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Folklore Atlas

Folklore Atlas

Folklore coverage on Engaia, including foundational concepts, major branches, historical development, core methods, and related topics for broad encyclopedia publishing. This page gathers the large folklore expansion into one place so readers can move through topic guides, deep-reference articles, and glossary terms without losing the section structure.

Subcategory Paths

The main routes into this expansion set and the large reference field growing under it.

Cryptids and Urban Legends

Cryptids and urban legends sit at the point where older folklore habits meet modern media conditions. A creature sighting, an overheard warning, a friend-of-a-friend

Fairy Tales and Wonder Tales

Fairy tales and wonder tales endure because they turn fear, desire, deprivation, and hope into forms that can be remembered and retold with unusual clarity. Their kingdoms may

Folk Belief

Folk belief and custom belong to the level where people actually live, decide, worry, and improvise. Omens, household rites, seasonal observances, protective gestures, and

Folk Belief and Custom

A guide to Folk Belief and Custom within Folklore, outlining its meaning, major questions, and the related topics readers should explore next.

Folk Creatures and Spirits

Creatures and spirits in folklore are rarely just decorative monsters. They cluster at thresholds where people feel least secure: the dark road, the marsh, the forest edge,

Folklore Studies and Interpretation

Folklore studies becomes most interesting when it refuses to treat tradition as either quaint entertainment or raw data waiting to be filed. The field asks how stories move,

Legends and Tales

Legends and tales often travel together, yet they do different kinds of cultural work. Tales usually announce their distance from ordinary life through stylized settings and

Legends and Tales

A guide to Legends and Tales within Folklore, outlining its meaning, major questions, and the related topics readers should explore next.

Oral Traditions

Oral tradition does not preserve stories by freezing them word for word. It preserves them by joining memory to voice, rhythm, occasion, and audience, so that a tale

Oral Traditions

A guide to Oral Traditions within Folklore, outlining its meaning, major questions, and the related topics readers should explore next.

Tricksters and Culture Heroes

Tricksters and culture heroes matter because they expose the rules of a society by bending, mocking, or temporarily breaking them. One figure steals fire, another cheats the

Expansion Articles

A large reading field for this section, spanning its methods, history, major concepts, evidence, comparisons, and current frontiers.

Anansi, Wit, Trickery, and Social Intelligence

Anansi wins attention by proving that size and formal power are not the same thing. The spider trickster survives through wit, timing, verbal dexterity, appetite, and

Tricksters and Culture HeroesLegendary Figure

Ancestor Offerings in Folklore: Presence, Duty, and Domestic Continuity

A close reading of Ancestor Offerings in Folklore matters because offerings to ancestors maintain kinship across death and place duties of remembrance inside kitchens, courtyards, and family ritual calendars. Qingming grave offerings, Obon household remembrance, food set for…

Folk BeliefFolklore Expansion

Archive Metadata and Folklore Classification: Organizing Living Tradition

Archive Metadata and Folklore Classification matters because method determines what becomes visible in the folklore archive and what disappears into noise. Dublin Core fields, catalog records, the Aarne-Thompson-Uther type index, Stith Thompson's motif index, and community-governed systems such…

Folklore Studies and InterpretationFolklore Expansion

Baba Yaga, Ambivalence, and the Forest Threshold

Baba Yaga is memorable not because she is simply terrifying, but because she refuses simple alignment. She may devour, instruct, test, reward, or mock, often in the same

Folk Creatures and SpiritsLegendary Figure

Black Dog Legends: Death Signs, Roads, and Night Encounters

A close reading of Black Dog Legends matters because the black dog appears where loneliness, roads, weather, and mortality converge, especially on paths walked after dark. Black Shuck in East Anglia, the Barguest in northern England, churchyard black…

Cryptids and Urban LegendsFolklore Expansion

Blessings and Curses in Folklore: Speech Acts with Social Weight

Compact speech forms often do far more social work than their size suggests, and blessings and curses in folklore are a strong example. Spoken blessings over food, travelers, newborns, fields, and weddings, alongside curses linked to envy, revenge,…

Oral TraditionsFolklore Expansion

Bread Lore in Folklore: Blessing, Labor, and Everyday Sacred Food

At first glance, bread lore in folklore can look too ordinary to warrant extended analysis. First-loaf blessings, harvest breads, funeral breads, hospitality customs, sourdough starters, and household rules about sharing or cutting show why that impression fails. Household…

Folk BeliefFolklore Expansion

Carnival Performance Traditions: Excess, Masking, and Social Release

A close reading of Carnival Performance Traditions matters because carnival licenses parody, masking, noisy occupation of the street, and controlled breach of ordinary decorum. Mardi Gras, Venetian masking, Trinidad Carnival, Alpine Fasnacht, and charivari-like inversion customs show how…

Oral TraditionsFolklore Expansion

Caves in Folklore: Hidden Worlds, Treasure, and Dangerous Depth

A close reading of Caves in Folklore matters because a cave promises concealment, initiation, hidden knowledge, and the fear that what shelters treasure may also shelter something older and stronger than the visitor. Dragon caves, underworld entrances, treasure…

Legends and TalesFolklore Expansion

Changelings in Folklore: Substitution, Care, and the Fear of Altered Children

A close reading of Changelings in Folklore matters because changeling legends gather parental fear around a child who seems altered, ill, inconsolable, or suddenly unfamiliar. Fairy substitution stories, elf-shot illness, tests using fire or trickery, and narratives later…

Fairy Tales and Wonder TalesFolklore Expansion

Glossary Highlights

Terms that help readers move from recognition to more exact language in this section.

ballad

A concise seed definition of ballad as a narrative song central to oral tradition and communal memory.

cryptid

A concise seed definition of cryptid as a legendary or unverified creature sustained by story and fringe belief.

custom

A concise seed definition of custom as repeated communal practice carrying symbolic or practical meaning.

custom cycle

A concise seed definition of custom cycle as a recurring sequence of traditional practices tied to seasons, work, or community life.

emic

A concise seed definition of emic as an account built from the meanings and categories of participants themselves.

etic

A concise seed definition of etic as an outside analytical framework applied by researchers rather than source communities.

fairy tale

A concise seed definition of fairy tale as a wonder-centered narrative shaped by motifs, tests, and transformation.

fakelore

A concise seed definition of fakelore as manufactured or commercialized tradition presented as authentic folklore.

formulaic phrase

A concise seed definition of formulaic phrase as a repeated verbal unit that supports oral memory and performance.

legend

A concise seed definition of legend as a story told as plausible within a recognizable world.

legend trip

A concise seed definition of legend trip as a journey to a place associated with a story, haunting, rumor, or legendary event.

liminality

A concise seed definition of liminality as the unstable in-between condition where ordinary rules loosen and transition becomes symbolically dense.