How to Read a Legend: An Auto/bio/graphical Excursus
In an obscure early nineteenthcentury antiquarian publication, the Scot William Motherwell poet, journalist, ballad editor (Minstrelsy: Ancient and Modern, 1827) offered a curious historical legend, something he titled The Story of the Palmyarm Ross, claiming its verity. No parallel texts have been noted and the editor of the volume in which it appeared suggested that Motherwell fabricated the text. How then can we read it? This paper suggests that one way to place the text is to interrogate Motherwells lived experience, his habitus, and to engage in historical ethnography. In the process, the author places this study in the context of her own introduction to the study of folk narrative.
Copyright © 2003 by Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG
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Articles in the same Issue
- Editorial
- Strange Illuminations: Min Min Lights Australian Ghost Light Stories
- Fortunatus in Italy. A History between Translations, Chapbooks and Fairy Tales
- Framing the Brothers Grimm: Paratexts and Intercultural Transmission in Postwar English-Language Editions of the Kinder- und Hausmärchen
- How to Read a Legend: An Auto/bio/graphical Excursus
- Vom Weltbürger zum Global Player. Harry Potter als kulturübergreifendes Phänomen
- Interpreters of Indian Ocean Tales
- Meaning in Narrative: A Franco-Newfoundland Version of AaTh 480 (The Spinning-Women by the Spring) and AaTh 510 (Cinderella and Cap ORushes)
- Forschungs- und Tagungsberichte
- Lauri Honko (19322002)
- Leea Virtanen (19352002)
- Besprechungen
- Eingesandte Bücher