] uses words within a specific and well-defined narrative structure to make people laugh. A [[fable]] uses anthropomorphized animals and natural features to illustrate a moral lesson, frequently concluding with a moral. These are just a few of the many formulaic structures used in oral traditions.</ref> Once classified, it was easy for structural folklorists to lose sight of the overarching issue: what are the characteristics which keep a form constant and relevant over multiple generations? [[Structural functionalism|Functionalism]] in folklore studies also came to the fore following World War II; as spokesman, [[William Bascom]] formulated the [[William Bascom#Four functions of folklore|4 functions of folklore]]. This approach takes a more top-down approach to understand how a specific form fits into and expresses meaning within the culture as a whole.<ref group=note>An example of this are the [[Joke#Joke cycles|joke cycles]] that spontaneously appear in response to a national or world tragedy or disaster.</ref> A third method of folklore analysis, popular in the late 20th century, is the [[Psychoanalytic theory|Psychoanalytic]] Interpretation,<ref>{{harv|Sims|Stephens|2005|page=187ff.}}</ref> championed by [[Alan Dundes]]. His monographs, including a study of homoerotic subtext in American football<ref>{{harv|Dundes|1978b}}</ref> and anal-erotic elements in German folklore,<ref>{{harv|Dundes|1984}}</ref> were not always appreciated and involved Dundes in several major folklore studies [[Alan Dundes#Controversy|controversies]] during his career. True to each of these approaches, and any others one might want to employ (political, women's issues, material culture, urban contexts, non-verbal text, ad infinitum), whichever perspective is chosen will spotlight some features and leave other characteristics in the shadows.
Three major approaches to folklore interpretation were developed during the second half of the 20th century. [[Structuralism#Structuralism in anthropology|Structuralism]] in folklore studies attempts to define the structures underlying oral and customary folklore.{{refn|group=note|For example, a [[joke]] uses words within a specific and well-defined narrative structure to make people laugh. A [[fable]] uses anthropomorphized animals and natural features to illustrate a moral lesson, frequently concluding with a moral. These are just a few of the many formulaic structures used in oral traditions.}} Once classified, it was easy for structural folklorists to lose sight of the overarching issue: what are the characteristics which keep a form constant and relevant over multiple generations? [[Structural functionalism|Functionalism]] in folklore studies also came to the fore following World War II; as spokesman, [[William Bascom]] formulated the [[William Bascom#Four functions of folklore|4 functions of folklore]]. This approach takes a more top-down approach to understand how a specific form fits into and expresses meaning within the culture as a whole.{{refn|group=note|An example of this are the [[Joke#Joke cycles|joke cycles]] that spontaneously appear in response to a national or world tragedy or disaster.}} A third method of folklore analysis, popular in the late 20th century, is the [[Psychoanalytic theory|Psychoanalytic]] Interpretation,{{sfn|Sims|Stephens|2005|page=187ff.}} championed by [[Alan Dundes]]. His monographs, including a study of homoerotic subtext in American football{{sfn|Dundes|1978b}} and anal-erotic elements in German folklore,{{sfn|Dundes|1984}} were not always appreciated and involved Dundes in several major folklore studies [[Alan Dundes#Controversy|controversies]] during his career. True to each of these approaches, and any others one might want to employ (political, women's issues, material culture, urban contexts, non-verbal text, ad infinitum), whichever perspective is chosen will spotlight some features and leave other characteristics in the shadows.


With the passage in 1976 of the American Folklife Preservation Act, folklore studies in the United States came of age. This legislation follows in the footsteps of other legislation designed to safeguard more tangible aspects of our [[Cultural Heritage|national heritage]] worthy of protection. This law also marks a shift in our national awareness; it gives voice to the national understanding that diversity within the country is a unifying feature, not something that separates us.<ref>{{Cite web | url=https://folkways.si.edu/mission-history/smithsonian | title=Mission and History}}</ref> "We no longer view cultural difference as a problem to be solved, but as a tremendous opportunity. In the diversity of American folklife we find a marketplace teeming with the exchange of traditional forms and cultural ideas, a rich resource for Americans".<ref>{{harv|Hufford|1991}}</ref> This diversity is celebrated annually at the [[Smithsonian Folklife Festival]] and many other [[List of folk festivals|folklife festivals]] around the country.
With the passage in 1976 of the American Folklife Preservation Act, folklore studies in the United States came of age. This legislation follows in the footsteps of other legislation designed to safeguard more tangible aspects of our [[Cultural Heritage|national heritage]] worthy of protection. This law also marks a shift in our national awareness; it gives voice to the national understanding that diversity within the country is a unifying feature, not something that separates us.<ref>{{Cite web |url=https://folkways.si.edu/mission-history/smithsonian |title=Mission and History |website=[[Smithsonian]] |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200609072619/https://folkways.si.edu/mission-and-history |archive-date=9 June 2020}}</ref> "We no longer view cultural difference as a problem to be solved, but as a tremendous opportunity. In the diversity of American folklife we find a marketplace teeming with the exchange of traditional forms and cultural ideas, a rich resource for Americans".{{sfn|Hufford|1991}} This diversity is celebrated annually at the [[Smithsonian Folklife Festival]] and many other [[List of folk festivals|folklife festivals]] around the country.


== Global folklore studies ==
== Global folklore studies ==
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=== Folklore studies in Chile ===
=== Folklore studies in Chile ===

[[File:Rodolfo_Lenz_en_1915.JPG|thumb|upright|Chilean folklorist Rodolfo Lenz in 1915.]]
[[File:Rodolfo_Lenz_en_1915.JPG|thumb|upright|Chilean folklorist Rodolfo Lenz in 1915.]]
The study of folklore in Chile was developed in a systematic and pioneering way since the late 19th century. In the work of compiling the popular traditions of the Chilean people and of the original peoples, they stood out, not only in the study of national folklore, but also in Latin America.{{citation needed |date= November 2021}} Ramón Laval, Julio Vicuña, Rodolfo Lenz, José Toribio Medina, Tomás Guevara, Félix de Augusta, and Aukanaw, among others, generated an important documentary and critical corpus around [[oral literature]], autochthonous languages, regional dialects, and peasant and indigenous customs. They published, mainly during the first decades of the 20th century, linguistic and philological studies, dictionaries, comparative studies between the national folklores of Ibero-America, compilations of stories, poetry, and religious traditions. In 1909, at the initiative of Laval, Vicuña and Lenz, the Chilean Folklore Society was founded, the first of its kind in America. Two years later, it would merge with the recently created Chilean Society of History and Geography.<ref>Sociedad Chilena de Historia y Geografía, [http://www.memoriachilena.cl/602/w3-article-97495.html fundada en 1839]</ref>
The study of folklore in Chile was developed in a systematic and pioneering way since the late 19th century. In the work of compiling the popular traditions of the Chilean people and of the original peoples, they stood out, not only in the study of national folklore, but also in Latin America.{{citation needed |date= November 2021}} Ramón Laval, Julio Vicuña, Rodolfo Lenz, José Toribio Medina, Tomás Guevara, Félix de Augusta, and Aukanaw, among others, generated an important documentary and critical corpus around [[oral literature]], autochthonous languages, regional dialects, and peasant and indigenous customs. They published, mainly during the first decades of the 20th century, linguistic and philological studies, dictionaries, comparative studies between the national folklores of Ibero-America, compilations of stories, poetry, and religious traditions. In 1909, at the initiative of Laval, Vicuña and Lenz, the Chilean Folklore Society was founded, the first of its kind in America. Two years later, it would merge with the recently created Chilean Society of History and Geography.<ref>{{cite web |title=Sociedad Chilena de Historia y Geografía |language=es |trans-title=|url=http://www.memoriachilena.cl/602/w3-article-97495.html |website=Memoria Chilena}}</ref>


==21st century==
== 21st century ==
With the advent of the [[digital age]], the question once again foregrounds itself concerning the relevance of [[folklore]] in this new century. Although the profession in folklore grows and the articles and books on folklore topics proliferate, the traditional role of the folklorist is indeed changing.
With the advent of the [[digital age]], the question once again foregrounds itself concerning the relevance of [[folklore]] in this new century. Although the profession in folklore grows and the articles and books on folklore topics proliferate, the traditional role of the folklorist is indeed changing.


===Globalization===
=== Globalization ===
The United States is known as a land of immigrants; with the exception of the first [[Indigenous peoples of the Americas|Indian nations]], everyone originally came from somewhere else. Americans are proud of their [[cultural diversity]]. For folklorists, this country represents a trove of cultures rubbing elbows with each other, mixing and matching into exciting combinations as new generations come up. It is in the study of their folklife that we begin to understand the cultural patterns underlying the different ethnic groups. Language and customs provide a window into their view of reality. "The study of varying worldviews among ethnic and national groups in America remains one of the most important unfinished tasks for folklorists and anthropologists."<ref>{{harv| Toelken|1996|page=297}}</ref><ref group=note>See also Dundes (2005), pg. 387. [Folklore studies is] "a discipline which has been ahead of its time in recognizing the importance of folklore in promoting ethnic pride and in providing invaluable data for the discovery of native cognitive categories and patterns of worldview and values."</ref>
The United States is known{{By whom|date=August 2023}} as a land of immigrants; with the exception of the first [[Indigenous peoples of the Americas|Indian nations]], everyone originally came from somewhere else. Americans are proud of their [[cultural diversity]]. For folklorists, this country represents a trove of cultures rubbing elbows with each other, mixing and matching into exciting combinations as new generations come up. It is in the study of their folklife that we begin to understand the cultural patterns underlying the different ethnic groups. Language and customs provide a window into their view of reality. "The study of varying worldviews among ethnic and national groups in America remains one of the most important unfinished tasks for folklorists and anthropologists."{{sfn|Toelken|1996|page=297}}{{refn|group=note|See also {{harvp|Dundes|2005|p=387}}. [Folklore studies is] "a discipline which has been ahead of its time in recognizing the importance of folklore in promoting ethnic pride and in providing invaluable data for the discovery of native cognitive categories and patterns of worldview and values."}}


Contrary to a widespread concern, we are not seeing a loss of diversity and increasing [[cultural homogenization]] across the land.<ref group=note>The newness of this discussion can be seen in the references for [[Cultural homogenization]]; all sources listed have been published in 21st century.</ref> In fact, critics of this theory point out that as different cultures mix, the cultural landscape becomes multifaceted with the intermingling of customs. People become aware of other cultures and pick and choose different items to adopt from each other. One noteworthy example of this is the [[Hanukkah bush|Jewish Christmas Tree]], a point of some contention among American Jews.
Contrary to a widespread concern, we are not seeing a loss of diversity and increasing [[cultural homogenization]] across the land.{{refn|group=note|The newness of this discussion can be seen in the references for [[Cultural homogenization]]; all sources listed have been published in 21st century.}} In fact, critics of this theory point out that as different cultures mix, the cultural landscape becomes multifaceted with the intermingling of customs. People become aware of other cultures and pick and choose different items to adopt from each other. One noteworthy example of this is the [[Hanukkah bush|Jewish Christmas Tree]], a point of some contention among American Jews.


[[Public folklore|Public sector folklore]] was introduced into the [[American Folklore Society]] in the early 1970s. These public folklorists work in museums and cultural agencies to identify and document the diverse folk cultures and folk artists in their region. Beyond this, they provide performance venues for the artists, with the twin objectives of entertainment and education about different ethnic groups. Given the [[List of folk festivals|number of folk festivals]] held around the world, it becomes clear that the cultural multiplicity of a region is presented with pride and excitement. Public folklorists are increasingly being involved in economic and community development projects to elucidate and clarify differing world views of the social groups impacted by the projects.<ref>{{harv|Hufford|1991}}</ref>
[[Public folklore|Public sector folklore]] was introduced into the [[American Folklore Society]] in the early 1970s. These public folklorists work in museums and cultural agencies to identify and document the diverse folk cultures and folk artists in their region. Beyond this, they provide performance venues for the artists, with the twin objectives of entertainment and education about different ethnic groups. Given the [[List of folk festivals|number of folk festivals]] held around the world, it becomes clear that the cultural multiplicity of a region is presented with pride and excitement. Public folklorists are increasingly being involved in economic and community development projects to elucidate and clarify differing world views of the social groups impacted by the projects.{{sfn|Hufford|1991}}


===Computerized databases and big data===
=== Computerized databases and big data ===
Once folklore artifacts have been recorded on the World Wide Web, they can be collected in large electronic databases and even moved into collections of [[big data]]. This compels folklorists to find new ways to collect and [[data curation|curate]] these data.<ref>{{harv|Dundes |2005|page=401}}</ref> Along with these new challenges, electronic data collections provide the opportunity to ask different questions, and combine with other academic fields to explore new aspects of traditional culture.<ref>{{harv|Dorst|2016|page=142}}</ref> [[Computational humor]] is just one new field that has taken up the traditional oral forms of jokes and anecdotes for study, holding its first dedicated conference in 1996. This takes us beyond gathering and categorizing large joke collections. Scholars are using computers firstly to recognize jokes in context,<ref>{{harv|Sacks|1974|pages=337–353}}</ref> and further to attempt to create jokes using [[artificial intelligence]].
Once folklore artifacts have been recorded on the World Wide Web, they can be collected in large electronic databases and even moved into collections of [[big data]]. This compels folklorists to find new ways to collect and [[data curation|curate]] these data.{{sfn|Dundes|2005|page=401}} Along with these new challenges, electronic data collections provide the opportunity to ask different questions, and combine with other academic fields to explore new aspects of traditional culture.{{sfn|Dorst|2016|page=142}} [[Computational humor]] is just one new field that has taken up the traditional oral forms of jokes and anecdotes for study, holding its first dedicated conference in 1996. This takes us beyond gathering and categorizing large joke collections. Scholars are using computers firstly to recognize jokes in context,{{sfn|Sacks|1974|pages=337–353}} and further to attempt to create jokes using [[artificial intelligence]].


