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На вводном занятии (19.10)
Термин «фольклор» / folklore
История термина
Истоки
фольклористики как науки; механистическая / органическая картина мира
Lore: значение
и классификация
Некоторые календарные традиции Англии
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Занятия 2 (26.10), 3 (02.11)
Что изучает фольклористика? (продолжение)
Folktale
Fairytale:
классификация (-и)
Практика: Reading a fairytale from Somerset
Анализ фольклорного текста:
понятия type, motif; ATU Index, Thompson’s Motif Index
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Alan Dundes –
Definition of folklore (1)
Folklore includes
myths, legends, folktales, jokes, proverbs, riddles, chants, charms, blessings,
curses, oaths, insults, retorts, taunts, teases, toasts, tongue-twisters, and greeting and leave-taking formulas (e.g., See you later, alligator). It also includes folk costume, folk dance, folk drama (and mime), folk art, folk belief (or superstition), folk medicine, folk instrumental music (e.g., fiddle tunes), folksongs (e.g., lullabies, ballads), folk speech (e.g., slang), folk similes (e.g., blind as a bat), folk metaphors (e.g., to paint the town red), and names (e.g., nicknames and place names). Folk poetry ranges from oral epics to autograph-book verse, epitaphs, latrinalia (writings on the walls of public bathrooms), limericks, ball-bouncing rhymes, jump-rope rhymes, finger and toe rhymes, dandling rhymes (to bounce children on the knee), counting-out rhymes (to determine who will be “it” in games), and nursery rhymes…
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Alan Dundes –
Definition of folklore (2)
… (continuing)
The list of folklore forms also contains games; gestures;
symbols; prayers (e.g., graces); practical jokes; folk etymologies; food recipes; quilt and embroidery designs; house, barn, and fence types; street vendor’s cries; and even the traditional conventional sounds used to summon animals or give them commands. There are such minor forms as mnemonic devices (e.g, the name “Roy G. Biv” to remember the colors of the spectrum in order), envelope sealers (e.g., “SWAK”—Sealed With A Kiss), and the traditional comments made after body emissions (e.g., after burps or sneezes). There are such major forms as festivals and special day (or holiday) customs (e.g., Christmas, Halloween, and birthday).
This list provides a sampling of the forms of folklore. It does not include all the forms. (1965)
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Folklore includes myths, legends, folktales...
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Folktale: definition
Broad sense: all traditional narratives in prose
(legends, anecdotes…)
Narrow sense: only fictional narratives
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Types of the folktale (broad sense)
Fairytale (wonder tale,
magic tale)
Legend – a short traditional oral narrative about
people, objects and places that exist(ed) in real life
Historical – about historical figures (heroes/kings/saints)
Local – about landmarks/buildings in a certain area
Migratory – found repeatedly at different places; same plot but different place names
Contemporary – urban legends
Fable – short comic tales making a moral point about human nature
Memorate - about a personal experience (“I saw a ghost”)
Tall tale – about astonishing adventures, unrealistically big animals and objects; presented as (not meant to be!) truth
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Approaches to explaining parallelism in folklore
Monogenesis
A story/song/ritual has
a single origin
It is reproduced by people > multiple
versions appear
Further versions are based on these versions, but may still resemble the original
This hypothesis is more popular in folklore studies
Polygenesis
A story/song/ritual was created many times, at different times and places, by different human beings
They are similar because:
- societies develop in the same way
- our psychological processes are the same
- we symbolize similar experiences in similar ways
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How can folktales be classified?
Catalogue (classification system): created
by Finnish folklorist Antti Aarne (1867 – 1925). Still
in use, almost universally accepted by folklorists.
Index of Folktale Types (1910) – Указатель сказочных типов; first published in German, Verzeichnis der Märchentypen
Revised and expanded by the American folktale scholar Stith Thompson: 1928, 1961 – the Aarne-Thompson system (AT)
Further improved in 2004 by Hans-Jörg Uther: The Types of International Folktales: A Classification and Bibliography – the Aarne-Thompson-Uther system (ATU)
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Key terms used in folktale research
Type
An established and
recognisable plot (“tale-type”)
>> Type set: a group of variants
of one and the same tale, based on the same plot
Example: ATU* 510A – Cinderella (=Persecuted Heroine)
*Aarne-Thompson-Uther
Motif
A recurrent element of a story (= an event, character, object or action)
Not the entire story – just an important part of it!
Example: Part of Cinderella as a complete tale – Motif N 711.6 “Prince sees heroine at ball and is enamoured (=falls in love)”
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Classification of motifs
Motif-index of folk-literature
Stith Thompson, 1955-1958
A motif
can be found in many tale types at the
same time
Example: Motif Index - Structure
A. Mythological Motifs
B. Animal Motifs
C. Motifs of Tabu
†C400--†C499. Speaking tabu.
†C420. Tabu: uttering secrets.
†C420.2. Tabu: not to speak about a certain happening.
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Motif C420.2 in an English legend: “The Old
Man at the White House”
THERE WAS ONCE a man
who lived in a white house in a certain village, and he knew everything about everybody who lived in the place.
In the same village there lived a woman who had a daughter called Sally, and one day she gave Sally a pair of yellow gloves and threatened to kill her if she lost them.
Now Sally was very proud of her gloves, but she was careless enough to lose one of them. After she had lost it she went to a row of houses in the village and inquired at every door if they had seen her glove. But everybody said “No,” and she was told to go and ask the old man that lived in the white house.
So Sally went to the white house and asked the old man if he had seen her glove. The old man said, “I have thy glove, and I will give it thee if thou wilt promise me to tell nobody where thou hast found it. And remember, if thou tells anybody I shall fetch thee out of bed when the clock strikes twelve at night.”
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Types and Motifs: Main sources
1) http://www.mftd.org/index.php?action=atu - ATU
2)
http://www.ruthenia.ru/folklore/thompson/ - Motifs
3) books.google.ru/books?id=uk-W8g_68b8C&printsec=frontcover&hl=de#v=onepage&q=1090&f=false – Baughman (a catalogue for
the English-speaking world)
4) http://www.pitt.edu/~dash/folktexts.html - Prof. Ashliman, Folklore and Mythology Electronic Texts
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The Apple Tree Man
Motifs
B251.1.2, “Animals speak to one
another at Christmas”
N541.1, “Treasure reveals itself only on Christmas
at midnight (or Christmas Eve)”
N511.1.9, “Treasure buried under tree”
N471, “Foolish attempt of second man to overhear secrets.”
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Little Rosy
Type
Motifs
E613.0.1, “Reincarnation of murdered child as bird”
G61,
Relative’s flesh eaten unwittingly”
N271, “Murder will out”
S31, Cruel stepmother”
ATU
720, My Mother Slew Me; My Father Ate Me, The Juniper Tree