- Public folklore
Public folklore is the term for the work done by folklorists in public settings in the
United States andCanada outside of universities and colleges, such as arts councils,museums ,folklife festivals , radio stations, etc. The term is actually short for "public sector folklore" and was first used by members of theAmerican Folklore Society in the early 1970s.Archie Green is generally credited as the founder of the public folklore movement, although his work builds on that ofBen Botkin andAlan Lomax , going back as far as the 1930s. (They called their work "applied folklore ," a related but distinct paradigm.)The birth of public folklore can be traced back to the creation of the
American Folklife Center at theLibrary of Congress in 1970, by an act of Congress, sponsored by Sen.Ralph Yarborough (D-TX) and written by Green and then-Senate aideJim Hightower . Other national programs were later established at theSmithsonian Institution and theNational Endowment for the Arts (NEA), where prominent folklorists such asRalph Rinzler ,Alan Jabbour , andBess Lomax Hawes worked. Funding programs were also established in the 1970s and 1980s in over 40 state arts councils, and these facilitated the eventual creation or funding of major non-profit centers forfolklife documentation and presentation, such asCity Lore and theCenter for Traditional Music and Dance in New York,Texas Folklife Resources ,Northwest Folklife , theWestern Folklife Center , and thePhiladelphia Folklore Project .Public folklorists are engaged with the documentation, preservation, and presentation of traditional forms of
folk art s,craft ,folk music , and other genres of traditionalfolklife . In later years, public folklorists have also become involved in economic and community development projects.Each year, some 15 outstanding American folk artists and performers are awarded
National Heritage Fellowship s from the NEA for their lifetime achievement. Some more widely known awardees over the years have includedJohn Lee Hooker ,B.B. King ,Clifton Chenier ,Earl Scruggs ,Michael Flatley ,Shirley Caesar ,Albertina Walker , Janette Carter,Koko Taylor ,Brownie McGhee ,Sonny Terry ,Jean Ritchie ,Sunnyland Slim ,Lydia Mendoza ,Boozoo Chavis , Zakir Hussain,Helen Cordero ,Margaret Tafoya ,Santiago Jiménez, Jr. ,John Cephas ,Bois Sec Ardoin ,Mick Moloney ,Clarence Fountain & the Blind Boys,Esther Martinez , and theDixie Hummingbirds .The Smithsonian Institution features the
Smithsonian Folklife Festival every June and July which attracts upwards of two million people to hear live performances and view demonstrations of traditional crafts.Public folklorists also work in "folk arts in the schools" programs, presenting master traditional artists to primary and secondary schools in demonstrations and residencies. They develop apprenticeship programs to foster the teaching of traditional arts by recognized masters. They also present traditional music on radio programs such as "
American Routes " onPublic Radio International . Occasionally they producedocumentary film s on aspects of traditional arts; Smithsonian folkloristMarjorie Hunt won an Academy Award for her 1984 short documentary film "The Stone Carvers " about the carvers at theNational Cathedral in Washington, D.C.External links
* [http://www.loc.gov/folklife American Folklife Center]
* [http://www.nea.gov/honors/heritage/allheritage.html NEA Heritage Awards]
* [http://www.folklife.si.edu/index.html Center for Folklife and Cultural Heritage, Smithsonian Institution]
* [http://www.folkculture.org/ Fund for Folk Culture]
* [http://www.citylore.org/ CityLore]
* [http://www.ctmd.org/ Center for Traditional Music and Dance]
* [http://www.folkloreproject.org/ Philadelphia Folklore Project]
* [http://www.culturalpartnerships.org Institute for Cultural Partnerships, Harrisburg]
* [http://www.njfolklife.com/ New Jersey Folklife Partners]
* [http://www.nyfolklore.org/ New York Folklore Society]
* [http://www.texasfolklife.org/ Texas Folklife Resources]
* [http://www.nwfolklife.org/ Northwest Folklife]
* [http://www.nefolklife.org/pages/1/index.htm Nebraska Folklife Network]
* [http://www.westernfolklife.org Western Folklife Center]
* [http://www.dafos.dk The Danish Folklore Archives]Sources and further reading
*Baron, Robert, and Nicholas R. Spitzer, eds., "Public Folklore". Washington: Smithsonian Institution Press, 1992.
*Feintuch, Burt, ed., "Conservation of Culture: Folklorists and the Public Sector". Lexington: University Press of Kentucky, 1988.
*Green, Archie, "Torching the Fink Books: And Other Essays on Vernacular Culture". Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2001.
*Hufford, Mary, ed. "Conserving Culture: A New Discourse on Heritage". Champaign: University of Illinois Press, 1994.
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