===Binary thinking of the computer age===
=== Binary thinking of the computer age ===
As we move forward in the digital age, the [[binary opposition|binary thinking]] of the 20th century [[Structuralism|structuralists]] remains an important tool in the folklorist's toolbox.<ref>{{harv|Sims|Stephens|2005|pages=184–187}}</ref> This does not mean that binary thinking was invented in recent times along with computers; only that we became aware of both the power and the limitations of the "either/or" construction. In folklore studies, the multiple binaries underlying much of the theoretical thinking have been identified – {dynamicism : conservatism}, {anecdote : myth}, {process : structure}, {performance : tradition}, {improvisation : repetition}, {variation : traditionalism}, {repetition : innovation};<ref>{{harv|Dorst|2016|page=133}}</ref> not to overlook the original binary of the first folklorists: {traditional : modern} or {old : new}. Bauman re-iterates this thought pattern in claiming that at the core of all folklore is the dynamic tension between tradition and variation (or creativity).<ref>{{harv|Bauman|2008|pages=31–32}}</ref> Noyes<ref>{{harv|Noyes|2003}}</ref> uses similar vocabulary to define [folk] group as "the ongoing play and tension between, on the one hand, the fluid networks of relationship we constantly both produce and negotiate in everyday life and, on the other, the imagined communities we also create and enact but that serve as forces of stabilizing allegiance."<ref>{{harv|Dorst|2016|page=134}}</ref>
As we move forward in the digital age, the [[binary opposition|binary thinking]] of the 20th century [[Structuralism|structuralists]] remains an important tool in the folklorist's toolbox.{{sfn|Sims|Stephens|2005|pages=184–187}} This does not mean that binary thinking was invented in recent times along with computers; only that we became aware of both the power and the limitations of the "either/or" construction. In folklore studies, the multiple binaries underlying much of the theoretical thinking have been identified – {dynamicism : conservatism}, {anecdote : myth}, {process : structure}, {performance : tradition}, {improvisation : repetition}, {variation : traditionalism}, {repetition : innovation};{{sfn|Dorst|2016|page=133}} not to overlook the original binary of the first folklorists: {traditional : modern} or {old : new}. Bauman re-iterates this thought pattern in claiming that at the core of all folklore is the dynamic tension between tradition and variation (or creativity).{{sfn|Bauman|2008|pages=31–32}} Noyes{{sfn|Noyes|2003}} uses similar vocabulary to define [folk] group as "the ongoing play and tension between, on the one hand, the fluid networks of relationship we constantly both produce and negotiate in everyday life and, on the other, the imagined communities we also create and enact but that serve as forces of stabilizing allegiance."{{sfn|Dorst|2016|page=134}}


This thinking only becomes problematic in light of the theoretical work done on [[binary opposition]], which exposes the values intrinsic to any binary pair. Typically, one of the two opposites assumes a role of dominance over the other. The categorization of binary oppositions is "often value-laden and ethnocentric", imbuing them with illusory order and superficial meaning.<ref>{{harv|Goody|1977|page=36}}</ref>
This thinking only becomes problematic in light of the theoretical work done on [[binary opposition]], which exposes the values intrinsic to any binary pair. Typically, one of the two opposites assumes a role of dominance over the other. The categorization of binary oppositions is "often value-laden and ethnocentric", imbuing them with illusory order and superficial meaning.{{sfn|Goody|1977|page=36}}


===Linear and non-linear concepts of time===
=== Linear and non-linear concepts of time ===
Another baseline of western thought has also been thrown into disarray in the recent past. In western culture, we live in a time of [[progress (history)|progress]], moving forward from one moment to the next. The goal is to become better and better, culminating in perfection. In this model time is linear, with direct causality in the progression. "You reap what you sow", "A stitch in time saves nine", "Alpha and omega", the Christian concept of an [[afterlife]] all exemplify a cultural understanding of time as linear and progressive. In folklore studies, going backwards in time was also a valid avenue of exploration. The goal of the early folklorists of the [[Folkloristics#Aarne–Thompson and the historic-geographic method|historic-geographic school]] was to reconstruct from fragments of folk tales the Urtext of the original mythic (pre-Christian) world view. When and where was an artifact documented? Those were the important questions posed by early folklorists in their collections. Armed with these data points, a grid pattern of [[Spacetime|time-space]] coordinates for artifacts could be plotted.<ref>{{harv|Toelken|1996|pages=271–274}}, {{harv|Dorst|2016|pages=128–129}}</ref>
Another baseline of western thought has also been thrown into disarray in the recent past. In western culture, we live in a time of [[progress (history)|progress]], moving forward from one moment to the next. The goal is to become better and better, culminating in perfection. In this model time is linear, with direct causality in the progression. "You reap what you sow", "A stitch in time saves nine", "Alpha and omega", the Christian concept of an [[afterlife]] all exemplify a cultural understanding of time as linear and progressive. In folklore studies, going backwards in time was also a valid avenue of exploration. The goal of the early folklorists of the [[Folkloristics#Aarne–Thompson and the historic–geographic method|historic-geographic school]] was to reconstruct from fragments of folk tales the Urtext of the original mythic (pre-Christian) world view. When and where was an artifact documented? Those were the important questions posed by early folklorists in their collections. Armed with these data points, a grid pattern of [[Spacetime|time-space]] coordinates for artifacts could be plotted.{{sfn|Toelken|1996|pages=271–274}}{{sfn|Dorst|2016|pages=128–129}}


Awareness has grown that different cultures have different concepts of time (and space). In his study "The American Indian Mind in a Linear World", Donald Fixico describes an alternate concept of time. "Indian thinking" involves "'seeing' things from a perspective emphasizing that circles and cycles are central to world and that all things are related within the Universe." He then suggests that "the concept of time for Indian people has been such a continuum that time becomes less relevant and the rotation of life or seasons of the year are stressed as important."<ref>{{harv|Rouse|2012|page=4}}</ref><ref group=note>This blanket interpretation has been questioned by some as too simplistic in its sweeping application to all Native American tribes. See {{harv|Rouse|2012|page=14ff.}}</ref> In a more specific example, the folklorist [[Barre Toelken]] describes the Navajo as living in circular times, which is echoed and re-enforced in their sense of space, the traditional circular or multi-sided [[hogan]].<ref>{{harv|Toelken|1996|pages=275ff}}</ref> Lacking the European mechanistic devices of marking time (clocks, watches, calendars), they depended on the cycles of nature: sunrise to sunset, winter to summer. Their stories and histories are not marked by decades and centuries, but remain close in, as they circle around the constant rhythms of the natural world.
Awareness has grown that different cultures have different concepts of time (and space). In his study "The American Indian Mind in a Linear World", Donald Fixico describes an alternate concept of time. "Indian thinking" involves "'seeing' things from a perspective emphasizing that circles and cycles are central to world and that all things are related within the Universe." He then suggests that "the concept of time for Indian people has been such a continuum that time becomes less relevant and the rotation of life or seasons of the year are stressed as important."{{sfn|Rouse|2012|page=4}}{{refn|group=note|This blanket interpretation has been questioned by some as too simplistic in its sweeping application to all Native American tribes. See {{harvp|Rouse|2012|page=14ff.}}}} In a more specific example, the folklorist [[Barre Toelken]] describes the Navajo as living in circular times, which is echoed and re-enforced in their sense of space, the traditional circular or multi-sided [[hogan]].{{sfn|Toelken|1996|pages=275ff}} Lacking the European mechanistic devices of marking time (clocks, watches, calendars), they depended on the cycles of nature: sunrise to sunset, winter to summer. Their stories and histories are not marked by decades and centuries, but remain close in, as they circle around the constant rhythms of the natural world.


Within the last decades our time scale has expanded from unimaginably small ([[nanoseconds]]) to unimaginably large ([[deep time]]). In comparison, our working concept of time as {past : present : future} looks almost quaint. How do we map "tradition" into this multiplicity of time scales? Folklore studies has already acknowledged this in the study of traditions which are either done in an annual cycle of circular time (ex. Christmas, May Day), or in a life cycle of linear time (ex. baptisms, weddings, funerals). This needs to be expanded to other traditions of oral lore. For folk narrative is NOT a linear chain of isolated tellings, going from one single performance on our time-space grid to the next single performance. Instead it fits better into a non-linear system, where one performer varies the story from one telling to the next, and the performer's understudy starts to tell the story, also varying each performance in response to multiple factors.<ref>{{harv|Dorst|2016|pages=131–132}}</ref>
Within the last decades our time scale has expanded from unimaginably small ([[nanoseconds]]) to unimaginably large ([[deep time]]). In comparison, our working concept of time as {past : present : future} looks almost quaint. How do we map "tradition" into this multiplicity of time scales? Folklore studies has already acknowledged this in the study of traditions which are either done in an annual cycle of circular time (ex. Christmas, May Day), or in a life cycle of linear time (ex. baptisms, weddings, funerals). This needs to be expanded to other traditions of oral lore. For folk narrative is NOT a linear chain of isolated tellings, going from one single performance on our time-space grid to the next single performance. Instead it fits better into a non-linear system, where one performer varies the story from one telling to the next, and the performer's understudy starts to tell the story, also varying each performance in response to multiple factors.{{sfn|Dorst|2016|pages=131–132}}


===Cybernetics===
=== Cybernetics ===
[[Cybernetics]] was first developed in the 20th century; it investigates the functions and processes of systems. The goal in cybernetics is to identify and understand a system's closed signaling loop, in which an action by the system generates a change in the environment, which in turn triggers feedback to the system and initiates a new action. The field has expanded from a focus on mechanistic and biological systems to an expanded recognition that these theoretical constructs can also be applied to many cultural and societal systems, including folklore.<ref>{{harv|Dorst|2016}}</ref> Once divorced from a model of tradition that works solely on a linear time scale (i.e. moving from one folklore performance to the next), we begin to ask different questions about how these folklore artifacts maintain themselves over generations and centuries.
[[Cybernetics]] was first developed in the 20th century; it investigates the functions and processes of systems. The goal in cybernetics is to identify and understand a system's closed signaling loop, in which an action by the system generates a change in the environment, which in turn triggers feedback to the system and initiates a new action. The field has expanded from a focus on mechanistic and biological systems to an expanded recognition that these theoretical constructs can also be applied to many cultural and societal systems, including folklore.{{sfn|Dorst|2016}} Once divorced from a model of tradition that works solely on a linear time scale (i.e. moving from one folklore performance to the next), we begin to ask different questions about how these folklore artifacts maintain themselves over generations and centuries.


