Vernacular Culture: The Folklore Blog

This blog chronicles recent developments in folklore studies, in my very subjective style. I hope to review books, websites and blogs. It might also include much griping about folklore and fakelorists. In a word, it's folklotastic!

Name:
Location: Acton, Mass., United States

I am an unemployed folklorist and a daddy.

April 04, 2007

April's Batch of Folklore Books

Here it is, a hotly anticipated list of books coming out this month. It's a mad mad mad folklore world.

March 13, 2007

New This Month

First off, apologies to all three of my readers for not updating in months. I promise this will never happen again, sincerely (uproarious cackle).

Here's a list of new books coming out this month that would be of interest to you and the folklorists in your life:

  • The Buried Book: The Loss and Rediscovery of the Great Epic of Gilgamesh - David Damrosch. Henry Holt & Company, 315 pp. The story of how the epic was discovered and deciphered by George Smith in 1872.
  • Morality and Expediency: The Folklore of Academic Politics - F. G. Bailey. Aldine, 237 pp. Paperback reissue of text from the 1970s. Read review of book here.
  • Irish American Folklore in New England - E. Moore Quinn. Academica. St. Patrick's Day is only three days away! Living here in Boston, I can't escape this. Proffesor Quinn's homepage can be found here.
  • Apollodorus: Library and Hyginus: Myths: Two Handbooks of Greek Mythology - Apollodorus and Hyginus, translated by Stephen Trzaskoma and R. Scott Smith. Hackett Publishing Company, 247 pp. Two Greek and Roman mythographs collected in one handy-dandy volume.
  • Blackfeet Indian Stories - George Bird Grinnell. Riverbend, 144 pp. Originally collected in the 1870s, is actually available in many different editions.
  • Flower of Paradise and Other Armenian Tales. Bonnie C. Marshall and Virginia Tashjian. Libraries Unlimited, 232 pp. Part of the World Folklore Series.
  • Folktales of the Jews, Volume 2: Tales from Eastern Europe - Dan Ben-Amos and Dov Noy. Jewish Publication Society, 550 pp. Both editors are heavy-hitters in the field, this is a collection I look forward to getting my mitts on. It appears that the publication date pushed back till May, but what the hey, I'll still mention it here. Also, the Israel Folktale Archive is named for Professor Noy.
  • Ganesh Goes to Lunch: And Other Tales of Ancient India - Kamla Kapur. Mandala Publishing, 128 pp. Collection of tales from the Ramayama and Mahabharat.
  • Remedies and Rituals: Folk Medicine in Norway and the New Land - Kathleen Stokker. Minnesota Historical Society, 260 pp. I look forward to reading this, Professor Stokker has an interesting bibliography. Her homepage is here. I've already added her Folklore Fights the Nazis to my ILL request page.
  • Thebiad: Seven Against Thebes - Publius Papinius Statius, translated by Charles Stanley Ross. Johns Hopkins University Press, 432 pp. New translation of work from 92 C.E.
  • Wild Ride: The History and Lore of Rodeo - Joel H. Bernstein. Gibbs Smith, 176 pp.
  • Opera and Sovereignty: Transforming Myths in Eighteenth-Century Italy - Martha Feldman. University of Chicago Press, 432 pp. This is showing a September release date, but it somehow made it into my March pile.
  • Senet, Gaming with the Gods, the Games of Senet and Ancient Egyptian Religious Beliefs - P. Piccione. Brill Academic Publishers, 320 pp. Part of the Egyptological Memoirs Series.
  • Fossil Legends of the First Americans - Adrienne Mayor. Princeton University Press, 488 pp.
If you are one of the authors or publishers of the above books, and you stumbled upon this link by googling your own name, then please give me a shout-out. I intend on getting most of these books by interlibrary loan, but, hey, review copies are most appreciated!

December 08, 2006

The Penguin Thief

Local story making the rounds about a child who steals a penguin from the New England Aquarium, as reported by the Boston Herald. I have yet to hear this story, but I am sure to hear it soon from either someone in the break room at work or one of my in-laws.

December 06, 2006

Fixing the damn Blog

For a while there was something screwy going on with this blog. Not screwy in the sense of what I'm writing makes no sense at all. It's always that type of screwy. No, screwy in that it was unreadable in certain browsers - mine included, and that I haven't set up the RSS feed properly. I have upgraded to blogger beta, and the blog looked fine on my browser as of two minutes ago. So, we're off and running again. . .

November 24, 2006

Plagiarism and Folklore

Slate has an interesting article on a bunch of nineteenth century writers stole from each other and how by using twenty-first century technology of Google Books will lead to more of this sort of thing. The funny part is England Howell stole a passage from Sabine Baring-Gould which she, in fact, had stolen from an earlier text on Northern Mythology. Y'all better make sure your disses and other stuff you'paraphrased' are vetted.

November 20, 2006

Oh yeah, I'm terrible at updating this

To my fan: I'm sorry I haven't been updating this. I promise to be a good boy. I'm going to kick this getting-on-with-my-real-life jag and start obsesssing over something as unprofitable (both monetarily and spiritually) as folklore.

On that note, let me rant about the most boring and misguided podcasts I have heard in a long while: The Myth Show.. I'm sure this guy means well, but he is so boring. His musical bed is jazzed-up New Age pap. He quotes wikipedia. He has a chub-on for Joseph Campbell. I considered recommending this to a friend who is developing a seventh-grade myth curriculum. But jeesh, I'm afraid this show would hold the interest of a class for even the scant seventeen minutes the show runs. I need volunteers to help me develop a folklore podcast that's both academically rigorous and interesting. I know, that's a tall order.

The folks at Hometown Tales have an interesting and funny show, but I would have a hard time either incorporating it into a folklore class or introducing a newbie into folklore studies.

Which brings me to the point about the point. What should the point of a folklore podcast be? Should it be geared to those outside of our admittedly small circle of folklorists? Should we evangelize to the unconverted? Or should we bicker among ourselves, becoming embroiled in silly internecine conflict over minutia and esoterica? (Personally I prefer the latter, that's why I wa a big fan of Lingua Franca while it lasted).

I just have this feeling that, as a folklorist, I am alone in this world. The discussion board over at Newfolk a couple of weeks ago was abuzz with talk about "Cultural Cringe." Well I personally cringe everytime I tell people I'm a folklorist. Especially since it is usually accompanied by "Would you like fries with that?" With colleges getting rid of folklore departments (as well as Russian departments), with English and Anthro departments looking down upon folklorists, and with the dearth of actual opportunity in the field, I can't help but feel that I chose the wrong vocation. With all my professed love for Lingua Franca, I never read that article that came out ten years ago asking "Whither Folklore?" Had I done so I might have just sold my soul and went to law school or ed school or culinary school.

March 23, 2006

McSweeneys Take on Popular Urban Legend

Have you ever wondered about the logistics behind some popular urban legends. Jim Stallard over at McSweeneys Internet Tendency presents a humourous take on one that we've all heard before.

Man Marries Goat

There must be an Aarne-Thompson type number for this story.