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Reddit mentions of Introduction to Folklore: Traditional Studies in Europe and Elsewhere

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Reddit mentions: 3

We found 3 Reddit mentions of Introduction to Folklore: Traditional Studies in Europe and Elsewhere. Here are the top ones.

Introduction to Folklore: Traditional Studies in Europe and Elsewhere
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    Features:
  • Bibliography
  • Introduction
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Release dateAugust 2014

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Found 3 comments on Introduction to Folklore: Traditional Studies in Europe and Elsewhere:

u/itsallfolklore · 54 pointsr/AskHistorians

My search for examples in my library - which is admittedly weighted to Europe - did not yield other examples. The Ashliman site I provided, however, often provides non-European examples, and yet there are none provided for this legend. I looked for scholarly analysis of this tradition, and I couldn't find any. I feel I may be overlooking something. I will continue to look. The following discusses this genre from my Introduction to Folklore; see #2 especially:

>Europeans were fascinated by the idea of condemned souls, either of individuals or groups of people, who could not find rest. These unfortunates were forced to exist in a nether world, appearing occasionally before the living as evidence of their hideous or peculiar plight. Such motifs have been favorites with artists and writers. It is possible to identify six types of these beings.

>1. The “Wild Hunt” is probably the oldest, occurring in ancient Greek sources and Scandinavian mythology. A cluster of stories refers to ghostly riders who race across the landscape or the night sky, questing for some phantom quarry that they can never catch. Legends tell of people seeing this eerie phenomenon. There are occasional references to the leader as being the god of death.

>2. The “Sleeping Army” is a motif that appears in a variety of stories telling of a group of warriors killed in combat, who haunt the battlefield or wait inside a mound for some future conflict. People often believe such an army serves as a matter of last resort, a supernatural force that will rise up if their country is threatened with destruction. King Arthur’s knights are often regarded as sleeping in this way, waiting for the return of their king, healed from his wounds after recuperating in the western island of Avalon.

>3. The “Flying Dutchman” is one of the better known and often used motifs of the condemned souls. This motif describes a phantom ship of ghostly sailors who travel the seas but never find harbor or rest. Their only respite comes every one hundred years, when they are allowed to anchor at a legendary port. Their ship is seen in bad weather. The story seems to be of medieval origin.

>4. The “Wandering Jew” is also a motif belonging to this class. Like the Flying Dutchman, the Wandering Jew appears to be of medieval origin. The legend tells of Ahasverus, a shoemaker of Jerusalem who refused to allow Jesus to sit while carrying his cross to Calvary. His fate is to wander the world, longing for rest.

>5. The Will-’o-the-Wisp is described in Chapter 4. The character was not good enough for heaven and made himself feared by the devil, and so he was exiled from hell. He carries a burning ember, a relic from the time when he briefly entered the abode of Satan, and with this phantom light, he lures nighttime travelers away from their destination. This character is common in Britain.

>6. There are also various legends of medieval origin about cities that sank underground or into the sea because of some collective sin committed by the inhabitants. These towns return to earth every hundred years for a few hours, only to sink back to their eternal existence in perpetual limbo.

u/sunagainstgold · 8 pointsr/AskHistorians

We have a lot of excellent (material book) already-published authors (Mike Dash, Roel Konijnendijk, Cassidy Percoco come immediately to mind, that is, /u/mikedash, /u/Iphikrates, and /u/mimicofmodes!), and a lot of brilliant flairs with books coming in the next year or two.

But I am confident I speak for every single AH community member when I say the place to start is:

u/82364 · 3 pointsr/Random_Acts_Of_Amazon

Book by a flaired /r/AskHistorians member.

An elephant cleaning up litter.

/u/kratzalot, do you think that /u/rarelyserious will be less of a grumpasaurus when /u/dryan0 flies out to visit?