The oral tradition of [[jokes]] as an example is found across all cultures, and is documented as early as 1600 B.C.<ref group=note>The earliest recorded joke is on an Egyptian papyrus dated at 1600 B.C. See [[:Joke#Printed jokes and the solitary laugh]].</ref> Whereas the subject matter varies widely to reflect its cultural context, the form of the joke remains remarkably consistent. According to the theories of cybernetics and its secondary field of [[autopoiesis]], this can be attributed to a closed loop auto-correction built into the system maintenance of oral folklore. Auto-correction in oral folklore was first articulated by the folklorist [[Walter Anderson (folklorist)|Walter Anderson]] in his monograph on the [[King John and the Bishop|King and the Abbot]] published 1923.<ref>{{harv|Anderson|1923}}</ref> To explain the stability of the narrative, Anderson posited a “double redundancy”, in which the performer has heard the story from multiple other performers, and has himself performed it multiple times. This provides a feedback loop between repetitions at both levels to retain the essential elements of the tale, while at the same time allowing for the incorporation of new elements.<ref>{{harv|Dorst|2016|page=132}}</ref>
The oral tradition of [[jokes]] as an example is found across all cultures, and is documented as early as 1600 B.C.{{refn|group=note|The earliest recorded joke is on an Egyptian papyrus dated at 1600 B.C. See [[:Joke#History in print]].}} Whereas the subject matter varies widely to reflect its cultural context, the form of the joke remains remarkably consistent. According to the theories of cybernetics and its secondary field of [[autopoiesis]], this can be attributed to a closed loop auto-correction built into the system maintenance of oral folklore. Auto-correction in oral folklore was first articulated by the folklorist [[Walter Anderson (folklorist)|Walter Anderson]] in his monograph on the [[King John and the Bishop|King and the Abbot]] published 1923.{{sfn|Anderson|1923}} To explain the stability of the narrative, Anderson posited a “double redundancy”, in which the performer has heard the story from multiple other performers, and has himself performed it multiple times. This provides a feedback loop between repetitions at both levels to retain the essential elements of the tale, while at the same time allowing for the incorporation of new elements.{{sfn|Dorst|2016|page=132}}


Another characteristic of cybernetics and autopoiesis is self-generation within a system. Once again looking to jokes, we find new jokes generated in response to events on a continuing basis. The folklorist Bill Ellis accessed internet humor message boards to observe in real time the creation of [[topical joke]]s following the 9/11 terrorist attack in the United States. "Previous folklore research has been limited to collecting and documenting successful jokes, and only after they had emerged and come to folklorists' attention. Now, an Internet-enhanced collection creates a time machine, as it were, where we can observe what happens in the period before the risible moment, when attempts at humour are unsuccessful.", that is before they have successfully mapped into the traditional joke format.<ref>{{harv|Ellis|2002|page=2}}</ref>
Another characteristic of cybernetics and autopoiesis is self-generation within a system. Once again looking to jokes, we find new jokes generated in response to events on a continuing basis. The folklorist Bill Ellis accessed internet humor message boards to observe in real time the creation of [[topical joke]]s following the 9/11 terrorist attack in the United States. "Previous folklore research has been limited to collecting and documenting successful jokes, and only after they had emerged and come to folklorists' attention. Now, an Internet-enhanced collection creates a time machine, as it were, where we can observe what happens in the period before the risible moment, when attempts at humour are unsuccessful.", that is before they have successfully mapped into the traditional joke format.{{sfn|Ellis|2002|page=2}}


[[Second-order cybernetics]] states that the system observer affects the systemic interplay; this interplay has long been recognized as problematic by folklorists. The act of observing and noting any folklore performance raises without exception the performance from an unconscious habitual acting within a group, to and for themselves, to a performance for an outsider. "Naturally the researcher's presence changes things, in the way that any new entrant to a social setting changes things. When people of different backgrounds, agendas, and resources interact, there are social risks, and where representation and publication are taking place, these risks are exacerbated..."<ref>{{Cite web | url=http://www.afsnet.org/default.asp?page=HumanSubjects | title=AFS Position Statement on Research with Human Subjects - American Folklore Society}}</ref><ref group=note>For a further discussion of this, see also {{harv|Schmidt-Lauber|2012|page=362ff.}}</ref>
[[Second-order cybernetics]] states that the system observer affects the systemic interplay; this interplay has long been recognized as problematic by folklorists. The act of observing and noting any folklore performance raises without exception the performance from an unconscious habitual acting within a group, to and for themselves, to a performance for an outsider. "Naturally the researcher's presence changes things, in the way that any new entrant to a social setting changes things. When people of different backgrounds, agendas, and resources interact, there are social risks, and where representation and publication are taking place, these risks are exacerbated..."<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.afsnet.org/default.asp?page=HumanSubjects |title=AFS Position Statement on Research with Human Subjects |website=[[American Folklore Society]]|date=8 February 2021 }}</ref>{{refn|group=note|For a further discussion of this, see also {{harvp|Schmidt-Lauber|2012|page=362ff.}}}}


==Scholarly organizations and journals==
== Scholarly organizations and journals ==
{{div col|colwidth=27em}}
{{div col|colwidth=27em}}
*[[American Folklore Society]]
* [[American Folklore Society]]
*[[International Society for Ethnology and Folklore]]
* [[International Society for Ethnology and Folklore]]
*[[Journal of American Folklore]]
* [[Journal of American Folklore]]
*[[Journal of Folklore Research]]
* [[Journal of Folklore Research]]
*[[The Society for Folk Life Studies]]
* [[The Society for Folk Life Studies]]
*[[The Folklore Society]]
* [[The Folklore Society]]
*[[Western Folklore]]
* [[Western Folklore]]
*[[Cultural Analysis]]
* [[Cultural Analysis]]
{{div col end}}
{{div col end}}


==Notable folklorists==
== Notable folklorists ==
For a list of notable folklorists, go to [[:Category:Folklorists|the category list]].
For a list of notable folklorists, go to [[:Category:Folklorists|the category list]].


==Associated theories and methods==
== Associated theories and methods ==
{{div col|colwidth=27em}}
{{div col|colwidth=27em}}
* [[Cultural Heritage]]
* [[Cultural Heritage]]
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* [[Ethnology]]
* [[Ethnology]]
* [[Ethnopoetics]], a method of recording text versions of oral poetry or narrative performances (i.e., verbal lore)
* [[Ethnopoetics]], a method of recording text versions of oral poetry or narrative performances (i.e., verbal lore)
* [[Fine Art]]
* [[Functionalism (philosophy of mind)]]
* [[Functionalism (philosophy of mind)]]
* [[Mimesis]]
* [[Mimesis]]
Line 173: Line 172:
{{div col end}}
{{div col end}}


==See also==
== See also ==

* [[Memetics]]
* [[Memetics]]
*[[Ethnomusicology]]
* [[Ethnomusicology]]
*[[Ethnography]]
* [[Ethnography]]


==Notes==
== Notes ==
{{Reflist|group=note|35em}}
{{Reflist|group=note|35em}}


==Citations==
== Citations ==
{{Reflist|colwidth=20em}}
{{Reflist|colwidth=20em}}


