(IMP) Dundes FolkloreMirrorCulture 1969
(IMP) Dundes FolkloreMirrorCulture 1969
(IMP) Dundes FolkloreMirrorCulture 1969
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and other forms of folklore is not neces- collectors, rewrote the folklore they col-
lected. This retouching of oral tales con-
sarily to allow the investigator to choose
tinues today in the children's literature
a way of life other than his own. Rather
field where reconstructed, reconstituted
by identifying the similarities, the actual
stories written in accordance with written
historical cognates such as hundreds of
versions of Cinderella, a tale which folk-not oral conventions are palmed off as
lorists label as Aarne-Thompson tale type genuine folktales.
510 in the internationally known index ofOne can see that the basic mistrust of
Indo-European folktales first published infolk materials is part of a general am-
bivalence about the materials of oral tra-
1910, or by identifying the near-similarities,
the probably noncognate folkloristic par- dition, the materials of the folk. On the one
allels which seem to depend upon univer-hand, the folk and their products were cele-
brated as a national treasure of the past;
sal or quasi-universal human experiences
(such as the introduction of death into the
on the other hand, the folk were wrongly
world because of some unthinking or fool-identified with the illiterate in a literate
ish action on the part of a culture hero society and thus the folk as a concept was
or trickster figure), one has convincing identified exclusively with the vulgar and
the uneducated. (The folk to a modern folk-
data which can effectively be used to pro-
mote international understanding. If onlylorist is any group of people whatsoever
who share at least one common linking
the Turks and Greeks realized that they
had the same folktales and the same factor, e.g., religion, occupation, ethnicity,
lovable wise fool of a Hodja figure in geographical
many location, etc. which leads to
of these tales. The same holds for the Arabs Jewish folklore, lumberjack folklore, Negro
and the Jews. In this light, it is sad tofolklore, and California folklore. As an
think that folklore, instead of being used American I know American folklore; as a
as a constructive force for internationalism,professor I know campus folklore; as a
has all too frequently been the tool of member of a family, I know my own family
excessive nationalism. folklore.) The equation of folklore with
The history of folklore studies revealsignorance has continued. The word 'folk-
lore' itself considered as an item of folk
that folklorists in many different countries
have often been inspired by the desire to speech means fallacy, untruth, error. Think
preserve their national heritage. The of the phrase "That's folklore." It is similar
Grimms, for example, at the beginning ofto the meaning of myth' in such phrases as
the nineteenth century, imbued with na- "the myth of race." This is not , however,
tionalism and romanticism, and armed with what folklore and myth mean to the pro-
the fashionable methodology of historical fessional folklorist. A myth is but one form
reconstruction, collected folktales and leg-or genre of folklore, a form which consists
ends with the hope of rescuing somethingof a sacred narrative explaining how the
ur-German, that is, something truly Teu-world and man came to be in their present
tonic, before it faded from the scene al- form. Folklore consists of a variety of
together. The Grimms were surprised andgenres most of which are found among all
probably more than a little disappointedpeoples of the earth. Nevertheless, the as-
when they discovered that many of their sociation of folklore with error (consider
"Teutonic" tales had almost exact analogues'folk' medicine as opposed to 'scientific'
in other European countries. The Grimms medicine ) has made it difficult for the study
incidentally, like most nineteenth centuryof folklore as a discipline to gain academic
the "dozens"
respectability and has generallyand the epic
dis- toast are ex-
tremely
couraged the use and study ofviable forms of American
folklore by Negro
educators. folklore and they encapsulate the critical
It is still mistakenly thought that thepoints and problems in Negro family struc-
only people who study folklore are anti-ture and in Negro-white relations. One
quarian types, devotees of ballads whichcould teach both literature and social
are no longer sung and collectors of quaintstudies from such folkloristic texts (were
customs which are no longer practiced.they not obscene' by our standards) wit
Folklore in this false view is equated with the advantage that these texts would b
survivals from an age past, survivals which known by the students from their ow
are doomed not to survive. Folklore is lives and experience.
Why not teach children about the na-
gradually dying out, we are told. More-
ture
over, since folklore is defined as error, it of poetry by examining their ow
folk poetry: nursery rhymes, jump rop
is thought by some educators to be a good
thing that folklore is dying out. In rhymes,
fact, hand clap rhymes, ball bouncin
it has been argued that one of the rhymes,
pur- dandling rhymes, and autograp
poses of education is to help stampbook
out verse among others. There is almos
folklore. As man evolves, he leaves folk-
no method or approach found in the study
of literature which could not also be ap
lore behind such that the truly civilized
plied to folk materials. One could discus
man is conceived to be folkloreless. From
formal features such as metrics, rhyme, al
this kind of thinking, one can understand
why education and folklore have been literation;
on one could discuss content fea
tures such as characterization, motivation
opposite sides and also why when well
meaning educators move into other cul- themes. By using the materials of folklor
as a point of departure, the educationa
tures, e. g., in Africa or in a ghetto school,
they actually believe they are doing their process may be comprehended as dealin
with the real world rather than with a
students a service by helping to suppress
local customs, superstitions, folk speech, world apart from the world in which the
and other folkloristic traditions. So it is students live. With folklore, the classroom
becomes a laboratory or forum for a con-
that African students are taught Shake-
sideration of "real life" as it is experienced
speare and Chaucer as great literature
while their own superb oral literatureand
is perceived by those being educated.
