The major thematic and narrative concerns in folk literature
Introduction
The issues
of the relation of mod-ernism to folklore and rhetorical uses of folklore
animate recent studies and reference projects on speech and narrative. A
primary question is whether modernization displaces folk expressions that come
out of preindustrial life, or if new forms emerge from modern conditions such
as urbanization, mobility, and commercialization.
The
Dictionary of Modern Proverbs, compiled by Charles C. Doyle, Wolfgang Mieder,
and Fred Shapiro, clearly makes the case that the latter is true, as do
monographic studies of modernism such as Proverbs Are Never Out of Season:
Popular Wisdom in the Modern Age by Wolfgang Mieder and Twisted Wisdom: Modern
Anti-Proverbs by Wolfgang Mieder and Anna Tóthné Litovkina. In narrative
studies, a spate of books reexamines the fairy and folktale genre. The leading
scholar in the fairy tale genre is Jack Zipes; his major oeuvre includes Why
Fairy Tales Stick: The Evolution and Relevance of a Genre and The Irresistible
Fairy Tale: The Cultural and Social History of a Genre, making the case for
oral folk roots of the fairy tale.
The question
of fairy tale origin erupted into controversy in the twenty-first century with
theories of individual composition and print sources as presented in Fairy
Tales: A New History and Fairy Godfather. Straparola, Venice, and the Fairy
Tale Tradition, both by Ruth B. Bottigheimer, and Tales of Magic, Tales in
Print by Willem de Blécourt, which claimed to locate a single author
(Straparola) who composed fairy tales that others imitated. Often coupled with
the study of folktales are studies of legend and myth. Typically, legend
studies cover the recent past with an evaluation of truth or social reality of
events and real-life figures, while investigations of myth delve into ancient
realms and often have etiological and sacred functions (folklorists bristle at
the rhetorical use of “myth” as falsehood).
Scholars of
both genres often relate folk belief to these narrative expressions and, in the
case of myth, often analyze its symbolic content for a society and its
integration into a cosmology or worldview. William G. Doty advocates further
for the origin of myths in ritual practices in Mythography: The Study of Myths
and Rituals. Other approaches, including the different forms by which myths
enter into popular culture and symbolic readings, are evident in Myth: A New
Symposium, edited by Gregory Schrempp and William Hansen. (The old, and
seminal, symposium is Myth: A Symposium, edited by Thomas A. Sebeok.)
Folkloristic work on legend is especially vibrant, with numerous books devoted
to legendry in modern life. Many analysts connect the expression of legends to
anxieties of modern life, including increasing alienation as a result of a loss
of community, change in gender roles, and concern for loss of human control as
technology dictates the round of everyday life.
Among the
prominent folkloristic studies exploring such connections are Legend and Belief
by Linda Dégh, The Truth Never Stands in the Way of a Good Story by Jan Harold
Brunvand, and Manufacturing Tales: Sex and Money in Contemporary Legends by
Gary Alan Fine. Another set of studies explores legendry in relation to rumors
and finds that they often arise to narrate certainty in response to fears of
health, global change, and invasion of privacy.
Exemplary
studies of this sort are The Global Grapevine: Why Rumors of Terrorism, Immigration,
and Trade Matter by Gary Alan Fine and Bill Ellis, Bodies: Sex, Violence,
Disease, and Death in Contemporary Legends by Gillian Bennett, Once Upon a
Virus: AIDS Legends and Vernacular Risk Perception by Diane E. Goldstein, What
Happens Next?: Contemporary Urban Legends and Popular Culture by Gail de Vos,
and Organ Theft Legends by Véronique Campion-Vincent. Legends also address
racial problems, and folklorists often find that narratives arise in legends to
interpret inter-ethnic relations in contemporary events. Prominent in
presenting such scenarios is I Heard It through the Grapevine: Rumor in
AfricanAmerican Culture by Patricia A. Turner and Whispers on the Color Line:
Rumor and Race in America by Gary Alan Fine and Patricia A. Turner. Another
question is the persistence of ghost legends, despite the supposed rationality
of modern society. In studies such as Haunting Experiences: Ghosts in
Contemporary Folklore by Diane Goldstein, Sylvia Grider, and Jeannie Banks
Thomas, Haunted Halls. Ghostlore of American College Campuses by Elizabeth
Tucker, and Alas Poor Ghost! Traditions of Belief in Story and Discourse by
Gillian Bennett, folklorists hypothesize that belief in the supernatural
actually increases with modernization because of the emphasis placed upon life.
Death becomes more fearful, and legends arise involving the dead in the midst
of life.
