Interpreting Folklore..". Dundes has produced a work which will be useful to both students and teachers who wish to broaden their understanding of modern folklore." -- Center for Southern Folklore Magazine "It is impossible ever to remain unimpressed with [Dundes'] excursuses, however much one may be in disagreement (or not) with his conclusions." -- Forum for Modern Language Studies Often controversial, Alan Dundes's scholarship is always provocative, perceptive, and intelligent. His concern here is to assess the material folklorists have so painstakingly amassed and classified, to interpret folklore, and to use folklore to increase our understanding of human nature and culture. |
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Page 24
... appear to conflict in such a way that the two elements seem not to belong together , e.g. , " What has eyes and cannot see ? " The first descriptive element , " has eyes , " and the second , “ cannot see , " do not appear to belong ...
... appear to conflict in such a way that the two elements seem not to belong together , e.g. , " What has eyes and cannot see ? " The first descriptive element , " has eyes , " and the second , “ cannot see , " do not appear to belong ...
Page 218
... appears so little in the play . The play is about a daughter - father relationship , not a wife - husband relationship . This is why , dramatically speaking , Cordelia's husband , " France , " cannot appear in the final act . Cordelia's ...
... appears so little in the play . The play is about a daughter - father relationship , not a wife - husband relationship . This is why , dramatically speaking , Cordelia's husband , " France , " cannot appear in the final act . Cordelia's ...
Page 235
... appear that Jesus would rate a score of seventeen ( which would rank him closer to Raglan's ideal hero paradigm than Jason , Bellerophon , Pelops , Asclepios , Apollo , Zeus , Joseph , Elijah , and Siegfried ) . If one accepts the ...
... appear that Jesus would rate a score of seventeen ( which would rank him closer to Raglan's ideal hero paradigm than Jason , Bellerophon , Pelops , Asclepios , Apollo , Zeus , Joseph , Elijah , and Siegfried ) . If one accepts the ...
Contents
Texture Text and Context | 20 |
The Curious Case of the Widemouth Frog | 62 |
A Folkloristic Reflection of | 69 |
Copyright | |
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Aarne-Thompson Alan Dundes American culture American folklore American football anal analysis animal anthropologists attempt baby believe birth boys breasts bullroarer castration child Cinderella considered consists context Cordelia daughter David Kopay endzone envy essay evil eye evil eye belief example fact fairy tale fantasy father female folklore folkloristic folktale football Freud future future-oriented genitals genres girl hero pattern homosexual individual Indo-European interpretation Jesus joke King Lear legend linguistic liquid literal male chauvinism marry Mary means metaphor milk mother motif myth narrative notion number three Oedipal one's Oompa-Loompas parents past-oriented perhaps phallic phallus play possible present proverb psychoanalytic psychological question Raglan refer rhyme riddle ritual Róheim scholars semen semiotics sexual society story structure suggests superstition symbolic tale type texture theory tion traditional trichotomy typical Vanishing Hitchhiker virgin wide-mouth frog wife woman women word worldview young