not deemed worthy of classroom treatment, Let me briefly provide just a few examples
assuming that the western educated teach- of folklore and try to illustrate how they
er even knows of its existence. How many might be used to enliven and stimulate
classroom discussions.
teachers of literature, of the epic in partic-
One technique which can immediately
ular, are aware of the fact that the epic
show
is a living oral form and that epics up to children something important about
the nature of oral tradition is to select
13,000 lines are now being sung in Yugo-
one item of folklore and ask each child to
slavia, among other places? How many
tell the other members of the class his
teachers of American Negro children have
version of the item. It doesn't matter what
ever heard of the "dozens" (or "rapping
and capping" or "sounding" etc. ) or of the
the item is: when Christmas presents are
opened (Christmas Eve, Christmas morn-
"toast", an important Negro folklore genre
in rhyme reminiscent of epic form? ing, Yet one on Christmas Eve and the rest on
the technique of verbal dueling known Christmas
as day, etc. ) or what one says near
the end of Hide and Seek to summon all be one of the most important lessons they
the other players: Oily, oily oxen free,are ever likely to learn.
Having illustrated the nature of vari-
Oily Oily Ocean free, (All ye, all ye 'outs'
in free?????), Home free all, etc. After a in folklore, the teacher might wish
ation
number of versions have been elicited, the
to discuss why there is variation. Here the
students should be able to see that al-
difference between oral and written (or
printed) traditions is crucial. Folklore is
though there is considerable diversity,
passed
there is also considerable uniformity. If on by means of person to person
there are differences-such as how contact.
many And an item of folklore may be
candles are placed on the birthdaychanged
cake by different individuals in ac-
(some have the number of candles cordance
equal with their own individual needs,
the demands of a particular social con-
to the number of years old while others
have that number plus one with the text-the
extra make-up of the audience- is it
boys
grow on, etc.), even these differences are and girls, just boys, children and
grown-ups,
traditional. How many children believe that etc. or the requirements of a
the number of candles left burning new
afterage. So it is that each item of folk-
the attempt to blow them out signifies lorethe
is passed on through time, sometimes
number of children one will have? How remaining the same, sometimes changing.
many believe the number left burningThissig- is why the task of collecting and
nifies the number of years to pass before
analyzing folklore can never be completed.
Tomorrow's version of a folksong may or
one's wish (made right before the blowing
attempt) comes true? Through suchmay de-not be the same as the one we know
vices, the children can learn that there are which in turn may or may not be
today
frequently subtraditions within traditions.the same as the one which was known in
Then the teacher may ask the children the past. This is in marked contrast to the
"Which version is correct?" "Which version products of written tradition. If one reads
is the right one?" Normally, there will be a play of Shakespeare or a novel of James
extended debate on this, individual studentsJoyce today, one can be reasonably sure
championing their own individual versions,that one hundred years from now, the
perhaps pointing to the statistical evidenceidentical text will be read by others.
available within the classroom to support There is a tendency to underestimate
one version over another. Gradually, thethe differences between a visual/written
children will come to realize that in folk- record and an aural/oral record. It has only
lore as in life, there is often no one correct
recently been suggested that the mass
or right version. One traditional version media,
is radio, television, motion pictures,
just as traditional as another version. A's
etc. have, by discouraging or impinging
way of observing Christmas or birthday upon time formerly spent in reading, made
rituals is no better and no worse than B's. us an oral rather than a written culture.
