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Folk Culture

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Folk Culture Around the World – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Folk Culture


1
Folk Culture
  • Around the World

2
Cultural integration in folk geography
  • Interaction between folk and popular cultures
  • Few folk groups escape some interaction with the
    larger world
  • A lively exchange is constantly on-going between
    folk and popular cultures
  • Most commonly, the folk absorb ideas filtering
    down from popular culture

3
Cultural integration in folk geography
  • Interaction between folk and popular cultures
  • Occasionally elements of folk culture penetrate
    the popular society
  • Folk handicrafts and arts often fetch high prices
    among city dwellers
  • They may exhibit quality, attention to detail,
    and uniqueness absent in factory-made goods
  • Some folk goods are revised to make them more
    marketable
  • Popular folk items include-Irish fisherman
    sweaters, Shaker furniture, and Panamanian Indian
    molas

4
Cuzco, Peru
  • Cuzco, an Inca capital, is a major tourist
    destination.
  • Llama wool sweaters, ponchos, and rugs displayed
    for the tourist trade.
  • Woven on hand-looms

5
Cuzco, Peru
  • Natural wool colors or are colored with mineral
    or vegetable dyes.
  • Similar products are also produced by factory
    machines using chemical dyes for trendy colors
    for appeal to mass market.

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Mountain moonshine
  • Mountain folk accepted markets offered by popular
    culture but rejected its legal and political
    institutions
  • By the 1950s, some 25,000 gallons of white
    lightning reached the market each week from the
    counties of eastern Tennessee alone
  • In spite of numerous raids by federal
    authorities, production continued unabated
  • Today, a substantial amount of illicit whisky
    still reaches markets from southern Appalachia

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Mountain moonshine
  • Whiskey production, legal and illegal, in
    Kentucky and Tennessee represents an impressive
    survival of folk industry to serve a market in
    popular society
  • Illegal whisky production and popular culture
    integration led to the creation of the folk
    automobile
  • A fast vehicle needed to outrun the law, but
    humble in appearance
  • Some have claimed these vehicles were the
    forerunners of the basic American stock car
  • Stock-car racing then is considered another
    result of interplay between folk and popular
    cultures

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Country and Western music
  • Upland Southern folk music had a very impressive
    impact upon American popular culture
  • Derived to a great degree, from folk ballads of
    English and Scotch-Irish, who settled in the
    upland-South in colonial times
  • Some have hypothesized use of the fiddle (violin)
    is an effort to recapture sounds of the Celtic
    Scottish bagpipe
  • Gradually, Upland Southern folk music absorbed
    influences of the American social experience

12
Country and Western music
  • Entry of country music into popular culture began
    about the time of World War I
  • Diffusion was facilitated by the invention of the
    radio
  • Popularization brought changes
  • Themes of lyrics increasingly addressed life in
    the popular culture
  • Acceptance remains greatest in its Upland
    Southern core area in Kentucky, Tennessee,
    Virginia, and North Carolina
  • Most performers come from this core area
  • Music retains strong identification with
    Appalachian places

13
Country and Western music
  • Impact of migration of Upland Southern folk on
    bluegrass music
  • Migrated to Missouri, Arkansas, Texas, and
    Oklahoma plus the Depression era movement of
    Okies and Arkies to the Central Valley of
    California
  • Provided natural areas for bluegrass expansion in
    the mid-twentieth century

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FOLK LANDSCAPES
  • Folk architecture most visible aspect of the
    landscape
  • Comes from the memory of traditional people
  • Built on mental images that change little from
    one generation to the next
  • Folk buildings are extensions of a people and
    their region
  • Provide the unique character of each district or
    province
  • Offer a highly visible aspect of the human mosaic

16
Folk landscapes
  • Seek in folk architecture the traditional, the
    conservative, and the functional
  • Expect from it a simple beauty
  • Harmony with the physical environment
  • A visible expression of folk culture

17
Folk Architecture Maasai House, Kenya
  • The Maasai are pastoralists who bring their
    cattle into their circular housing compounds
    (engangs or manyattas) at night. Maasai bomas
    (houses) are built by women.
  • Latticed frames are constructed with termite, ant
    and beetle resistant wood poles, insulated with
    packed leaves, and covered with cattle dung
    readily available in the engang.

18
Folk Architecture Maasai House, Kenya
  • A snail-shell entry inhibits entry of human or
    animal intruders.
  • Lattice sleeping platforms covered with cowhide
    are attached to internal walls.
  • No windows, only vents for the central fire..
  • Plastic sheeting as a roof cover is a modern
    luxury few can afford.