==References==
== References ==
{{refbegin|35em}}
{{refbegin|35em}}

* {{cite journal|last1=Anderson|first1=Walter|title= Kaiser und Abt. Die Geschichte eines Schwanks|date=1923|journal= FF Communications|volume=42}}
* {{cite book
* {{cite book|last1=Attardo|first1= Salvatore|editor1-last=Raskin|editor1-first=Victor|title=Primer of Humor Research: Humor Research 8|url=https://archive.org/details/primerhumorresea00rask|url-access=limited|date=2008|publisher=Mouton de Gruyter|location=Berlin, New York|pages=[https://archive.org/details/primerhumorresea00rask/page/n107 101]–156|chapter= A primer for the Linguistics of Humor}}
|last1 = Anderson
* {{cite journal|last1=Bauman|first1=Richard|title=Differential Identity and the Social Base of Folklore|date=1971|journal= The Journal of American Folklore|volume=84|issue=331|pages=31–41| jstor=539731|doi=10.2307/539731}}
|first1 = Walter
* {{cite journal|last1=Bauman|first1=Richard|title=The Philology of the Vernacular|date=2008|journal= Journal of Folklore Research |volume=45|issue=1|pages=29–36|jstor=40206961|doi=10.2979/JFR.2008.45.1.29|s2cid=144402948}}
|author-link1 = Walter Anderson (folklorist)
* {{cite book|editor1-last=Bauman|editor1-first=Richard|editor2-last=Paredes|editor2-first=Americo|title=Toward New Perspectives in Folklore|date=1972|publisher=Trickster Press|location=Bloomington, IN|page=xv}}
|editor-last1 = Anderson
* {{cite journal|last1=Bauman|first1=Richard|title=Verbal Art as Performance |journal=American Anthropologist |series=New Series|date=1975|volume=77|issue=2|pages=290–311|doi=10.1525/aa.1975.77.2.02a00030|jstor=674535|doi-access=free}}
|editor-first1 = Walter
* {{cite journal|last1=Ben-Amos|first1=Dan|title= On the Final [s] in 'Folkloristics'|journal=The Journal of American Folklore|date=1985|volume=98|issue=389|pages=334–336|jstor=539940|doi=10.2307/539940}}
|editor-last2 = Bolte
* {{cite journal|last1=Bendix|first1= Regina|title=Of Names, Professional Identities, and Disciplinary Futures|journal=The Journal of American Folklore |date=1998|volume=111|issue=441|pages=235–246|jstor=541309|doi=10.2307/541309}}
|editor-first2 = Johannes
* {{cite book|last1=Bendix|first1= Regina|title= In Search of Authenticity: The Formation of Folklore Studies|date=1997|publisher= University of Wisconsin Press|location=Madison}}
|editor-link2 = Johannes Bolte
* {{cite book|editor1-last=Blank|editor1-first=Trevor J.|title=Folklore and the Internet|date=2009|publisher=Utah State University Press|location= Logan, UT }}
|editor-last3 = Krohn
* {{cite book|last1=Bronner|first1=Simon J.|title= American Folklore Studies: An Intellectual History|date=1986|publisher=University Press of Kansas|location=Lawrence, KS}}
|editor-first3 = Kaarle
* {{cite book|last1=Bronner|first1=Simon J.|title= Following Tradition: Folklore in the Discourse of American Culture|year=1998|publisher=Utah State University Press|location=Logan, UT|isbn= 978-0-87421-239-6}}
|editor-link3 = Kaarle Krohn
* {{cite book|editor1-last=Bronner|editor1-first=Simon J.|title=The Meaning of folklore: the Analytical Essays of Alan Dundes|year=2007|publisher=Utah State University Press|location=Logan, UT}}
|editor-last4 = Liestøl
* {{cite book|last1=Brunvand|first1=Jan Harald|title=The Study of American Folklore|url=https://archive.org/details/studyofamericanf00brun|url-access=registration|date=1968|publisher=W.W. Norton|location=New York, London|isbn=9780393098037 }}
|editor-first4 = Knut
* {{cite book|editor1-last=Brunvand|editor1-first=Jan Harald|title=American Folklore, an Encyclopedia|date=1996|publisher=Garland Publishing|location=New York, London}}
|editor-link4 = Knut Liestøl
* {{cite book|last1=Dow|first1=James|last2=Lixfeld|first2=Hannjost|title=The Nazification of an Academic Discipline: Folklore in the Third Reich|
|editor-last5 = von Sydow
date=1994|isbn=978-0253318213}}
|editor-first5 = C. W.
* {{cite journal|last1=Burns|first1=Thomas A.|title= Folkloristics: A Conception of Theory|journal=Western Folklore|date=1977|volume=36|issue=2|pages=109–134|jstor=1498964 |doi=10.2307/1498964}}
|editor-link5 = Carl Wilhelm von Sydow
* {{cite journal|last1= Del-Rio-Roberts|first1=Maribel|title=A Guide to Conducting Ethnographic Research: A Review of Ethnography: Step-by-Step (3rd ed.) by David M. Fetterman |date=2010|journal=The Qualitative Report|volume=15|issue=3|pages=737–749|url=http://www.nova.edu/ssss/QR/QR15-3/fetterman.pdf}}
|name-list-style = amp
* {{cite book|last1=Deloria|first1= Vine|date=1994|title=God Is Red: A Native View of Religion |publisher=Fulcrum Publishing |location=Golden, CO }}
|year = 1923
* {{cite book|last1=Dorson|first1=Richard|title= Folklore and Fakelore: Essays Toward a Discipline of Folk Studies|date=1976|publisher=Harvard University Press|location=Cambridge, London|isbn= 9780674330207}}
|title = Kaiser und Abt: die Geschichte eines Schwanks
* {{cite book|editor1-last=Dorson|editor1-first=Richard M.|title= Folklore and Folklife: An Introduction|url=https://archive.org/details/folklorefolklife00dors|url-access=registration|year=1972|publisher=University of Chicago Press|location=Chicago, IL|isbn=9780226158709 }}
|trans-title=Emperor and Abbot. The story of a farce
* {{cite journal|last1=Dorst|first1=John|title=Folklore's Cybernetic Imaginary, or, Unpacking the Obvious|journal=Journal of American Folklore |date=2016 |volume=129 |issue=512|pages=127–145 |jstor=10.5406/jamerfolk.129.512.0127 |doi=10.5406/jamerfolk.129.512.0127|s2cid=148523716}}
|series = Folklore Fellows’ Communications
* {{cite journal|last1=Dorst|first1=John|title=Tags and Burners, Cycles and Networks: Folklore in the Telectronic Age|journal=Journal of Folklore Research|date=1990|volume=27|issue=3|pages=61–108}}
|language = de
* {{cite journal|last1=Dundes|first1=Alan|title=The Devolutionary Premise in Folklore Theory|journal=Journal of the Folklore Institute|date=1969|volume=6|issue=1|pages=5–19|doi=10.2307/3814118|jstor=3814118}}
|volume = 42
* {{cite book|last1=Dundes|first1=Alan|title=Essays in Folkloristics|series=Kirpa Dai series in folklore and anthropology|date=1978a|place=Meerut|publisher=Folklore Institute|oclc=5089016}}
|publication-place = Helsinki
|publisher = [[Finnish Academy of Science and Letters]]
|hdl = 10062/89331
|isbn = 978-9916-21-798-6
}}
* {{cite book |last1=Attardo |first1=Salvatore |editor1-last=Raskin |editor1-first=Victor |title=Primer of Humor Research: Humor Research 8 |url=https://archive.org/details/primerhumorresea00rask |url-access=limited |date=2008 |publisher=[[Mouton de Gruyter]] |location=Berlin, New York |pages=[https://archive.org/details/primerhumorresea00rask/page/n107 101]–156 |chapter=A primer for the Linguistics of Humor}}
* {{cite journal |last1=Bauman |first1=Richard |title=Differential Identity and the Social Base of Folklore |date=1971 |journal=[[The Journal of American Folklore]] |volume=84 |issue=331 |pages=31–41 |jstor=539731 |doi=10.2307/539731}}
* {{cite journal |last1=Bauman |first1=Richard |title=The Philology of the Vernacular |date=2008 |journal=[[Journal of Folklore Research]] |volume=45 |issue=1 |pages=29–36 |jstor=40206961 |doi=10.2979/JFR.2008.45.1.29 |s2cid=144402948}}
* {{cite book |editor1-last=Bauman |editor1-first=Richard |editor2-last=Paredes |editor2-first=Americo |title=Toward New Perspectives in Folklore |date=1972 |publisher=Trickster Press |location=Bloomington, IN |page=xv}}
* {{cite journal |last1=Bauman |first1=Richard |title=Verbal Art as Performance |journal=American Anthropologist |series=New Series |date=1975 |volume=77 |issue=2 |pages=290–311 |doi=10.1525/aa.1975.77.2.02a00030 |jstor=674535 |doi-access=free}}
* {{cite journal |last1=Ben-Amos |first1=Dan |title= On the Final [s] in 'Folkloristics' |journal=The Journal of American Folklore |date=1985 |volume=98 |issue=389 |pages=334–336 |jstor=539940 |doi=10.2307/539940}}
* {{cite journal |last1=Bendix |first1=Regina |title=Of Names, Professional Identities, and Disciplinary Futures |journal=The Journal of American Folklore |date=1998 |volume=111 |issue=441 |pages=235–246 |jstor=541309 |doi=10.2307/541309}}
* {{cite book |last1=Bendix |first1=Regina |title=In Search of Authenticity: The Formation of Folklore Studies |date=1997 |publisher=[[University of Wisconsin Press]] |location=Madison}}
* {{cite book |editor1-last=Blank |editor1-first=Trevor J. |title=Folklore and the Internet |date=2009 |publisher=[[Utah State University Press]] |location=Logan, UT}}
* {{cite book |last1=Bronner |first1=Simon J. |title=American Folklore Studies: An Intellectual History |date=1986 |publisher=[[University Press of Kansas]] |location=Lawrence, KS}}
* {{cite book |last1=Bronner |first1=Simon J. |title=Following Tradition: Folklore in the Discourse of American Culture |year=1998 |publisher=[[Utah State University Press]] |location=Logan, UT |isbn=978-0-87421-239-6}}
* {{cite book |editor1-last=Bronner |editor1-first=Simon J. |title=The Meaning of folklore: the Analytical Essays of Alan Dundes |year=2007 |publisher=[[Utah State University Press]] |location=Logan, UT}}
* {{cite book |last1=Brunvand |first1=Jan Harald |title=The Study of American Folklore |url=https://archive.org/details/studyofamericanf00brun |url-access=registration |date=1968 |publisher=[[W. W. Norton & Company]]
|location=New York, London |isbn=9780393098037}}
* {{cite book |editor1-last=Brunvand |editor1-first=Jan Harald |title=American Folklore, an Encyclopedia |date=1996 |publisher=Garland Publishing |location=New York, London}}
* {{cite book |last1=Dow |first1=James |last2=Lixfeld |first2=Hannjost |title=The Nazification of an Academic Discipline: Folklore in the Third Reich |date=1994 |isbn=978-0253318213}}
* {{cite journal |last1=Burns |first1=Thomas A. |title=Folkloristics: A Conception of Theory |journal=Western Folklore |date=1977 |volume=36 |issue=2 |pages=109–134 |jstor=1498964 |doi=10.2307/1498964}}
* {{cite journal |last1=Del-Rio-Roberts |first1=Maribel |title=A Guide to Conducting Ethnographic Research: A Review of Ethnography: Step-by-Step (3rd ed.) by David M. Fetterman |date=2010 |journal=The Qualitative Report |volume=15 |issue=3 |pages=737–749 |url=http://www.nova.edu/ssss/QR/QR15-3/fetterman.pdf}}
* {{cite book |last1=Deloria |first1=Vine |date=1994 |title=God Is Red: A Native View of Religion |publisher=Fulcrum Publishing |location=Golden, CO}}
* {{cite book |last1=Dorson |first1=Richard |title=Folklore and Fakelore: Essays Toward a Discipline of Folk Studies |date=1976 |publisher=[[Harvard University Press]] |location=Cambridge, London |isbn=9780674330207}}
* {{cite book |editor1-last=Dorson |editor1-first=Richard M. |title=Folklore and Folklife: An Introduction |url=https://archive.org/details/folklorefolklife00dors |url-access=registration |year=1972 |publisher=[[University of Chicago Press]] |location=Chicago, IL |isbn=9780226158709}}
* {{cite journal |last1=Dorst |first1=John |title=Folklore's Cybernetic Imaginary, or, Unpacking the Obvious |journal=[[Journal of American Folklore]] |date=2016 |volume=129 |issue=512 |pages=127–145 |jstor=10.5406/jamerfolk.129.512.0127 |doi=10.5406/jamerfolk.129.512.0127 |s2cid=148523716}}
* {{cite journal |last1=Dorst |first1=John |title=Tags and Burners, Cycles and Networks: Folklore in the Telectronic Age |journal=[[Journal of Folklore Research]] |date=1990 |volume=27 |issue=3 |pages=61–108}}
* {{cite journal |last1=Dundes |first1=Alan |title=The Devolutionary Premise in Folklore Theory |journal=Journal of the Folklore Institute |date=1969 |volume=6 |issue=1 |pages=5–19 |doi=10.2307/3814118 |jstor=3814118}}
* {{cite book |last1=Dundes |first1=Alan |title=Essays in Folkloristics |series=Kirpa Dai series in folklore and anthropology |date=1978a |place=Meerut |publisher=Folklore Institute |oclc=5089016}}
* {{cite journal|last1=Dundes|first1=Alan|date=1971|title=Folk Ideas as Units of Worldview|journal=The Journal of American Folklore|volume=84|issue=331|pages=93–103 |doi=10.2307/539737|jstor=539737}}
* {{cite journal|last1=Dundes|first1=Alan|date=1971|title=Folk Ideas as Units of Worldview|journal=The Journal of American Folklore|volume=84|issue=331|pages=93–103 |doi=10.2307/539737|jstor=539737}}
* {{cite journal|last1=Dundes|first1=Alan|title=Folkloristics in the Twenty-First Century (AFS Invited Presidential Plenary Address, 2004)|journal=Journal of American Folklore|date=2005|volume=118|issue=470 |pages=385–408 |jstor=4137664|doi=10.1353/jaf.2005.0044|s2cid=161269637}}
* {{cite journal|last1=Dundes|first1=Alan|title=Folkloristics in the Twenty-First Century (AFS Invited Presidential Plenary Address, 2004)|journal=Journal of American Folklore|date=2005|volume=118|issue=470 |pages=385–408 |jstor=4137664|doi=10.1353/jaf.2005.0044|s2cid=161269637}}
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* {{cite book|last1=Fixico|first1= Donald L. |date=2003|title= The American Indian Mind in a Linear World|publisher=Routledge|location=New York}}
* {{cite book|last1=Fixico|first1= Donald L. |date=2003|title= The American Indian Mind in a Linear World|publisher=Routledge|location=New York}}
* {{cite book|last1=Frank|first1=Russel|editor1-last=Blank|editor1-first=Trevor J.|title=Folklore and the Internet|url=https://archive.org/details/folkloreinternet00blan_362|url-access=limited|date=2009|pages=[https://archive.org/details/folkloreinternet00blan_362/page/n108 98]–122|publisher=Utah State University Press|location= Logan, UT|chapter=The Forward as Folklore: Studying E-Mailed Humor}}
* {{cite book|last1=Frank|first1=Russel|editor1-last=Blank|editor1-first=Trevor J.|title=Folklore and the Internet|url=https://archive.org/details/folkloreinternet00blan_362|url-access=limited|date=2009|pages=[https://archive.org/details/folkloreinternet00blan_362/page/n108 98]–122|publisher=Utah State University Press|location= Logan, UT|chapter=The Forward as Folklore: Studying E-Mailed Humor}}
* {{cite journal|last1=Genzuk|first1=Michael|title=A Synthesis of Ethnographic Research|publisher=Center for Multilingual, Multicultural Research. University of Southern California|date=2003|url=http://www-bcf.usc.edu/~genzuk/Ethnographic_Research.html|access-date=2011-12-10|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181023021956/http://www-bcf.usc.edu/~genzuk/Ethnographic_Research.html|archive-date=2018-10-23|url-status=dead}}
* {{cite web|last1=Genzuk|first1=Michael|title=A Synthesis of Ethnographic Research|publisher=Center for Multilingual, Multicultural Research. University of Southern California|date=2003|url=http://www-bcf.usc.edu/~genzuk/Ethnographic_Research.html|access-date=2011-12-10|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181023021956/http://www-bcf.usc.edu/~genzuk/Ethnographic_Research.html|archive-date=2018-10-23|url-status=dead}}
* {{cite book|last1=Georges|first1=Robert A.| last2=Jones|first2=Michael Owen|title= Folkloristics : an Introduction|date=1995|publisher= Indiana University Press |location= Bloomington and Indianapolis}}
* {{cite book|last1=Georges|first1=Robert A.| last2=Jones|first2=Michael Owen|title= Folkloristics : an Introduction|date=1995|publisher= Indiana University Press |location= Bloomington and Indianapolis}}
* {{cite journal|last1=Glassie|first1=Henry|date=1983|title=The Moral Lore of Folklore|journal=Folklore Forum|volume=16|issue=2|pages=123–151|url= https://scholarworks.iu.edu/dspace/bitstream/handle/2022/1873/16(2)%20123-151.pdf?sequence=1 }}
* {{cite journal|last1=Glassie|first1=Henry|date=1983|title=The Moral Lore of Folklore|journal=Folklore Forum|volume=16|issue=2|pages=123–151|url= https://scholarworks.iu.edu/dspace/bitstream/handle/2022/1873/16(2)%20123-151.pdf?sequence=1 }}
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* {{cite book|last1=Mason|first1=Bruce Lionel|title=Oral Traditions|date=1998|volume=13|issue=2 |publisher=Center for Studies in Oral Tradition|location=Columbia, MO|chapter=E-Texts: The Orality and Literacy Issue Revisited |chapter-url=http://journal.oraltradition.org/issues/13ii/mason}}
* {{cite book|last1=Mason|first1=Bruce Lionel|title=Oral Traditions|date=1998|volume=13|issue=2 |publisher=Center for Studies in Oral Tradition|location=Columbia, MO|chapter=E-Texts: The Orality and Literacy Issue Revisited |chapter-url=http://journal.oraltradition.org/issues/13ii/mason}}
* {{cite book|last1=Mitscherlich|first1= Alexander|last2= Mitscherlich|first2=Margarete|title= Die Unfaehigkeit zu trauern. Grundlagen kollektiven Verhaltens |date=1987|location= Muenchen, Zurich}}
* {{cite book|last1=Mitscherlich|first1= Alexander|last2= Mitscherlich|first2=Margarete|title= Die Unfaehigkeit zu trauern. Grundlagen kollektiven Verhaltens |date=1987|location= Muenchen, Zurich}}
* {{cite book |last=Morgan|first=Winifred|title=An American Icon: Brother Jonathan and American Identity|publisher=University of Delaware Press|location=Newark, New Jersey|year=1988|isbn=0-87413-307-6}}
* {{cite book|last1=Noyes|first1=Dorothy|date=2003|chapter=Group|editor1-last=Feintuch|editor1-first=Burt|title=Eight Words for the Study of Expressive Culture|pages=7–41|publisher=University of Illinois Press|jstor=10.5406/j.ctt2ttc8f.5|isbn=9780252071096}}
* {{cite book|last1=Noyes|first1=Dorothy|date=2003|chapter=Group|editor1-last=Feintuch|editor1-first=Burt|title=Eight Words for the Study of Expressive Culture|pages=7–41|publisher=University of Illinois Press|jstor=10.5406/j.ctt2ttc8f.5|isbn=9780252071096}}
*{{cite book|editor1-last=Raskin|editor1-first=Victor|title=Primer of Humor Research: Humor Research 8|date=2008|publisher=Mouton de Gruyter|location=Berlin, New York}}
*{{cite book|editor1-last=Raskin|editor1-first=Victor|title=Primer of Humor Research: Humor Research 8|date=2008|publisher=Mouton de Gruyter|location=Berlin, New York}}
* {{cite journal|last1=Rouse|first1=Anderson|title=Re-examining American Indian Time Consciousness|date=2012|url=https://www.academia.edu/7329888}}
* {{cite journal|last1=Rouse|first1=Anderson|title=Re-examining American Indian Time Consciousness|date=2012|url=https://www.academia.edu/7329888}}
*{{cite book|last1=Sacks|first1=Harvey|editor1-last=Bauman|editor1-first=Richard|editor2-last=Sherzer|editor2-first=Joel|title=Explorations in the Ethnography of Speaking|date=1974|publisher=Cambridge University Press|location=Cambridge, UK|chapter=An Analysis of the Course of a Joke's telling in Conversation|pages=337–353}}
* {{cite book |last1=Sacks |first1=Harvey |editor1-last=Bauman |editor1-first=Richard |editor2-last=Sherzer |editor2-first=Joel |title=Explorations in the Ethnography of Speaking |date=1974 |publisher=[[Cambridge University Press]] |location=Cambridge, UK |chapter=An Analysis of the Course of a Joke's telling in Conversation |pages=337–353}}
* {{cite book|last1=Schmidt-Lauber|first1=Brigitta|chapter=Seeing, Hearing, Feeling, Writing: Approaches and Methods in Ethnographic Research from the Perspective of Ethnological Analyses of the Present|date=2012 |title=A Companion to Folklore Studies |pages=559–578|doi=10.1002/9781118379936.ch29|editor1-last=Bendix |editor1-first=Regina|editor2-last=Hasan-Rokem|editor2-first=Galit}}
* {{cite book |last1=Sawin |first1=Patricia |last2=Zumwalt |first2=Rosemary|author2-link=Rosemary Lévy Zumwalt |title=Folklore in the United States and Canada: An Institutional History |date=2020 |publisher=[[Indiana University Press]]}}
* {{cite book |last1=Schmidt-Lauber |first1=Brigitta |chapter=Seeing, Hearing, Feeling, Writing: Approaches and Methods in Ethnographic Research from the Perspective of Ethnological Analyses of the Present |date=2012 |title=A Companion to Folklore Studies |pages=559–578 |doi=10.1002/9781118379936.ch29 |editor1-last=Bendix |editor1-first=Regina |editor2-last=Hasan-Rokem |editor2-first=Galit}}
* {{cite book|last1=Sims|first1=Martha|last2=Stephens|first2=Martine|title=Living Folklore: Introduction to the Study of People and their Traditions|date=2005|publisher=Utah State University Press|location=Logan, UT}}
* {{cite book |last1=Sims |first1=Martha |last2=Stephens|first2=Martine |title=Living Folklore: Introduction to the Study of People and their Traditions |date=2005 |publisher=[[Utah State University Press]] |location=Logan, UT}}
* {{cite journal|last1=Šmidchens|first1=Guntis|title=Folklorism Revisited|date=1999|journal=Journal of American Folklore Research|volume=36|issue=1|pages=51–70| jstor=3814813}}
* {{cite journal |last1=Šmidchens |first1=Guntis |title=Folklorism Revisited |date=1999 |journal=[[Journal of American Folklore Research]] |volume=36 |issue=1 |pages=51–70 |jstor=3814813}}
* {{cite book|last1=Stahl|first1=Sandra D.|date=1989|title=Literary Folkloristics and the Personal Narrative|url=https://archive.org/details/literaryfolklori00stah|url-access=registration|location=Bloomington|publisher=Indiana University Press|isbn=978-0915305483}}
* {{cite book |last1=Stahl |first1=Sandra D. |date=1989 |title=Literary Folkloristics and the Personal Narrative |url=https://archive.org/details/literaryfolklori00stah |url-access=registration |location=Bloomington |publisher=[[Indiana University Press]] |isbn=978-0915305483}}
* {{cite book|author-link1=Barre Toelken|last1=Toelken|first1=Barre|title= The Dynamics of Folklore |date=1996|publisher=Utah State University Press|location= Logan, UT}}
* {{cite book|author-link1=Barre Toelken|last1=Toelken|first1=Barre|title= The Dynamics of Folklore |date=1996|publisher=Utah State University Press|location= Logan, UT}}
* {{Cite book |last=Watson |first=John F. |title=Annals of Philadelphia and Pennsylvania, in the olden time |place=Philadelphia |publisher=The author |date=1850–1860 |url=https://archive.org/details/annalsofphiladel01wats}}
* {{Cite book |last=Watson |first=John F. |title=Annals of Philadelphia and Pennsylvania, in the olden time |place=Philadelphia |publisher=The author |date=1850–1860 |url=https://archive.org/details/annalsofphiladel01wats}}
* {{cite journal|last1=Widdowson|first1=J. D. A.|date=2016|title=England, National Folklore Survey |journal=Folklore|volume=127|issue=3|pages=257–269|doi=10.1080/0015587X.2016.1198178|s2cid=151463190}}
* {{cite journal |last1=Widdowson |first1=J. D. A. |date=2016 |title=England, National Folklore Survey |journal=Folklore |volume=127 |issue=3 |pages=257–269 |doi=10.1080/0015587X.2016.1198178 |s2cid=151463190}}
* {{cite book|last1=Wilson|first1=William|date=2006|title=The Marrow of Human Experience: Essays on Folklore|editor1-last=Rudy|editor1-first=Jill Terry| editor2-last=Call|editor2-first=Diane |publisher=University Press of Colorado|jstor=j.ctt4cgkmk |chapter=Essays on Folklore by William A. Wilson |doi=10.2307/j.ctt4cgkmk |isbn=9780874216530}}
* {{cite book|last1=Wilson|first1=William|date=2006|title=The Marrow of Human Experience: Essays on Folklore|editor1-last=Rudy|editor1-first=Jill Terry| editor2-last=Call|editor2-first=Diane |publisher=University Press of Colorado|jstor=j.ctt4cgkmk |chapter=Essays on Folklore by William A. Wilson |doi=10.2307/j.ctt4cgkmk |isbn=9780874216530}}
* {{cite journal|last1=Wolf-Knuts |first1= Ulrika|title= On the history of comparison in folklore studies |journal=Folklore Fellows' Summer School|date=1999 |url=http://www.hanko.uio.no/planses/Ulrika.html}}
* {{cite journal|last1=Wolf-Knuts |first1= Ulrika|title= On the history of comparison in folklore studies |journal=Folklore Fellows' Summer School|date=1999 |url=http://www.hanko.uio.no/planses/Ulrika.html}}
* {{cite book|last1=Zumwalt|first1=Rosemary Levy|last2=Dundes|first2=Alan|title=American Folklore Scholarship: A Dialogue of Dissent|date=1988|publisher=Indiana University Press}}
* {{cite book|last1=Zumwalt|first1=Rosemary Levy|last2=Dundes|first2=Alan|title=American Folklore Scholarship: A Dialogue of Dissent|date=1988|publisher=Indiana University Press}}

