Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-2pzkn Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-05-14T16:49:50.638Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Folklore as an Agent of Nationalism

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 September 2016

James W. Fernandez*
Affiliation:
Smith College

Extract

Hopefully there has been enough contact between humanists and social scientists in recent years and enough attempt at creating a common concern with common problems so that the one no longer entirely distrusts the cold and myopic eye of science peering into the literary intricacies of folklore and the other no longer thinks of folklore as a kind of folk entertainment, “a floating segment of culture,” which is marginal to his main concerns. I cannot speak for the humanist, though I should imagine he has learned to put up with the sometimes heavy hand of the anthropologist or political scientist for the sake of the wealth of contextual crosscultural data he gets from him. But speaking for the anthropologist, I would be surprised if there are any of us left today who would not collect what oral narrative we could, exploiting to the fullest the potentialities of such data in arriving at explanations for the workings of society and culture. We recognize well enough that folklore functions within a social and cultural context whose cultural content and social integration it both reflects and determines; We should therefore find some agreement in regarding folklore as having efficacy in human affairs - as being an agent.

That folklore is an agent of particular vitality and potential in Africa is something that can hardly be denied by those who have been there. We have evidence for this in the many extensive collections of traditional verbal art from the different quarters of that continent, and most recently we have only to mention the Herskovits collection in Dahomean Narrative. But folklore is not to be seen only as a manifestation of tribal tradition now on the wane. It must be seen as an aspect of African culture that will enjoy and suffer the greatest exploitation for the sake of the African future. This should surprise neither humanist nor social scientist for they both know well “how inviting, from its very nature the field of folklore is for those who wish to exalt national character and a national destiny.” (Herskovits, 1959: 219). We have watched it being used to these ends in countries as far removed as Ireland and Argentina, and now we see the same thing in Africa. We see, for example, how the concepts and the circumnambient mythologies of “African personality” and “negritude” depend in their expression upon authentic or reinterpreted African folklore. In the matter of migration legends alone one has only to read the work of one of the early African intellectuals to articulate these notions-Cheik Anta Diop's Nations Negres et Culture (1948)-to realize how crucial to the arguments of these cultural pan-Africanists are the migration legends of the various African peoples.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © African Studies Association 1962

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

References Cited

Alexandre, Pierre, and Jacques, Binet. 1958 Le Peuple dit Pahouin. Paris: Presses Universitaires de France.Google Scholar
Diop, Cheik Anta. 1948 Nations negres et culture. Paris.Google Scholar
Herskovits, Melville J. 1959 Comments on ‘A theory for American folklore.’ Journal of American Folklore 72: 216–20.Google Scholar
Herskovits, Melville J., and Herskovits, Frances S.. 1958 Dahomean narrative. Evanston: Northwestern University Press.Google Scholar
Engute, Ondoua. 1954 Dulu Bon Be Afri Kara. Ebolowa.Google Scholar
Rolland, M. 1955 Le mouvement Fang au Moyen Congo. Archives inedites--Centre des Hautes Etudes d'Administration Musulmane.Google Scholar