- Applied folklore
Applied folklore is the branch of
folkloristics concerned with the study and use offolklore andtraditional cultural materials to address or solve real social problems. The term was coined in 1939 in a talk byfolklorist Benjamin A. Botkin who, along withAlan Lomax , became the foremost proponent of this approach over the next thiry years. Applied folklore is similar in its rationale and approach toapplied anthropology and otherapplied social science s, and like these other applied approaches often distinguishes itself from "pure" research, that which has no explicit problem-solving aims.Botkin's development of the approach emerged from his work on the collecting by the
Federal Writers' Project of oral narratives of formerslaves , when he worked for theLibrary of Congress . He saw the dissemination of these materials as having the potential to improverace relations in theUnited States and to combat prejudice. The Abolition movement had similarly used the oral narratives of escaped slaves, such as those collected byWilliam Still in his "Underground Railroad Records", to draw support for their cause. Botkin's landmark work, "Lay My Burden Down" (1945) was the first American book to treat oral testimonies as historicalevidence , and it was another thirty years before this became accepted practice. Botkin also worked with Quaker activistRachel Davis DuBois to develop public programs to improve race andethnic relations by incorporating cultural practices and materials into neighborhood events, such asfestivals and block parties. Independent of this,Myles Horton ,Zilphia Horton ,Guy Carawan ,Candie Carawan , and others at theHighlander Folk School inTennessee incorporatedfolk song andfolk dance into the training ofcivil rights activists, such asRosa Parks and John Lewis.In the 1960s, other American folklorists began to apply knowledge gained from folkloric sources to address social issues, most notably drawing on
folk medicine in the teaching and practice of holistic andcross-cultural approaches tomedicine andpublic health . Folklorists also began to work as consultants incity planning ,gerontology ,economic development , multiculturaleducation , conservation, and other fields.Sources
*Botkin, B.A., "Lay My Burden Down". Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1945.
*Jones, Michael Owen, ed., "Putting Folklore to Use". Lexington: University of Kentucky Press, 1994.
*Goldstein, Diane, "Once Upon a Virus: AIDS Legends and Vernacular Risk Perception". Logan: Utah State University Press: 2004.
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