
Contents
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The Folklife Studies Movement The Folklife Studies Movement
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Three Lives Three Lives
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From Folklife to Folklorism From Folklife to Folklorism
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Poetics of Commodities Poetics of Commodities
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Conclusions: Winds of Change Conclusions: Winds of Change
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4 Material Culture in Folklife Studies
Get accessRobert Saint George is Associate Professor of History at the University of Pennsylvania.
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Published:18 September 2012
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Abstract
The essence of this article is material culture in folklife studies. The meaning of ‘material culture’ seems clear. According to archaeologist James Deetz, it included that sector of our physical environment that we modify through culturally determined behavior. Material culture reveals human intrusion into the environment. It is the way we imagine', he continues, ‘a distinction between nature and culture, and then rebuild nature to our desire, shaping, reshaping, and arranging things during life’. This article argues that the anthropological study of folklife has had a long series of connections with, and influences upon, the investigation of material culture. Folklife has brought to the analysis of landscapes, archaeology, and vernacular objects an integrative methodology. This article discusses the key features of the folklife studies movement, including the ways it differed from ‘folklore’. The Pennsylvania folklife society is given much emphasis. The gradual shift from folklore to folklorism is explained in details followed by poetics of commodities.
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