Isn't this a marvelous way of showing whatActually, one should say, has made us an
ethnocentrism is: people insisting that theoral culture again . In evolutionary terms,
way they know is best and proper while the pre-literate society which was orally orient-
strange unfamiliar way is wrong? And isn't ed became literate, but now we have 'post-
this a marvelous way of teaching tolerance?literate' man who is influenced by oral
If children can learn that their fellows' ways communication once more. Yet the educa-
are not "wrong" but "alternative, equally tion system has not always kept pace. The
traditional" ways of doing things, this could
traditional emphasis has been upon "read-
folklore
mechanism for reversing the could help anyone
normal adult- seriously in-
child relationship in our society. In our
terested in understanding children. I refer
society, it is the parent or to
specifically teacher
that portion who
of children's folk-
knows all the answers and who insists
lore which is performed by children for
other children. This is distinct from that
upon proposing difficult if not 'impossible'
questions to children. However, in the portion
rid- of children's folklore which con-
dle context, either the parent doesn't sists
know of materials imposed upon children
by parents and teachers. The analysis of
the answer to the elephant or little moron
joking question- in which case thethe latter kind of children's folklore would
child
can have the great pleasure of tellingprobably
him give more of an insight into par-
what the answer is or the parent ents
givesand teachers' worldview than the
worldview of children. I suspect that in
the 'wrong' answer (e.g., 'newspaper'
would be considered 'wrong' by the child dealing with children's literature,
courses
who has another answer in mind- and it is this latter category which receives
most
aren't there plenty of instances where theof the attention. In other words, the
emphasis is on 'literature for children'
child answers an adult's question perfect-
rather
ly well but fails because his answer was than 'literature of children'! ( By
'literature
not the particular answer the adult de- of children' I mean their oral
literature, their folklore, their traditions,
sired? This is also what happens whenever
an unthinking adult asks the kind ofnot their little individual written compo-
ques-
sitions or poems.) This is, in my opinion,
tions which can be labelled as being "Guess
what's in my mind" questions. In this the in-
same kind of thinking that makes
stance where the parent has givenPeace
the Corps teachers teach Shakespeare
'wrong' answer, the child has the and Chaucer to African students instead
even
more exquisite pleasure of correcting of utilizing African folktales and proverbs,
rather
than merely informing the parent.) thatChil-is, using some of the native' liter-
dren also use riddles with their peers ature
whereas the basis for an understanding of
the
a similar function is evident. A child goesnature of prose and poetry. Education-
al, as awell as foreign, policy is invariably
one up if he has a riddle which stumps
made
friend. I should perhaps mention that rid-in accordance with the value system
of us, the teacher or the American. Such
dles or joking questions are by no means
confined to children's usage. Many decisions
adults may be rational from our point
of view; they may even prove to be 'cor-
use such devices in daily interpersonal
rect,' but in the majority of cases, these
rituals. Some of these riddling questions
decisions are probably all too often made
provide serious reflections of our culture.
Do you remember the 'knock-knock' without
cycle? sufficient knowledge of the groups
Well, have you heard the World War III
we honestly want to help. We tend to think
of the 'other' people be they inhabitants
knock-knock joke? No? Okay, "Knock-
knock" ( audience ) : "Who's there?- (of villages in Asia or children in our class-
long
room as poor little sponges who need to
silent pause- signifying that no one would
be left to answer in the event of total soak up as much of our material as they
nuclear world war. ) possibly can.
The phrase "culturally deprived" is a
Literature for Children
prime example of this faulty kind of think-
or Literature of Children
ing. From an anthropological perspective,
of course, there can be no such thing as
The analysis of the content of children's
lore, one is very likely to be able to de- "Excuse me, professor, but I don't see why
lineate the principal topics of crisis and X cubed equals у cubed. Why wouldn't x
anxiety among that people. So if Ameri- cubed equal у cubed plus z cubed?" The
can folklore, both adult and children's folk-professor replied, "That's a very interest-
lore has a sexual element, then we must ing question but I don't want to take up
face the problem which is reflected in the valuable class time with it. See me at the
folklore. Squelching folklore as if such a end of the hour." In a variant of this joke,
thing were really possible- it is impossible it is a professor of art history who offers
to censor oral tradition as opposed to print a seminar in advanced Burmese vase paint-
-would not help in solving the original ing. Again there is one student and again
problems which generated the collective the professor reads his lecture. This time,
fantasies in the first place. the professor is at the faculty club talking
to his colleagues. When they discover that
Folklore About Teachers he has only one student for the seminar,
they ask him what he is doing in the class.
There can be no doubt that folklore re- He tells them that he reads his lecture
flects culture and as a final example, just
I as he always has. "Good heavens," one
colleague exclaims, "with just one student
will briefly mention teacher folklore. The
folklore of and about teachers reflects both why don't you run the class as a discus-
teachers' attitudes about themselves and sion?" whereupon the professor replied,
"What is there to discuss?" Of course, I
students' attitudes about teachers. There is
the resentment of administrators as illus- don't have to say how distasteful modern
trated in the numerous dean stories, e.g., students find this philosophy of education.
"Old deans never die; they just lose theirThe folklore of teaching includes ele-
mentary school teachers too. For example,
faculties." There are the parodies of teach-
ing methods. An English teacher is ex- there's the story of the elementary school
plaining to her class how to write a short teacher who taught look-say reading. One
day in backing her car out of a parking
story: It should have religion, high society,
sex, and mystery. Within a few moments, place on the street, she banged into the
-past, present, future; space- length, width, Those interested in general folklore theory
depth; and language- good, better, best, should consult Alan Dundes, ed., The Study of
etc. This is why we have the three R's Folklore (Englewood Cliffs : Prentice-Hall, 1965).
For American folklore in particular, one may
(Reading, 'Riting and 'Rithmetic), Pri- look at Jan Harold Brunvand, The Study of
mary, Secondary, and Higher Education,American Folklore: An Introduction (New York :
the latter with its three degrees B.A., M.W. W. Norton, 1968) and Richard M. Dorson,
American Folklore (Chicago: University of Chi-
A. and PhD., the first of which can be cago Press, 1959). Those curious about the num-
cum laude, magna cum laude, and sum-ber three may enjoy Alan Dundes, "The Number
ma cum laude. This is why we have suchThree in American Culture/' in Every Man His
Way : Readings in Cultural Anthropology (edited
pedagogical principles as: "Preview, Teach, by Alan Dundes) Englewood Cliffs: Prentice-
and Review" which retains its tripartiteHall, 1968), p. 401-424.