Friday, October 2, 2015

Finding Folklore

What is folklore?  When most think of folklore or folk tales they conjure unto themselves images from Grimm fairy tales or Hans Christian Anderson stories.  These certainly do, in fact, constitute the most recognizable of folk stories.  But, do modern novels or films meet the standard?  Are your stories folklore?
When the brothers Grimm traversed Europe they gathered local tales from communities and villages throughout.  They compiled these into a collection that has entertained and even frightened generations.  These European stories of valiant princes and noble heroines, heroic underdogs and monstrous villains have long been staples of what most consider folklore.  But this is not the measure of a folk tale.
Almost by definition, folklore is a story or collection of stories unique to the people, or folk, of a specific geographic region.  Folklore speaks to the hopes, fears and traditions of an area and helps to form a geographic identity.  In this way, the western world and even the United States has it’s own folklore, and these might include many modern stories.
In colonial and post colonial America, in the North East stories like Washington Irving’s The Legend of Sleepy Hollow or Rip Van Winkle or the fictionalization of the life and times of John Chapman, known to posterity as Johnny Appleseed, are examples of early American folklore. 
As settlers moved across the plains   From their observations and their shared experiences western tales of Cowboys, Pecos Bill being one such example, became dime store fodder.  Often depicting the Native American culture inaccurately and even vilifying them as well as sometimes glorifying renegade outlaws like Billy the Kid, western stories became some of the most successful folktales in the world.  These stories were even sold and told in the “old world” and came to solidify a world image of America and it’s people as fiercely independent. 


of the Western U.S., they created their own folklore based on the harsh untamed lands they settled, and the pioneer attitudes that often accompanied such an exodus.
Soon and into the 20th century, America’s West Coast was settled, and like other regions before, they began to shape a geo-specific cultural identity.  Among the many genres that have come from this region, one of the most prominent is the detective mystery noir.  In Chandler stories or others, the American West Coast is as prominent a character as the protagonist or the antagonist.  Hard-boiled private eyes, defiant of traditional law enforcement, the iconic femme fatale and the stark city-after-dark descriptions unique to this region rapidly skyrocketed the genre. 
Since the inception of these staples of the American story, they have pushed and stretched the boundaries of folklore beyond the fantastical and into the almost surreal.
A new phenomenon in folk tales has emerged in the late 20th and early 21st centuries.  The geo-specific nature of folklore has been challenged.  The emergence of cinema and the worldwide web has helped shape a new kind of collective community.  This time, instead of geographic commonality, members of this community tend to be distinguished by age, experiences or other social standards.  In this way, subcultures have formed making stories of nearly all genres folksy by virtue of their distribution or popularity among a specific global social segment.
With all of the story components of traditional folklore, heavy drama, unlikely heroic characters, damsels or innocence in distress and the rise of underdogs to defeat sometime terrifying and melodramatic villains, as well as their proliferation of society’s pop-culture, it is arguable that the Harry Potter stories or Star Wars could be considered a kind of non-geo-specific generational folklore.
With this understanding of classic and modern folklore, do your favorite stories qualify as folklore?  

Do you write folklore? 


Don’t we all?

G.W. Pomichter's Lot 28 on iBooks

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