19
Building materials
  • One way we classify folk houses and farmsteads is
    by the type of building materials used
  • Structures tend to blend nicely with the natural
    landscape
  • Farm dwellings range from massive houses of
    stone for permanency, to temporary brush thatch
    huts

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Building materials
  • Environmental conditions influence choice of
    construction materials)
  • Climate
  • Vegetation
  • Geomorphology
  • Shifting cultivators of tropical rain forests
    build houses of poles and leaves

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Building materials
  • Sedentary subsistence farming peoples of adjacent
    highlands, oases, and river valleys of the Old
    World zone
  • Rely principally on earthen construction
  • Sun-dried (adobe) bricks
  • Pounded earth
  • In more prosperous regions, kiln-baked bricks are
    available
  • People in the tropical grasslands, especially in
    Africa, construct thatched houses from coarse
    grasses and thorn bushes

27
Building materials
  • Buildings of Mediterranean farmers and some rural
    residents of interior Indian and the Andean
    highlands
  • Most live in rocky, deforested lands
  • Use stone as principal building material
  • Create entire landscapes of stone
  • Walls, roofs, terraces, streets, and fences
  • Lends an air of permanence to the landscape

28
China
29
Folk architecture China
  • The Kazak practice transhumance, spending the
    summer with their horses, goats, sheep and cattle
    in high pastures of the Tien Shan (Heavenly
    Mountains) of northwestern China.
  • These yurts have wooden trellis walls and are
    covered with felt which is pressed animal hair.

30
Folk architecture China
  • The top flap can be opened to vent a central fire
    or closed to keep out rain.
  • As winter approaches, the yurt is dismantled and
    carried by pack animals to lower elevations.

31
Folk architecture China
  • Many Kazak now winter in Chinese style,
    mud-brick, sod-roofed houses.
  • Yurts are experiencing technological change as
    wood gives way to plastic and felt to canvas.

32
Building materials
  • Housing in the middle and higher latitudes
  • Houses made of wood where timber is abundant
  • In the United States, log cabins and later frame
    houses
  • Folk houses of northern Europe and in the
    mountains of eastern Australia are made of wood

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35
Building materials
  • Housing in the middle and higher latitudes
  • In some deforested regions Central Europe and
    parts of China
  • Farmers built half-timbered houses
  • Framework of hardwood beams with fill in the
    interstices of some other material
  • Sod or turf houses typify prairie and tundra
    areas
  • Russian steppes
  • In pioneer times, the American Great Plains
  • Nomadic herders often live in portable tents made
    of skins or wool

36
Floor plan
  • Unit farmstead
  • Single structure where family, farm animals, and
    storage facilities share space
  • In simplest form is one storied People and
    animals occupy different ends of structure
  • More complex ones are multi-storied arranged so
    people and livestock live on different levels

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Floor plan
  • Communal unit housing common among some shifting
    cultivators
  • Multiple families live under the same roof
  • Sleeping and cooking done in separate alcoves
  • Living space is shared

40
Floor plan
  • Communal unit housing common among some shifting
    cultivators
  • Example the Sarawak longhouse found on the
    Malaysian portion of the island of Borneo
  • Accommodates between 5 and 8 nuclear families
  • An elongated dwelling
  • Raised above forest floor on stilts
  • Reflect a clan or tribal social organization

41
Folk Architecture Manali, India
42
Folk Architecture Manali, India
  • This house has been constructed by the Kullu
    people who live in the lower Himalayas of
    Himachal Pradesh. This is a steeply sloped,
    rocky and forested area and people make the best
    use of local materials.

43
Folk Architecture Manali, India
  • Noted for their woodwork, the Kulli carve and
    paint religious and tribal designs to propitiate
    the gods and ward off evil
  • The substantial stone roof will support a heavy
    winter snowfall.
  • Fodder and cattle are kept below the living
    quarters.

44
Floor plan
  • Most common are farmsteads where the house, barn,
    and stalls occupy separate buildings
  • Example of the courtyard farmstead
  • Various structures clustered around an enclosed
    yard
  • Appears in several seemingly unrelated culture
    regions
  • Found in Inca-settled portions of Andes Mountains
  • Also found in the hills of central Germany, and
    eastern China
  • Have wide distribution offer privacy and
    protection

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Floor plan
  • Strewn farmstead prevails in countries where
    Germanic Europeans immigrated and settled
  • Anglo-America, Australia, and New Zealand
  • Buildings lie spaced apart each other in no
    consistent pattern
  • Especially common in zones of wooden construction
    where fire is a hazard
  • Poorly suited for defense
  • Often associated with rural regions of more than
    average tranquility

49
Floor plan Challenge
  • What would a folk living quarters look like in
    Woodstock?
  • Consider our climate, elevation, and local
    building materials.
  • Incorporate 1 cultural component (what is
    important to you?)
  • Draw your floor plan and label parts (with
    explanations on why)
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