Although the
bookshelf of folkloristic research of jokes is not as long as the one for
legendry, folklore research has made a significant contribution to humor
studies. Prominently setting paths in different directions is the analytical
work of folklorists Elliott Oring and Alan Dundes. Oring, in his books Engaging
Humor and Jokes and Their Relations, has understood humor arising from
“appropriate incongruities” and sought to analyze contextually how those
incongruities structured into humorous performances are variously perceived, so
that what is funny to participants in one situation is not laughable in
another. Alan Dundes applies a Freudian view that jokes can be read for
symbolic projections of anxieties, often sexual and scatological. In Cracking
Jokes: Studies of Sick Humor Cycles and Stereotypes, and “The Kushmaker” and
Other Essays on Folk Speech and Folk Humor, and with Carl Pagter, Work Hard and
You Shall Be Rewarded: Urban Folklore from the Paperwork Empire, Dundes shows
joking to be about serious matters. He joins other folklorists in noting the
way that folklore can provide a “veil of play” that allows individuals to say
and act in ways that would be unacceptable in everyday discourse. Other
admirable studies of folk humor that interpret jokes as being more than
entertainment and providing emotional outlets for aggression, distress, or
frustration include The Last Laugh: Folk Humor, Celebrity Culture, and
MassMediated Disasters in the Digital Age by Trevor J. Blank, Of Corpse: Death
and Humor in Folklore and Popular Culture, edited by Peter Narváez, and
Lowering the Bar: Lawyer Jokes and Legal Culture by Marc Galanter. Folklorists
have been especially active in the study of folk songs and ballads as signs of
regional and ethnic persistence. Many of these studies also analyze the
popularization of folk music to ask about the consequences for communities when
traditions are taken out of those communities and become commercialized. Often,
American folklorists locate a hybridization or creolization process, as
different influences come together to produce mixed forms such as country music
and blues. Notable monographs covering such ground in U.S. folk music include
James P. Leary’s Polkabilly: How the Goose Island Ramblers Redefined American
Folk Music, Ryan André Brasseaux’s Cajun Breakdown. The Emergence of an
American-Made Music, and Cecilia Conway’s African Banjo Echoes in Appalachia: A
Study of Folk Traditions. María HerreraSobek’s Northward Bound: The Mexican
Immigrant Experience in Ballad and Song is a laudable example of an ethnic
study showing the power of song to comment on social movements and to often
convey political protest. Although the period covered in these studies is
contemporary, other books describe remaining legacies of song and music to
inquire about historical change in a region, particularly social interactional
patterns. New England and the northern maritime regions have especially
attracted this kind of investigation, as exemplified by Jennifer C. Post’s
Music in Rural New England: Family and Community Life, 1870-1940.
A number of
genres fall under the heading of “social folklife,” including customs, rituals,
beliefs, holidays, dances, games, and festivals. Studies of these topics often
take an ethnographic approach and emphasize the context of distinctive cultural
settings, groups, and ideas. In these studies, folklife refers to special
occasions to celebrate tradition, and often to socially bond communities. A
strong set of books interprets U.S. holiday celebrations at local and national
levels and finds tension between the values implied in home observances and
commercial appropriation. For example, Jack Santino, in All Around the Year:
Holidays and Celebrations in American Life, suggests the main social function
of holidays serves to adjust to seasonal change that has been undermined by
commercialism. Of the holidays, Halloween garners the most scholarly attention,
and folklorists often note the shift of the holiday from child to adult
control. Folklorists write in Halloween and Other Festivals of Death and Life,
edited by Santino, on the use of play to confront the fear of darkness and
decay that occurs during the season. In Groundhog Day by Don Yoder, the author
observes the shift of the holiday from an expression of German ethnic
separation based on a prognostication belief to a national celebration of
leisure and recreation. Folklorists also take the lead in documenting
traditions that resist appropriation by mass culture, such as Alan Jabbour and
Karen Singer Jabbour, who in Decoration Day in the Mountains explain the
persistence of grave-cleaning customs with a homecoming function in the
Appalachian Mountains. Another inclusive rubric used by folklife researchers is
“material culture,” for architecture, art, craft, landscape, and food, and,
increasingly since the 1990s, “visual culture,” covering designs, decorations,
and iconography. As with the integrative term folklife, so too do material and
visual culture represent patterns across genres, but studies are often based in
a type of artifact or practice, or grounded in the material surroundings of a
region or community.
The
monumental achievement in the global scholarship of folk and vernacular
architecture is undoubtedly the Encyclopedia of Vernacular Architecture of the
World, in three fat volumes edited by Paul Oliver. A theme of the many entries
in that work is that folk housing is in tune with the environment and serves
community-building functions for families and workers as they are culturally
defined in different societies. An illuminating companion volume that
graphically shows patterns of construction and form is Atlas of Vernacular
Architecture of the World by Marcel Vellinga, Paul Oliver, and Alexander
Bridge. Oliver continues the theme of the environmental and social adaptability
of folk housing in a key pair of recent publications: Built to Meet Needs:
Cultural Issues in Vernacular Architecture and Dwellings: The Vernacular House
World Wide. A number of excellent studies focus on the U.S. cultural landscape
that gives identity to residents and their aesthetics or spatial thinking:
Images of an American Land: Vernacular Architecture in the Western United States,
edited by Thomas Carter; Homeplace: The Social Use and Meaning of the Folk
Dwelling in Southwestern North Carolina by Michael Ann Williams; and Building
with Logs: Western Log Construction in Context by Jennifer Eastman Attebery.
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