{{refend}}
{{refend}}


==External links==
==External links==
{{Commonscat|Folklore studies}}
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20181023021956/http://www-bcf.usc.edu/~genzuk/Ethnographic_Research.html A Synthesis of Ethnographic Research]
* [http://www.nova.edu/ssss/QR/QR15-3/fetterman.pdf A Guide to Conducting Ethnographic Research]{{dead link}}
*[http://www.nova.edu/ssss/QR/QR15-3/fetterman.pdf A Guide to Conducting Ethnographic Research] (PDF). {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160508231840/http://www.nova.edu/ssss/QR/QR15-3/fetterman.pdf |date=2016-05-08 }}.
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20120426041947/http://www.orasi.com/events/archivedevents/Documents/expert_series/cara_woodland_110904.pdf Introduction to Ethnographic Research, 101: The Basics]
*[https://web.archive.org/web/20120426041947/http://www.orasi.com/events/archivedevents/Documents/expert_series/cara_woodland_110904.pdf Introduction to Ethnographic Research, 101: The Basics] (PDF) (archived 26 April 2012)
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20120426044413/http://folklore.usu.edu/what.aspx "What is Folklore?" from Utah State University]
*[https://web.archive.org/web/20120426044413/http://folklore.usu.edu/what.aspx "What is Folklore?" from Utah State University] (archived 26 April 2012)


{{Folklore genres}}
{{Folklore genres}}

Latest revision as of 16:12, 30 June 2024

Front cover of Folklore: "He loses his hat: Judith Philips riding a man", from: The Brideling, Sadling, and Ryding, of a rich Churle in Hampshire (1595)

Folklore studies (less often known as folkloristics, and occasionally tradition studies or folk life studies in the United Kingdom)[1] is the branch of anthropology devoted to the study of folklore. This term, along with its synonyms,[note 1] gained currency in the 1950s to distinguish the academic study of traditional culture from the folklore artifacts themselves. It became established as a field across both Europe and North America, coordinating with Volkskunde (German), folkeminner (Norwegian), and folkminnen (Swedish), among others.[5]

Overview[edit]

The importance of folklore and folklore studies was recognized globally in 1982 in the UNESCO document "Recommendation on the Safeguarding of Traditional Culture and Folklore".[6] UNESCO again in 2003 published a Convention for the Safeguarding of the Intangible Cultural Heritage. Parallel to these global statements, the American Folklife Preservation Act (P.L. 94-201),[7] passed by the United States Congress in conjunction with the Bicentennial Celebration in 1976, included a definition of folklore, also called folklife:

"...[Folklife] means the traditional expressive culture shared within the various groups in the United States: familial, ethnic, occupational, religious, regional; expressive culture includes a wide range of creative and symbolic forms such as custom, belief, technical skill, language, literature, art, architecture, music, play, dance, drama, ritual, pageantry, handicraft; these expressions are mainly learned orally, by imitation, or in performance, and are generally maintained without benefit of formal instruction or institutional direction."

This law was added to the variety of other legislation designed to protect the natural and cultural heritage of the United States. It gives voice to a growing understanding that the cultural diversity of the United States is a national strength and a resource worthy of protection.[8]

To fully understand the term folklore studies, it is necessary to clarify its component parts: the terms folk and lore. Originally the word folk applied only to rural, frequently poor, frequently illiterate peasants. A more contemporary definition of folk is a social group which includes two or more persons with common traits, who express their shared identity through distinctive traditions. "Folk is a flexible concept which can refer to a nation as in American folklore or to a single family."[9] This expanded social definition of folk supports a wider view of the material considered to be folklore artifacts. These now include "things people make with words (verbal lore), things they make with their hands (material lore), and things they make with their actions (customary lore)".[10] The folklorist studies the traditional artifacts of a group. They study the groups, within which these customs, traditions and beliefs are transmitted.

Transmission of these artifacts is a vital part of the folklore process. Without communicating these beliefs and customs within the group over space and time, they would become cultural shards relegated to cultural archaeologists. These folk artifacts continue to be passed along informally within the group, as a rule anonymously and always in multiple variants. For the folk group is not individualistic, it is community-based and nurtures its lore in community. This is in direct contrast to high culture, where any single work of a named artist is protected by copyright law.

