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folklore |
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folkloreOral traditions and culture of a people, expressed in legends, riddles, songs, tales, and proverbs. The term was coined in 1846 by W J Thoms (1803-1885), but the founder of the systematic study of the subject was Jacob Grimm; see also oral literature. The approach to folklore has varied greatly; the early alternative term ‘Popular Antiquities’ suggests that high value was originally placed on elements showing continuity with archaic traditions, giving knowledge of past events ignored by official or academic history, and providing evidence of legal and religious observances otherwise forgotten. The German scholar Max Müller (1823-1900) interpreted folklore as evidence of nature myths; James Frazer was the exponent of the comparative study of early and popular folklore as mutually explanatory; Laurence Gomme (1853-1916) adopted a historical analysis; and Bronislaw Malinowski and Alfred Radcliffe-Brown (1881-1955) examined the material as an integral element of a given living culture. Folklore overlaps with ethnography, cultural anthropology, and sociology, but their roots and theoretical concerns are not the same.
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| At first sight such a work seems to be a miscellany of myths, technical advice, moral precepts, and folklore maxims without any unifying principle; and critics have readily taken the view that the whole is a canto of fragments or short poems worked up by a redactor. The surprising skill which Jonson, author of such plays, showed in devising the court masks, daintily unsubstantial creations of moral allegory, classical myth, and Teutonic folklore, is rendered less surprising, perhaps, by the lack in the masks of any very great lyric quality. They were to go to Rockett's--the farm of one Cloke, in the southern counties--where, she assured them, they would meet the genuine England of folklore and song. |
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