The Harvard Gazette interviews Maria Tatar, in which she discusses her book “The Fairest of Them All: Snow White and 21 Tales of Mothers and Daughters” and how fairy tales (märchen) serve as narratives to “enact all the fantasies, fears, and terrors stored
Folklorists in the News
AFS members Jeannie Thomas and Lynne McNeill review the most influential digital trends of 2019, including the “Greta Thunberg vs. President Trump” and “Storm Area 51” memes, in Utah Public Radio’s Access Utah. See: Tom Williams, “Revisiting The Digital Folklore Trends of 2019 On Thursday’s
The Minnesota Public Radio (MPR) features Alisha Jones, an ethnomusicologist, and Zaheer Ali, an oral historian, in their discussion of music and the definitive role that it plays in times of unrest and in protest. See: Kerri Miller, Marcheta Fornoff and Breann Schossow, “The power of
Maribel Alvarez describes folklore as a discipline that understands the ways of knowing that is grasped by oral tradition and observation, serving as an alternative entry point in addressing global issues such as climate change. Alvarez also introduces a new project, ClimateLore, a planned yearlong
Kathryn Hughes of The Guardian reviews Maria Tatar’s The Fairest of Them All: Snow White and 21 Tales of Mothers and Daughters (2020). Hughes states that “Tatar’s avowed intention is to demonstrate the endless fluidity of folktale narratives, the way they wash into one another so that
Los Angeles Times cites folklorist Maribel Alvarez who states that legends of Lupe Hernandez, a nursing student from Bakersfield and inventor of hand sanitizer, have resurfaced in light of the COVID-19 pandemic, becoming a folk hero for the Latinx populations. See: Alejandra Reyes-Velarde
MLA executive director Paula Krebs, calls for a new Works Progess Administration (WPA) for the humanities. She cites folklorists Zora Neale Hurston Hurston and the Lomaxes—along with the field in general—as she writes about how the humanities ought to be called forth in
In an article in The Eastern Carolinian, Andrea Kitta comments on the various narratives—some harmful while others hopeful—that make an appearance during health crises and offers a rationale for the narratives and behaviors that have surfaced due to the COVID-19 outbreak. See Madison Barnhill, “ECU
Sheila Bock examines the ways in which people’s reactions to the novel coronavirus pandemic have mirrored other, earlier public health scares from the bubonic plague to Ebola in an essay in the University of Nevada, Las Vegas News Center. See Sheila Bock,
Maribel Alvarez, of the University of Arizona Southwest Center, identifies folklorists as “first responders” in times of great change or transition as she states that “folklorists can sense small shifts in human behavior that others might at first overlook or dismiss as