Folklore
Found in 5056 Collections and/or Records:
What is wrong with being blonde / by Jenny Ballard, 2005
What is your favorite memory of your father : Christopher Rosenvall, 2006 December 6
What it means to be a Small : one of many conversations with my grandfather / Kristen Fry, 2005
This project is a collection of stories about the collector's grandfather, Donald Eugene Small. It includes an interview of the informant and contains information on his experiences in the Korean War, life as a small child, stories about his father and mother, his brother during WWWII, personality traits, and other war stories. Collected by Kristen Fry, Dr. Dierdre Paulsen's ENGL 391 class, Winter 2005.
What it means to be green / Melissa Heaton, 1999
Heaton collected missionary stories involving pranks played on new missionary for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Project includes pranks involving praying to someone other than deity, abandoning the new missionary, language misspeaks, and crazy encounters. Project was created for Dr. Rudy's English 392 course taught at Brigham Young University in 1999.
What it means to live in Midway / René Holm, 1999
Holm collected narratives about the establishment of Midway and the way that it is has changed over the years. Included are journals from members of the community that helped establish the town, and the way that carried out their lives, as well as modern day citizens of Midway and the ways in which they see the past seeping through to the present. Project was created for Kristi Bell's English 391 course taught at Brigham Young University in 1999.
What keeps us together : my family's traditions / Terrie Brockmann, 1980 March 7
Collection of traditions that the author's family participated in. Includes stories about holiday decorating, special events planning, and family heirlooms. Project was created for Utah State University's American Folklore course taught by Dr. Wilson on March 7, 1980.
What motivates a hoax : an analysis of deception in inter-generational family folklore / Cathleen Alton, 2003
Collection of family stories. All of the stories are untrue, and therefore Alton has identified them as family hoaxes. Alton writes about her mother being the queen of family hoaxes, possessing the ability to get anyone to believe anything. She addresses the relationship between parents and their children as well as between siblings. Created by Cathleen Alton while she was enrolled in Eric Eliason's English 391 class during the fall semester of 2001.
What they remember : memories from BYU women's cross country alumni / Wendy Shaha, 2009
This project contains stories and memories of the BYU women's cross country alumni. The collector comments from both an emic and etic point of view. The collector notes how the folklore of this group serves as a release valve, a guilt reliever, and as a motivator. She also notes how the folklore serves to solidify the group. Stories include scar stories, unusual runs, and workout stories. Collected by Wendy Shaha, Dr. Eliason's ENGL 392 class, Winter 2009.