folk tale

literature
Also known as: folktale

Learn about this topic in these articles:

Assorted References

traditions

    • African
      • Brer Rabbit and the Tar-Baby, drawing by E.W. Kemble from The Tar-Baby, by Joel Chandler Harris, 1904
        In Tar-Baby

        …central figure in black American folktales popularized in written literature by the American author Joel Chandler Harris. Harris’ “Tar-Baby” (1879), one of the animal tales told by the character Uncle Remus, is but one example of numerous African-derived tales featuring the use of a wax, gum, or rubber figure to…

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    • American Indian
    • ancient Greek
      • Exekias: Greek amphora depicting Achilles slaying Penthesilea
        In Greek mythology: Folktales

        Folktales, consisting of popular recurring themes and told for amusement, inevitably found their way into Greek myth. Such is the theme of lost persons—whether husband, wife, or child (e.g., Odysseus, Helen of Troy, or Paris of Troy)—found or recovered after long and exciting adventures.…

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    • Baltic religion
      • In Baltic religion: Sources of data

        Baltic folklore—one of the most extensive folklores of all European peoples—contains the greatest amount of material, especially in the form of dainas (short folk songs of four lines each) and folktales. Folklore is especially valuable because it contains many concepts that elsewhere have been lost under…

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    • Japanese
      • Nise-e
        In Japanese literature: Prose

        …collection of religious stories and folktales drawn not only from the Japanese countryside but also from Indian and Chinese sources, described elements of society that had never been treated in the court novels. These stories, though crudely written, provide glimpses of how the common people spoke and behaved in an…

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    • Judaism
      • Jerusalem: Western Wall, Temple Mount
        In Judaism: Jewish myth and legend

        …all the standard types of folktales are represented. Conspicuously absent, however, are pure fairy tales, because fairies, elves, and the like are foreign to the Jewish imagination, which prefers to populate the otherworld with angels and demons subservient to God.

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    • Korean
      • In Korean literature: Prose

        include myths, legends, and folktales found in the written records. The principal sources of these narratives are the two great historical records compiled during the Koryŏ dynasty: Samguk sagi (1146; “Historical Record of the Three Kingdoms”) and Samguk yusa (1285; “Memorabilia of the Three Kingdoms”). The most important myths…

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    • Mongol
      • Da Hinggan (Greater Khingan) Range
        In Inner Mongolia: Cultural life

        …content and emphasis of Mongol folk legends vary somewhat with the location and with tribal or clan history concerning their origins, most clans have legends of their founders as either a mythical animal or a hero; others preserve legends about historical figures once prominent in the life of their clan.…

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