The folklorist strives to understand the significance of these beliefs, customs and objects for the group. For "folklore means something – to the tale teller, to the song singer, to the fiddler, and to the audience or addressees".[11] These cultural units[12] would not be passed along unless they had some continued relevance within the group. That meaning can however shift and morph.

Brothers Grimm (1916)

With an increasingly theoretical sophistication of the social sciences, it has become evident that folklore is a naturally occurring and necessary component of any social group, it is indeed all around us.[13] It does not have to be old or antiquated. It continues to be created, transmitted and in any group can be used to differentiate between "us" and "them". All cultures have their own unique folklore, and each culture has to develop and refine the techniques and methods of folklore studies most effective in identifying and researching their own. As an academic discipline, folklore studies straddles the space between the Social Sciences and the Humanities.[8] This was not always the case. The study of folklore originated in Europe in the first half of the 19th century with a focus on the oral folklore of the rural peasant populations. The "Kinder- und Hausmärchen" of the Brothers Grimm (first published 1812) is the best known but by no means only collection of verbal folklore of the European peasantry. This interest in stories, sayings and songs, i.e. verbal lore, continued throughout the 19th century and aligned the fledgling discipline of folklore studies with Literature and Mythology. By the turn into the 20th century, European folklorists remained focused on the oral folklore of the homogeneous peasant populations in their regions, while the American folklorists, led by Franz Boas, chose to consider Native American cultures in their research, and included the totality of their customs and beliefs as folklore. This distinction aligned American folklore studies with cultural anthropology and ethnology, using the same techniques of data collection in their field research. This divided alliance of folklore studies between the humanities and the social sciences offers a wealth of theoretical vantage points and research tools to the field of folklore studies as a whole, even as it continues to be a point of discussion within the field itself.[14]

Public folklore is a relatively new offshoot of folklore studies; it started after the Second World War and modeled itself on the seminal work of Alan Lomax and Ben Botkin in the 1930s which emphasized applied folklore. Public sector folklorists work to document, preserve and present the beliefs and customs of diverse cultural groups in their region. These positions are often affiliated with museums, libraries, arts organizations, public schools, historical societies, etc. The most renowned of these is the American Folklife Center at the Smithsonian, together with its Smithsonian Folklife Festival held every summer in Washington, DC. Public folklore differentiates itself from the academic folklore supported by universities, in which collection, research and analysis are primary goals.[8]

Terminology[edit]

The terms folklore studies and folklore belong to a large and confusing word family. We have already used the synonym pairs Folkloristics / Folklife Studies and folklore / folklife, all of them in current usage within the field. Folklore was the original term used in this discipline. Its synonym, folklife, came into circulation in the second half of the 20th century, at a time when some researchers felt that the term folklore was too closely tied exclusively to oral lore. The new term folklife, along with its synonym folk culture, is meant to categorically include all aspects of a culture, not just the oral traditions. Folk process is used to describe the refinement and creative change of artifacts by community members within the folk tradition that defines the folk process.[15] Professionals within this field, regardless of the other words they use, consider themselves to be folklorists.

Other terms which might be confused with folklore are popular culture and Vernacular culture, both of which vary from folklore in distinctive ways. Pop culture tends to be in demand for a limited time; it is generally mass-produced and communicated using mass media. Individually, these tend to be labeled fads, and disappear as quickly as they appear. The term vernacular culture differs from folklore in its overriding emphasis on a specific locality or region. For example, vernacular architecture denotes the standard building form of a region, using the materials available and designed to address functional needs of the local economy. Folk architecture is a subset of this, in which the construction is not done by a professional architect or builder, but by an individual putting up a needed structure in the local style. In a broader sense, all folklore is vernacular, i.e. tied to a region, whereas not everything vernacular is necessarily folklore.[13]

There are also further cognates used in connection with folklore studies. Folklorism refers to "material or stylistic elements of folklore [presented] in a context which is foreign to the original tradition." This definition, offered by the folklorist Hermann Bausinger, does not discount the validity of meaning expressed in these "second hand" traditions.[16] Many Walt Disney films and products belong in this category of folklorism; the fairy tales, originally told around a winter fire, have become animated film characters, stuffed animals and bed linens. Their meaning, however far removed from the original story telling tradition, does not detract from the importance and meaning they have for their young audience. Fakelore refers to artifacts which might be termed pseudo-folklore; these are manufactured items claiming to be traditional. The folklorist Richard Dorson coined this word, clarifying it in his book "Folklore and Fakelore".[17] Current thinking within the discipline is that this term places undue emphasis on the origination of the artifact as a sign of authenticity of the tradition. The adjective folkloric is used to designate materials having the character of folklore or tradition, at the same time making no claim to authenticity.

Methodology[edit]

There are several goals of active folklore research. The first objective is to identify tradition bearers within a social group and to collect their lore, preferably in situ. Once collected, these data need to be documented and preserved to enable further access and study. The documented lore is then available to be analyzed and interpreted by folklorists and other cultural historians, and can become the basis for studies of either individual customs or comparative studies. There are multiple venues, be they museums, journals or folk festivals to present the research results. The final step in this methodology involves advocating for these groups in their distinctiveness.[18]

The specific tools needed by folklorists to do their research are manifold.

  • The researchers must be comfortable in fieldwork; going out to meet their informants where they live, work, and perform.
  • They need to access archives housing a vast array of unpublished folklore collections.
  • They will want work with folk museums, to both view the collections, and present their own findings.
  • Bibliographies maintained by libraries and on line contain an important trove of articles from around the world.
  • The use of indexes allow them to view and use the categorization of artifacts which have already been established.
  • All work by a folklorist must be appropriately annotated in order to provide identifiable sources of the work.
  • For all folklorists terminology becomes a skill to master as they rub elbows not only with related academic fields but also with the colloquial understanding (what exactly is a fairy tale?). This shared vocabulary, with varying and sometimes divergent shades of meaning, needs to be used thoughtfully and consistently.
  • The use of printed sources to locate and identify further variants of a folk tradition is a necessary adjunct to the field research.
  • Because the transmission of folk artifacts preceded and ignored the establishment of national and political boundaries, it is important to cultivate international connections to folklorists in neighboring countries and around the world to compare both the artifacts researched and the methodology used.
  • A knowledge of the history of folklore studies is called for to identify the direction and more importantly the biases which the field has taken in the past, enabling us to temper the current analysis with more impartiality.[19][note 2]

The folklorist also rubs shoulders with researchers, tools and inquiries of neighboring fields: literature, anthropology, cultural history, linguistics, geography, musicology, sociology, psychology. This is just a partial list of the fields of study related to folklore studies, all of which are united by a common interest in subject matter.[21]

History[edit]

From antiquities to lore[edit]

It is well-documented that the term folklore was coined in 1846 by the Englishman William Thoms. He fabricated it for use in an article published in the August 22, 1846 issue of The Athenaeum.[22] Thoms consciously replaced the contemporary terminology of popular antiquities or popular literature with this new word. Folklore was to emphasize the study of a specific subset of the population: the rural, mostly illiterate peasantry.[23] In his published call for help in documenting antiquities, Thoms was echoing scholars from across the European continent to collect artifacts of older, mostly oral cultural traditions still flourishing among the rural populace. In Germany the Brothers Grimm had first published their "Kinder- und Hausmärchen" in 1812. They continued throughout their lives to collect German folk tales to include in their collection. In Scandinavia, intellectuals were also searching for their authentic Teutonic roots and had labeled their studies Folkeminde (Danish) or Folkermimne (Norwegian).[24] Throughout Europe and America, other early collectors of folklore were at work. Thomas Crofton Croker published fairy tales from southern Ireland and, together with his wife, documented keening and other Irish funeral customs. Elias Lönnrot is best known for his collection of epic Finnish poems published under the title Kalevala. John Fanning Watson in the United States published the "Annals of Philadelphia".[25]

With increasing industrialization, urbanization, and the rise in literacy throughout Europe in the 19th century, folklorists were concerned that the oral knowledge and beliefs, the lore of the rural folk would be lost. It was posited that the stories, beliefs and customs were surviving fragments of a cultural mythology of the region, pre-dating Christianity and rooted in pagan peoples and beliefs.[26] This thinking goes in lockstep with the rise of nationalism across Europe.[27] Some British folklorists,[which?] rather than lamenting or attempting to preserve rural or pre-industrial cultures, saw their work as a means of furthering industrialization, scientific rationalism, and disenchantment.[28]

As the need to collect these vestiges of rural traditions became more compelling, the need to formalize this new field of cultural studies became apparent. The British Folklore Society was established in 1878 and the American Folklore Society was established a decade later. These were just two of a plethora of academic societies founded in the latter half of the 19th century by educated members of the emerging middle class.[29] For literate, urban intellectuals and students of folklore the folk was someone else and the past was recognized as being something truly different.[30] Folklore became a measure of the progress of society, how far we had moved forward into the industrial present and indeed removed ourselves from a past marked by poverty, illiteracy and superstition. The task of both the professional folklorist and the amateur at the turn of the 20th century was to collect and classify cultural artifacts from the pre-industrial rural areas, parallel to the drive in the life sciences to do the same for the natural world.[note 3] "Folk was a clear label to set materials apart from modern life…material specimens, which were meant to be classified in the natural history of civilization. Tales, originally dynamic and fluid, were given stability and concreteness by means of the printed page."[31]

Viewed as fragments from a pre-literate culture, these stories and objects were collected without context to be displayed and studied in museums and anthologies, just as bones and potsherds were gathered for the life sciences. Kaarle Krohn and Antti Aarne were active collectors of folk poetry in Finland. The Scotsman Andrew Lang is known for his 25 volumes of Andrew Lang's Fairy Books from around the world. Francis James Child was an American academic who collected English and Scottish popular ballads and their American variants, published as the Child Ballads. In the United States, Mark Twain was a charter member of the American Folklore Society.[32] Both he and Washington Irving drew on folklore to write their stories.[33][34] The 1825 novel Brother Jonathan by John Neal is recognized as the most extensive literary use of American folklore of its time.[35]

Aarne–Thompson and the historic–geographic method[edit]

By the beginning of the 20th century these collections had grown to include artifacts from around the world and across several centuries. A system to organize and categorize them became necessary.[36] Antti Aarne published a first classification system for folktales in 1910. It was later expanded into the Aarne–Thompson classification system by Stith Thompson and remains the standard classification system for European folktales and other types of oral literature. As the number of classified artifacts grew, similarities were noted in items which had been collected from very different geographic regions, ethnic groups and epochs.

In an effort to understand and explain the similarities found in tales from different locations, the Finnish folklorists Julius and Kaarle Krohne developed the Historical-Geographical method, also called the Finnish method.[37] Using multiple variants of a tale, this investigative method attempted to work backwards in time and location to compile the original version from what they considered the incomplete fragments still in existence. This was the search for the "Urform",[23] which by definition was more complete and more "authentic" than the newer, more scattered versions. The historic-geographic method has been succinctly described as a "quantitative mining of the resulting archive, and extraction of distribution patterns in time and space". It is based on the assumption that every text artifact is a variant of the original text. As a proponent of this method, Walter Anderson proposed additionally a Law of Self-Correction, i.e. a feedback mechanism which would keep the variants closer to the original form.[38][note 4]

It was during the first decades of the 20th century that Folklore Studies in Europe and America began to diverge. The Europeans continued with their emphasis on oral traditions of the pre-literate peasant, and remained connected to literary scholarship within the universities. By this definition, folklore was completely based in the European cultural sphere; any social group that did not originate in Europe was to be studied by ethnologists and cultural anthropologists. In this light, some twenty-first century scholars have interpreted European folkloristics as an instrument of internal colonialism, in parallel with the imperialistic dimensions of early 20th century cultural anthropology and Orientalism.[40] Unlike contemporary anthropology, however, many early European folklorists were themselves members of the prioritized groups that folkloristics was intended to study; for instance, Andrew Lang and James George Frazer were both themselves Scotsmen and studied rural folktales from towns near where they grew up.[41]

In contrast to this, American folklorists, under the influence of the German-American Franz Boas and Ruth Benedict, sought to incorporate other cultural groups living in their region into the study of folklore. This included not only customs brought over by northern European immigrants, but also African Americans, Acadians of eastern Canada, Cajuns of Louisiana, Hispanics of the American southwest, and Native Americans. Not only were these distinct cultural groups all living in the same regions, but their proximity to each other caused their traditions and customs to intermingle. The lore of these distinct social groups, all of them Americans, was considered the bailiwick of American folklorists, and aligned American folklore studies more with ethnology than with literary studies.[42]

Federal Writers Project

Great Depression and the Federal Writers' Project[edit]

Then came the 1930s and the worldwide Great Depression. In the United States the Federal Writers' Project was established as part of the WPA. Its goal was to offer paid employment to thousands of unemployed writers by engaging them in various cultural projects around the country. These white collar workers were sent out as field workers to collect the oral folklore of their regions, including stories, songs, idioms and dialects. The most famous of these collections is the Slave Narrative Collection. The folklore collected under the auspices of the Federal Writers Project during these years continues to offer a goldmine of primary source materials for folklorists and other cultural historians.[43]

As chairman of the Federal Writers' Project between 1938 and 1942, Benjamin A. Botkin supervised the work of these folklore field workers. Both Botkin and John Lomax were particularly influential during this time in expanding folklore collection techniques to include more detailing of the interview context.[44] This was a significant move away from viewing the collected artifacts as isolated fragments, broken remnants of an incomplete pre-historic whole. Using these new interviewing techniques, the collected lore became embedded in and imbued with meaning within the framework of its contemporary practice. The emphasis moved from the lore to the folk, i.e. the groups and the people who gave this lore meaning within contemporary daily living.

