Following Tradition: Folklore in the Discourse of American Culture

Following Tradition is an expansive examination of the history of tradition—"one of the most common as well as most contested terms in English language usage"—in Americans' thinking and discourse about culture. Tradition in use becomes problematic because of "its multiple meanings and its conceptual softness." As a term and a concept, it has been important in the development of all scholarly fields that study American culture. Folklore, history, American studies, anthropology, cultural studies, and others assign different value and meaning to tradition. It is a frequent point of reference in popular discourse concerning everything from politics to lifestyles to sports and entertainment. Politicians and social advocates appeal to it as prima facie evidence of the worth of their causes. Entertainment and other media mass produce it, or at least a facsimile of it. In a society that frequently seeks to reinvent itself, tradition as a cultural anchor to be reverenced or rejected is an essential, if elusive, concept. Simon Bronner's wide net captures the historical, rhetorical, philosophical, and psychological dimensions of tradition. As he notes, he has written a book "about an American tradition—arguing about it." His elucidation of those arguments makes fascinating and thoughtful reading. An essential text for folklorists, Following Tradition will be a valuable reference as well for historians and anthropologists; students of American studies, popular culture, and cultural studies; and anyone interested in the continuing place of tradition in American culture.

"1101166462"
Following Tradition: Folklore in the Discourse of American Culture

Following Tradition is an expansive examination of the history of tradition—"one of the most common as well as most contested terms in English language usage"—in Americans' thinking and discourse about culture. Tradition in use becomes problematic because of "its multiple meanings and its conceptual softness." As a term and a concept, it has been important in the development of all scholarly fields that study American culture. Folklore, history, American studies, anthropology, cultural studies, and others assign different value and meaning to tradition. It is a frequent point of reference in popular discourse concerning everything from politics to lifestyles to sports and entertainment. Politicians and social advocates appeal to it as prima facie evidence of the worth of their causes. Entertainment and other media mass produce it, or at least a facsimile of it. In a society that frequently seeks to reinvent itself, tradition as a cultural anchor to be reverenced or rejected is an essential, if elusive, concept. Simon Bronner's wide net captures the historical, rhetorical, philosophical, and psychological dimensions of tradition. As he notes, he has written a book "about an American tradition—arguing about it." His elucidation of those arguments makes fascinating and thoughtful reading. An essential text for folklorists, Following Tradition will be a valuable reference as well for historians and anthropologists; students of American studies, popular culture, and cultural studies; and anyone interested in the continuing place of tradition in American culture.

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Following Tradition: Folklore in the Discourse of American Culture

Following Tradition: Folklore in the Discourse of American Culture

by Simon Bronner
Following Tradition: Folklore in the Discourse of American Culture

Following Tradition: Folklore in the Discourse of American Culture

by Simon Bronner

eBook

$22.95 

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Overview

Following Tradition is an expansive examination of the history of tradition—"one of the most common as well as most contested terms in English language usage"—in Americans' thinking and discourse about culture. Tradition in use becomes problematic because of "its multiple meanings and its conceptual softness." As a term and a concept, it has been important in the development of all scholarly fields that study American culture. Folklore, history, American studies, anthropology, cultural studies, and others assign different value and meaning to tradition. It is a frequent point of reference in popular discourse concerning everything from politics to lifestyles to sports and entertainment. Politicians and social advocates appeal to it as prima facie evidence of the worth of their causes. Entertainment and other media mass produce it, or at least a facsimile of it. In a society that frequently seeks to reinvent itself, tradition as a cultural anchor to be reverenced or rejected is an essential, if elusive, concept. Simon Bronner's wide net captures the historical, rhetorical, philosophical, and psychological dimensions of tradition. As he notes, he has written a book "about an American tradition—arguing about it." His elucidation of those arguments makes fascinating and thoughtful reading. An essential text for folklorists, Following Tradition will be a valuable reference as well for historians and anthropologists; students of American studies, popular culture, and cultural studies; and anyone interested in the continuing place of tradition in American culture.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780874213645
Publisher: Utah State University Press
Publication date: 04/01/1998
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 616
File size: 9 MB

Table of Contents

Contents
Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Prologue. The Past and Present in Tradition
1. The Problem of Tradition
Folklore and the Study of Tradition
Folk and Tradition in Popular Discourse
Tradition in Scholarly Discourse
Tradition in the Press
The Politics of Tradition
The Character of Tradition
2. Folklore and Ideology during the Gilded Age
Museums in the Advance of Civilization
Folklore at the Fair
The Ideology of Evolution
Black Folklore and “Progress of the Race”
Relativism and the Diversity of American Culture
3. The English Connection, from Cultural Survivals to Cultural Studies
Rationality and Morality
Function and the Role of Tradition
Analyzing Tradition across the Atlantic
The Problem of Childhood
The Folklore of Modernism
4. The Americanization of the Brothers Grimm
The German Grimms
The English Grimms
The American Grimms
The Academic Grimms
5. Martha Warren Beckwith and the Rise of Academic Authority
6. Alfred Shoemaker and the Discovery of American Folklife
The Ethnic Connection
The Celebration of Decorative and Preindustrial Arts
The Community Emphasis
The Emergence of Folklife
The Creation of the First Department of Folklore
After Shoemaker: The Public Face of Folklife
7. Henry W. Shoemaker and the Fable of Public Folklore
Writing Traditions
Publicizing Traditions
Creating a Public Folklore for the State
Professionalism and Authenticity
Revision of the Historical Narrative
8. Richard Dorson and the Great Debates
The Fakelore Debate
The Applied Folklore Debate
The Nationalism Debate
Discipline from Discourse
9. Displaying American Tradition in Folk Arts
Natives and Immigrants in Folkloristic Presentation
Modernism and Nationalism in the Art World
“Circles” and “Treasures” of Folk Art
Art and the Elevation of Tradition
Praxis and the Representation of Action
Epilogue. The Future of Tradition
Bibliographic Essay
Expressions and Performers
Identities and Communities
Settings and Contexts
Guides, Histories, Bibliographies, and Internet Sources
Premise and Promise
Notes
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Bibliographic Essay
References
Index
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