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📖 Core Concepts Folklore: Shared expressive culture (stories, jokes, crafts, rituals) of a social group; transmitted informally and anonymously. Folkloristics: Academic discipline that studies folklore artifacts, their transmission, and social functions. Folklore Artifact: Any verbal, material, or customary item (tale, dance, handcrafted object, festival) that embodies group identity. Performance: The act that brings a folklore artifact to life; without performance the item remains inert. Tradition‑bearer vs. Audience: The performer who transmits the artifact and the receivers whose feedback shapes future renditions. Bascom’s Four Functions: Escape, validation, pedagogy, and social control. Historic‑Geographic Method: Early “text‑only” approach tracking variants across time/space. Holistic / Behavioral Turn: Post‑WWII focus on context, performance, and the dynamic performer‑audience feedback loop. --- 📌 Must Remember Origin of term: “Folklore” coined 1846 by William Thoms (folk + lore). Folklore transmission: Informal, oral, demonstrative, often with multiple variants; anonymity is typical. American Folklife Preservation Act (1976): Defines “folklife” broadly (customs, beliefs, skills, language, art, etc.) and stresses oral/imitative learning. Anderson’s Law of Auto‑Correction: Audience feedback keeps variants close to the original form. Barre Toelken’s Continuum: Performers balance conservation (stability) with innovation (change). Aarne–Thompson classification: Standard system for European folktales (origin 1910, expanded by Stith Thompson). Victor Turner’s performance traits: Playful, framed (clear start/end), symbolic. Digital folklore: User‑generated content (YouTube, memes) continues traditional cycles in new media. --- 🔄 Key Processes Transmission Cycle Observation → Imitation → Repetition → (Audience) Feedback → Auto‑correction → Next performance. Historic‑Geographic Comparison Collect variants → Map across regions & epochs → Identify common core → Infer original form. Holistic Fieldwork (post‑WWII) Identify folk group → Record artifact (text) → Document production, use, and social context → Analyze performer‑audience dynamics. Digital Folklore Propagation Creation → Upload → Sharing (shares, comments) → Remix → Re‑upload → New cycle. --- 🔍 Key Comparisons Oral vs. Material Lore Oral: Emphasizes performance, framing, symbolic language. Material: Emphasizes text (physical artifact) and production/use context. Historic‑Geographic Method vs. Holistic Approach Historic‑Geographic: Focus on textual variants, isolates artifact. Holistic: Integrates performance, context, and feedback loops. Active vs. Passive Tradition‑bearer Active: Continues to perform/teach. Passive: Retains memory only, does not rehearse publicly. Traditional Folklore (pre‑digital) vs. Digital Folklore Traditional: Transmitted face‑to‑face, limited speed, localized variants. Digital: Instant global spread, rapid remixing, new “user‑generated” cycles. --- ⚠️ Common Misunderstandings “Folklore = Old Things” – Folklore is living; new artifacts (e.g., memes) are folklore. “Only Rural Peasants Produce Folklore” – Modern view: any social group (occupational, ethnic, age‑based) creates folklore. “Performance = Text Only” – Performance includes gesture, context, and audience interaction, not just spoken words. “Legal Acts Freeze Folklore” – The 1976 Act protects but does not freeze; folklore continues to evolve. --- 🧠 Mental Models / Intuition “Folklore as a Conversation” – Think of each performance as a turn in a dialogue; the audience’s response nudges the next turn. “Cultural DNA” – Core motifs (plot skeletons, symbols) are the genes; variations are mutations that survive only if they fit the current cultural environment. --- 🚩 Exceptions & Edge Cases Intentional Innovation: When a performer deliberately alters a tale to comment on current events, the change may become a new, stable variant if audience accepts it. Hybrid Artifacts: Mass‑produced items (e.g., Christmas ornaments) can acquire folklore status when they are used in ritualized ways. Digital “Lost” Folklore: Some online memes disappear quickly; without repeated performance they become “historical relics.” --- 📍 When to Use Which Identify Variant Origins → Use Historic‑Geographic Method if you need a diachronic map of textual changes. Understand Social Meaning → Apply Holistic/Behavioral Approach to explore performance, audience feedback, and context. Classify Tale Types → Refer to the Aarne–Thompson system for European narratives. Analyze Material Objects → Focus on Production & Use Context (who made it, why, how used). Study Modern Folklore → Treat user‑generated digital content as contemporary oral tradition; use the same feedback‑loop model. --- 👀 Patterns to Recognize Framing Signals: Opening phrases (“Once upon a time…”) or ritualized gestures that mark a performance’s start. Redundancy: Repeated core motifs across variants (e.g., “the trickster outwits the authority”). Feedback Cues: Laughter, applause, or corrective remarks indicating acceptability of a version. Innovation Hotspots: Periods of cultural upheaval (new technology, political change) often spawn many intentional variations. --- 🗂️ Exam Traps “Folklore is static” – Distractor that ignores the dynamic feedback loop and innovation. Confusing “text” with “context” – Choosing the historic‑geographic method for a material artifact when the question asks about production/use context. Assuming only rural groups produce folklore – Modern expansion to multiple overlapping folk groups. Over‑emphasizing legal definitions – The Act defines folklife but does not dictate how folklore changes; exam may test the distinction between protection and evolution. Mixing up active vs. passive tradition‑bearers – Remember only active bearers continue performance; passive ones simply remember. ---
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