German folklore in the Third Reich[edit]

In Europe during these same decades, folklore studies were drifting in a different direction. Throughout the 19th century folklore had been tied to romantic ideals of the soul of the people, in which folk tales and folksongs recounted the lives and exploits of ethnic folk heroes. Folklore chronicled the mythical origins of different peoples across Europe and established the beginnings of national pride. By the first decade of the 20th century there were scholarly societies as well as individual folklore positions within universities, academies, and museums. However, the study of German Volkskunde had yet to be defined as an academic discipline.[citation needed]

Greater Germanic Reich

In the 1920s this originally apolitical movement[citation needed] was coopted by nationalism in several European countries, including Germany,[45][46] where it was absorbed into emerging Nazi ideology. The vocabulary of German Volkskunde such as Volk (folk), Rasse (race), Stamm (tribe), and Erbe (heritage) were frequently referenced by the Nazi Party. Their expressed goal was to re-establish what they perceived as the former purity of the Germanic peoples of Europe. The German anti-Nazi philosopher Ernst Bloch was one of the main analysts and critics of this ideology.[note 5] "Nazi ideology presented racial purity as the means to heal the wounds of the suffering German state following World War I. Hitler painted the ethnic heterogeneity of Germany as a major reason for the country's economic and political weakness, and he promised to restore a German realm based on a cleansed, and hence strong, German people. Racial or ethnic purity" was the goal of the Nazis, intent on forging a Greater Germanic Reich.[47]

In the postwar years, departments of folklore were established in multiple German universities. However an analysis of just how folklore studies supported the policies of the Third Reich did not begin until 20 years after World War II in West Germany.[48] Particularly in the works of Hermann Bausinger and Wolfgang Emmerich in the 1960s, it was pointed out that the vocabulary current in Volkskunde was ideally suited for the kind of ideology that the National Socialists had built up.[49] It was then another 20 years before convening the 1986 Munich conference on folklore and National Socialism. This continues to be a difficult and painful discussion within the German folklore community.[48]

After World War II[edit]

Following World War II, the discussion continued about whether to align folklore studies with literature or ethnology. Within this discussion, many voices were actively trying to identify the optimal approach to take in the analysis of folklore artifacts. One major change had already been initiated by Franz Boas. Culture was no longer viewed in evolutionary terms; each culture has its own integrity and completeness, and was not progressing either toward wholeness or toward fragmentation. Individual artifacts must have meaning within the culture and for individuals themselves in order to assume cultural relevance and assure continued transmission. Because the European folklore movement had been primarily oriented toward oral traditions, a new term, folklife, was introduced to represent the full range of traditional culture. This included music, dance, storytelling, crafts, costume, foodways and more.

In this period, folklore came to refer to the event of doing something within a given context, for a specific audience, using artifacts as necessary props in the communication of traditions between individuals and within groups.[50] Beginning in the 1970s, these new areas of folklore studies became articulated in performance studies, where traditional behaviors are evaluated and understood within the context of their performance. It is the meaning within the social group that becomes the focus for these folklorists, foremost among them Richard Baumann[51] and Barbara Kirshenblatt-Gimblett.[52] Enclosing any performance is a framework which signals that the following is something outside of ordinary communication. For example, "So, have you heard the one…" automatically flags the following as a joke. A performance can take place either within a cultural group, re-iterating and re-enforcing the customs and beliefs of the group. Or it can be performance for an outside group, in which the first goal is to set the performers apart from the audience.[53]

This analysis then goes beyond the artifact itself, be it dance, music or story-telling. It goes beyond the performers and their message. As part of performance studies, the audience becomes part of the performance. If any folklore performance strays too far from audience expectations, it will likely be brought back by means of a negative feedback loop at the next iteration.[54] Both performer and audience are acting within the "Twin Laws" of folklore transmission, in which novelty and innovation is balanced by the conservative forces of the familiar.[55] Even further, the presence of a folklore observer at a performance of any kind will influence the performance itself in subtle and not-so-subtle ways. Because folklore is firstly an act of communication between parties, it is incomplete without inclusion of the reception in its analysis. The understanding of folklore performance as communication leads directly into modern linguistic theory and communication studies. Words both reflect and shape our worldview. Oral traditions, particularly in their stability over generations and even centuries, provide significant insight into the ways in which insiders of a culture see, understand, and express their responses to the world around them.[56][note 6]

2015 Smithsonian Folklife Festival

Three major approaches to folklore interpretation were developed during the second half of the 20th century. Structuralism in folklore studies attempts to define the structures underlying oral and customary folklore.[note 7] Once classified, it was easy for structural folklorists to lose sight of the overarching issue: what are the characteristics which keep a form constant and relevant over multiple generations? Functionalism in folklore studies also came to the fore following World War II; as spokesman, William Bascom formulated the 4 functions of folklore. This approach takes a more top-down approach to understand how a specific form fits into and expresses meaning within the culture as a whole.[note 8] A third method of folklore analysis, popular in the late 20th century, is the Psychoanalytic Interpretation,[57] championed by Alan Dundes. His monographs, including a study of homoerotic subtext in American football[58] and anal-erotic elements in German folklore,[59] were not always appreciated and involved Dundes in several major folklore studies controversies during his career. True to each of these approaches, and any others one might want to employ (political, women's issues, material culture, urban contexts, non-verbal text, ad infinitum), whichever perspective is chosen will spotlight some features and leave other characteristics in the shadows.

With the passage in 1976 of the American Folklife Preservation Act, folklore studies in the United States came of age. This legislation follows in the footsteps of other legislation designed to safeguard more tangible aspects of our national heritage worthy of protection. This law also marks a shift in our national awareness; it gives voice to the national understanding that diversity within the country is a unifying feature, not something that separates us.[60] "We no longer view cultural difference as a problem to be solved, but as a tremendous opportunity. In the diversity of American folklife we find a marketplace teeming with the exchange of traditional forms and cultural ideas, a rich resource for Americans".[8] This diversity is celebrated annually at the Smithsonian Folklife Festival and many other folklife festivals around the country.

Global folklore studies[edit]

Folklore studies and nationalism in Turkey[edit]

Sinasi Bozalti

Folklore interest sparked in Turkey around the second half of the nineteenth century when the need to determine a national language came about. Their writings consisted of vocabulary and grammatical rule from the Arabic and Persian language. Although the Ottoman intellectuals were not affected by the communication gap, in 1839, the Tanzimat reform introduced a change to Ottoman literature. A new generation of writers with contact to the West, especially France, noticed the importance of literature and its role in the development of institutions. Following the models set by Westerners, the new generation of writers returned to Turkey bringing the ideologies of novels, short stories, plays and journalism with them. These new forms of literature were set to enlighten the people of Turkey, influencing political and social change within the country. However, the lack of understanding for the language of their writings limited their success in enacting change.

Using the language of the "common people" to create literature, influenced the Tanzimat writers to gain interest in folklore and folk literature. In 1859, writer Sinasi Bozalti, wrote a play in simple enough language that it could be understood by the masses. He later produced a collection of four thousand proverbs. Many other poets and writers throughout the Turkish nation began to join in on the movement including Ahmet Midhat Efendi who composed short stories based on the proverbs written by Sinasi. These short stories, like many folk stories today, were intended to teach moral lessons to its readers.

Folklore studies in Chile[edit]

Chilean folklorist Rodolfo Lenz in 1915.

The study of folklore in Chile was developed in a systematic and pioneering way since the late 19th century. In the work of compiling the popular traditions of the Chilean people and of the original peoples, they stood out, not only in the study of national folklore, but also in Latin America.[citation needed] Ramón Laval, Julio Vicuña, Rodolfo Lenz, José Toribio Medina, Tomás Guevara, Félix de Augusta, and Aukanaw, among others, generated an important documentary and critical corpus around oral literature, autochthonous languages, regional dialects, and peasant and indigenous customs. They published, mainly during the first decades of the 20th century, linguistic and philological studies, dictionaries, comparative studies between the national folklores of Ibero-America, compilations of stories, poetry, and religious traditions. In 1909, at the initiative of Laval, Vicuña and Lenz, the Chilean Folklore Society was founded, the first of its kind in America. Two years later, it would merge with the recently created Chilean Society of History and Geography.[61]

21st century[edit]

With the advent of the digital age, the question once again foregrounds itself concerning the relevance of folklore in this new century. Although the profession in folklore grows and the articles and books on folklore topics proliferate, the traditional role of the folklorist is indeed changing.

Globalization[edit]

The United States is known[by whom?] as a land of immigrants; with the exception of the first Indian nations, everyone originally came from somewhere else. Americans are proud of their cultural diversity. For folklorists, this country represents a trove of cultures rubbing elbows with each other, mixing and matching into exciting combinations as new generations come up. It is in the study of their folklife that we begin to understand the cultural patterns underlying the different ethnic groups. Language and customs provide a window into their view of reality. "The study of varying worldviews among ethnic and national groups in America remains one of the most important unfinished tasks for folklorists and anthropologists."[62][note 9]

Contrary to a widespread concern, we are not seeing a loss of diversity and increasing cultural homogenization across the land.[note 10] In fact, critics of this theory point out that as different cultures mix, the cultural landscape becomes multifaceted with the intermingling of customs. People become aware of other cultures and pick and choose different items to adopt from each other. One noteworthy example of this is the Jewish Christmas Tree, a point of some contention among American Jews.

Public sector folklore was introduced into the American Folklore Society in the early 1970s. These public folklorists work in museums and cultural agencies to identify and document the diverse folk cultures and folk artists in their region. Beyond this, they provide performance venues for the artists, with the twin objectives of entertainment and education about different ethnic groups. Given the number of folk festivals held around the world, it becomes clear that the cultural multiplicity of a region is presented with pride and excitement. Public folklorists are increasingly being involved in economic and community development projects to elucidate and clarify differing world views of the social groups impacted by the projects.[8]

Computerized databases and big data[edit]

Once folklore artifacts have been recorded on the World Wide Web, they can be collected in large electronic databases and even moved into collections of big data. This compels folklorists to find new ways to collect and curate these data.[63] Along with these new challenges, electronic data collections provide the opportunity to ask different questions, and combine with other academic fields to explore new aspects of traditional culture.[64] Computational humor is just one new field that has taken up the traditional oral forms of jokes and anecdotes for study, holding its first dedicated conference in 1996. This takes us beyond gathering and categorizing large joke collections. Scholars are using computers firstly to recognize jokes in context,[65] and further to attempt to create jokes using artificial intelligence.

