Glassie showed early on in his book that there was a specific time and a place for the various kinds of entertainment he examined. Talk, chat, crack, storytelling and music-making all had a moment and a venue where they were meant to be presented and a specific way in which people were meant to respond. These cues are unspoken and yet adhered to within the community fairly closely; any deviance is clearly felt. (Take, for instance, the incident at the pub when a young man speaks much too directly of his feelings and calls for open approval, something that is obviously not normal in that setting, and he is met with a chilly response.) While I find these cues and they way they are followed beautiful, I acknowledge that similar cues are present in nearly every group that could be classified as "folkloric". One of the beauties in Glassie's book is that these unspoken cues are made tangible to those outside of the group in such a fluid way.
It reminded me of kairos, the opportune moment when something special is made possible. In a way, this concept might be what I was searching for in the definitions of the "everyday". Something mundane becomes other-worldly within the perfect, fleeting moment and that becomes the subject of study.
I also want to say that I loved Glassie's book and only wish I could have spent more time with it. I found its depth and sincerity incredible and feel that, in some way, this is a prime example of why I love folklore.
-Caitlin
(I apologize if this is terse. I wrote this response up once much more elegantly and then my browser refreshed, losing absolutely everything I had written. Eek.)
Sunday, March 22, 2009
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