Ritchie's Ventriloquist article reminded me of a discussion I had as an undergrad in a folklore class of East Asia. We discussed not only representation of folklore but the argument of "authentic" vs "inauthentic". The class argued that folklore, in its pure form of Tradition, is authentic. But is it still authentic when it is reproduced? Especially for profit? And if it can be named either--is that representation, authentic or inauthentic, for folklore. Oral traditions that are transcribed, written down for tangible evidence, may lose some of their authenticity. "Within folklore the most explicit discussions of representation have taken place chiefly within the context of fieldwork ethics." This also begs the discussion of ethnographies--could we call them representation of folklore? Do they bend folklore? Are they seen through a certain point of view? May we call what is recorded authentic?
I think what I'm mostly interested in is representation of folklore in a mass-market arena. Can folklore, reproduced folklore, be called authentic? If not, does it retain any authenticity?
Jennie Ziegler
Monday, March 2, 2009
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