Binary thinking of the computer age[edit]

As we move forward in the digital age, the binary thinking of the 20th century structuralists remains an important tool in the folklorist's toolbox.[66] This does not mean that binary thinking was invented in recent times along with computers; only that we became aware of both the power and the limitations of the "either/or" construction. In folklore studies, the multiple binaries underlying much of the theoretical thinking have been identified – {dynamicism : conservatism}, {anecdote : myth}, {process : structure}, {performance : tradition}, {improvisation : repetition}, {variation : traditionalism}, {repetition : innovation};[67] not to overlook the original binary of the first folklorists: {traditional : modern} or {old : new}. Bauman re-iterates this thought pattern in claiming that at the core of all folklore is the dynamic tension between tradition and variation (or creativity).[68] Noyes[69] uses similar vocabulary to define [folk] group as "the ongoing play and tension between, on the one hand, the fluid networks of relationship we constantly both produce and negotiate in everyday life and, on the other, the imagined communities we also create and enact but that serve as forces of stabilizing allegiance."[70]

This thinking only becomes problematic in light of the theoretical work done on binary opposition, which exposes the values intrinsic to any binary pair. Typically, one of the two opposites assumes a role of dominance over the other. The categorization of binary oppositions is "often value-laden and ethnocentric", imbuing them with illusory order and superficial meaning.[71]

Linear and non-linear concepts of time[edit]

Another baseline of western thought has also been thrown into disarray in the recent past. In western culture, we live in a time of progress, moving forward from one moment to the next. The goal is to become better and better, culminating in perfection. In this model time is linear, with direct causality in the progression. "You reap what you sow", "A stitch in time saves nine", "Alpha and omega", the Christian concept of an afterlife all exemplify a cultural understanding of time as linear and progressive. In folklore studies, going backwards in time was also a valid avenue of exploration. The goal of the early folklorists of the historic-geographic school was to reconstruct from fragments of folk tales the Urtext of the original mythic (pre-Christian) world view. When and where was an artifact documented? Those were the important questions posed by early folklorists in their collections. Armed with these data points, a grid pattern of time-space coordinates for artifacts could be plotted.[72][73]

Awareness has grown that different cultures have different concepts of time (and space). In his study "The American Indian Mind in a Linear World", Donald Fixico describes an alternate concept of time. "Indian thinking" involves "'seeing' things from a perspective emphasizing that circles and cycles are central to world and that all things are related within the Universe." He then suggests that "the concept of time for Indian people has been such a continuum that time becomes less relevant and the rotation of life or seasons of the year are stressed as important."[74][note 11] In a more specific example, the folklorist Barre Toelken describes the Navajo as living in circular times, which is echoed and re-enforced in their sense of space, the traditional circular or multi-sided hogan.[75] Lacking the European mechanistic devices of marking time (clocks, watches, calendars), they depended on the cycles of nature: sunrise to sunset, winter to summer. Their stories and histories are not marked by decades and centuries, but remain close in, as they circle around the constant rhythms of the natural world.

Within the last decades our time scale has expanded from unimaginably small (nanoseconds) to unimaginably large (deep time). In comparison, our working concept of time as {past : present : future} looks almost quaint. How do we map "tradition" into this multiplicity of time scales? Folklore studies has already acknowledged this in the study of traditions which are either done in an annual cycle of circular time (ex. Christmas, May Day), or in a life cycle of linear time (ex. baptisms, weddings, funerals). This needs to be expanded to other traditions of oral lore. For folk narrative is NOT a linear chain of isolated tellings, going from one single performance on our time-space grid to the next single performance. Instead it fits better into a non-linear system, where one performer varies the story from one telling to the next, and the performer's understudy starts to tell the story, also varying each performance in response to multiple factors.[76]

Cybernetics[edit]

Cybernetics was first developed in the 20th century; it investigates the functions and processes of systems. The goal in cybernetics is to identify and understand a system's closed signaling loop, in which an action by the system generates a change in the environment, which in turn triggers feedback to the system and initiates a new action. The field has expanded from a focus on mechanistic and biological systems to an expanded recognition that these theoretical constructs can also be applied to many cultural and societal systems, including folklore.[77] Once divorced from a model of tradition that works solely on a linear time scale (i.e. moving from one folklore performance to the next), we begin to ask different questions about how these folklore artifacts maintain themselves over generations and centuries.

The oral tradition of jokes as an example is found across all cultures, and is documented as early as 1600 B.C.[note 12] Whereas the subject matter varies widely to reflect its cultural context, the form of the joke remains remarkably consistent. According to the theories of cybernetics and its secondary field of autopoiesis, this can be attributed to a closed loop auto-correction built into the system maintenance of oral folklore. Auto-correction in oral folklore was first articulated by the folklorist Walter Anderson in his monograph on the King and the Abbot published 1923.[39] To explain the stability of the narrative, Anderson posited a “double redundancy”, in which the performer has heard the story from multiple other performers, and has himself performed it multiple times. This provides a feedback loop between repetitions at both levels to retain the essential elements of the tale, while at the same time allowing for the incorporation of new elements.[78]

Another characteristic of cybernetics and autopoiesis is self-generation within a system. Once again looking to jokes, we find new jokes generated in response to events on a continuing basis. The folklorist Bill Ellis accessed internet humor message boards to observe in real time the creation of topical jokes following the 9/11 terrorist attack in the United States. "Previous folklore research has been limited to collecting and documenting successful jokes, and only after they had emerged and come to folklorists' attention. Now, an Internet-enhanced collection creates a time machine, as it were, where we can observe what happens in the period before the risible moment, when attempts at humour are unsuccessful.", that is before they have successfully mapped into the traditional joke format.[79]

Second-order cybernetics states that the system observer affects the systemic interplay; this interplay has long been recognized as problematic by folklorists. The act of observing and noting any folklore performance raises without exception the performance from an unconscious habitual acting within a group, to and for themselves, to a performance for an outsider. "Naturally the researcher's presence changes things, in the way that any new entrant to a social setting changes things. When people of different backgrounds, agendas, and resources interact, there are social risks, and where representation and publication are taking place, these risks are exacerbated..."[80][note 13]

Scholarly organizations and journals[edit]

Notable folklorists[edit]

For a list of notable folklorists, go to the category list.

Associated theories and methods[edit]

See also[edit]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ According to Alan Dundes, this term was first introduced in an address by Charles Leland in 1889. He spoke in German to the Hungarian Folklore Society and referenced "Die Folkloristik".[2] In contemporary scholarship, the word Folkloristics is favored by Alan Dundes, and used in the title of his publication.[3] The term Folklore Studies is defined and used by Simon Bronner.[4]
  2. ^ In a more dramatic and less technical approach, Henry Glassie describes the tools of the folklore trade: "[Folklorists were the] hunters and gatherers of academe…still rooting about in reality, hunting down and gathering up facts that we brought back alive. In those days [the 1960s] … we were delighted to be allowed to enter the university, set up camp, and practice our humble, archaic trade. They had let us in and we honored the established disciplines around us by stealing all we could. While the more advanced people around us slept, we slid in the shadows past their fires, rifled their baggage, stole their books, learned their language, and came to be able to ape their culture in a way that we at least found convincing. In our excitement we did not stop to ponder whether their theories sorted well with our traditional preoccupations. We learned the schemes of those we perceived to be higher in the academic hierarchy than ourselves, then applied those schemes to our own topics. We felt mature.[20]
  3. ^ Charles Darwin published On the Origin of Species in 1859.
  4. ^ Anderson is best known for his monograph Kaiser und Abt (Folklore Fellows' Communications 42, Helsinki 1923) on folktales of type AT 922.[39]
  5. ^ In his study Erbschaft dieser Zeit (1935) (translation Heritage of Our Times, Polity, 1991) Ernst Bloch examined how the mythological way of scholarly thought of the 19th century was revived by the National Socialists.
  6. ^ In his chapter "Folklore and Cultural Worldview", Toelken provides an illuminating comparison of the worldview of European Americans with Navajos. In the use of language, the two cultural groups express widely differing understandings of their spatial and temporal place in the universe.
  7. ^ For example, a joke uses words within a specific and well-defined narrative structure to make people laugh. A fable uses anthropomorphized animals and natural features to illustrate a moral lesson, frequently concluding with a moral. These are just a few of the many formulaic structures used in oral traditions.
  8. ^ An example of this are the joke cycles that spontaneously appear in response to a national or world tragedy or disaster.
  9. ^ See also Dundes (2005), p. 387. [Folklore studies is] "a discipline which has been ahead of its time in recognizing the importance of folklore in promoting ethnic pride and in providing invaluable data for the discovery of native cognitive categories and patterns of worldview and values."
  10. ^ The newness of this discussion can be seen in the references for Cultural homogenization; all sources listed have been published in 21st century.
  11. ^ This blanket interpretation has been questioned by some as too simplistic in its sweeping application to all Native American tribes. See Rouse (2012), p. 14ff.
  12. ^ The earliest recorded joke is on an Egyptian papyrus dated at 1600 B.C. See Joke#History in print.
  13. ^ For a further discussion of this, see also Schmidt-Lauber (2012), p. 362ff.

Citations[edit]

  1. ^ Widdowson 2016.
  2. ^ Dundes 2005, p. 386.
  3. ^ Dundes 1978a.
  4. ^ Bronner 1986, p. xi.
  5. ^ Brunvand 1996, p. 286.
  6. ^ "UNESCO Recommendation 1989".
  7. ^ "Public Law 94-201 (The Creation of the American Folklife Center, Library of Congress)". Library of Congress.
  8. ^ a b c d e Hufford 1991.
  9. ^ Dundes 1969, p. 13, footnote 34.
  10. ^ Wilson 2006, p. 85.
  11. ^ Dundes 2007, p. 273.
  12. ^ Dundes 1972.
  13. ^ a b Sims & Stephens 2005, p. 7.
  14. ^ Zumwalt & Dundes 1988.
  15. ^ Levy & Murphy 1991, p. 43.
  16. ^ Šmidchens 1999, p. 52.
  17. ^ Dorson 1976.
  18. ^ Wilson 2006, pp. 81–106.
  19. ^ Dorson 1972, p. 6.
  20. ^ Glassie 1983, p. 128.
  21. ^ Bauman & Paredes 1972, p. xx.
  22. ^ Georges & Jones 1995, p. 35.
  23. ^ a b Sims & Stephens 2005, p. 23.
  24. ^ Sims & Stephens 2005, pp. 22–23.
  25. ^ Watson 1850–1860, p. [page needed].
  26. ^ Sims & Stephens 2005, pp. 23–24.
  27. ^ Georges & Jones 1995, p. 40.
  28. ^ Josephson-Storm 2017, p. 129.
  29. ^ Bronner 1986, p. 17.
  30. ^ Georges & Jones 1995, p. 32.
  31. ^ Bronner 1986, p. 11.
  32. ^ Dundes 2005, p. 402.
  33. ^ Bronner 1986, p. 5.
  34. ^ Bronner 1986, pp. 21–22.
  35. ^ Morgan 1988, p. 156.
  36. ^ Georges & Jones 1995, p. 54.
  37. ^ Wolf-Knuts 1999.
  38. ^ Dorst 2016, p. 131.
  39. ^ a b Anderson 1923.
  40. ^ Josephson-Storm 2017, p. 128.
  41. ^ Josephson-Storm 2017, pp. 128–130.
  42. ^ Zumwalt & Dundes 1988, pp. 16–20.
  43. ^ Sims & Stephens 2005, pp. 10, 25.
  44. ^ Sims & Stephens 2005, p. 25.
  45. ^ Dorson 1972, p. 15.
  46. ^ Bendix 1998, p. 240.
  47. ^ Bendix 1997, p. 163.
  48. ^ a b Lixfeld & Dow 1994.
  49. ^ Lixfeld & Dow 1994, p. 11.
  50. ^ Bauman & Paredes 1972, p. xv.
  51. ^ Bauman 1975.
  52. ^ Kirshenblatt-Gimblett 1999.
  53. ^ Bauman 1971, p. 45.
  54. ^ Dorst 2016, p. 139.
  55. ^ Toelken 1996, pp. 39–40.
  56. ^ Toelken 1996, p. 226.
  57. ^ Sims & Stephens 2005, p. 187ff..
  58. ^ Dundes 1978b.
  59. ^ Dundes 1984.
  60. ^ "Mission and History". Smithsonian. Archived from the original on 9 June 2020.
  61. ^ "Sociedad Chilena de Historia y Geografía". Memoria Chilena (in Spanish).
  62. ^ Toelken 1996, p. 297.
  63. ^ Dundes 2005, p. 401.
  64. ^ Dorst 2016, p. 142.
  65. ^ Sacks 1974, pp. 337–353.
  66. ^ Sims & Stephens 2005, pp. 184–187.
  67. ^ Dorst 2016, p. 133.
  68. ^ Bauman 2008, pp. 31–32.
  69. ^ Noyes 2003.
  70. ^ Dorst 2016, p. 134.
  71. ^ Goody 1977, p. 36.
  72. ^ Toelken 1996, pp. 271–274.
  73. ^ Dorst 2016, pp. 128–129.
  74. ^ Rouse 2012, p. 4.
  75. ^ Toelken 1996, pp. 275ff.
  76. ^ Dorst 2016, pp. 131–132.
  77. ^ Dorst 2016.
  78. ^ Dorst 2016, p. 132.
  79. ^ Ellis 2002, p. 2.
  80. ^ "AFS Position Statement on Research with Human Subjects". American Folklore Society. 8 February 2021.

References[edit]

External links[edit]