Feminist Theory and the Study of FolkloreSusan T. Hollis, Linda Pershing, M. Jane Young |
Contents
Folklore Theory Reconsidered from | 9 |
Romantic Nationalism and the Engenderment | 29 |
Can Praxis Make | 51 |
Copyright | |
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Feminist Theory and the Study of Folklore Susan T. Hollis,Linda Pershing,M. Jane Young No preview available - 1993 |
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activities aesthetic Almeda Riddle altar American Folklore Society analysis Ancient Egypt Anthropology baby birth body Cambridge cartoons childbirth concept context culture disabled discussion dominant editorial cartoons Egyptian episiotomy essay ethnic example experience expression feast female feminism feminist theory Ferraro festival fieldwork folklorists forms Gascon gender genres Geraldine Ferraro girls Herder Hopi housework ideology Ilmarinen images interaction interpretation Jeannie Robertson jokes Joseph's Day Journal of American Kachina Kalevala labor language Lemminkäinen Lönnrot Louhi male Mary material meaning metaphor Moncrabeau mother narrative natural needlework obstetrical panel parable participants patriarchal performance perspective play players political quilters quilting relationship religion religious reproductive Ribbon ritual role Romantic Nationalism saints scholars sexual social society songs story suggests Susan symbolic technocratic technocratic model Texas texts tion traditional University Press Väinämöinen values Western Puebloan woman women's folklore York Zuni