1998
DOI: 10.7592/fejf1998.08.aflore
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Australian Folklore Yesterday and Today: Definitions and Practices

Abstract: In 1993 there was published a milestone volume, The Oxford Companion to Australian Folklore, edited by Graham Seal and Gwenda Bede Davey. This influential compendium had followed hard upon: the first issue of Australian Folklore: A Yearly Journal of Folklore Studies, edited by Graham Seal and David S. Hults, in 1987; 1 the various biennial folklore conferences 2 of the Australian Folk Trust; and the appearance of Graham Seal's The Hidden Culture: Folklore in Australian Society (1989; reissued in 1993). This pu… Show more

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“…Due to the specific focus, it is necessary to clarify key terminology. Australia is somewhat disparate from the rest of the 'West', and within Australian folklore, an accepted convention is that the phrases 'urban legend' and 'urban myth' are used interchangeably (Gilding, 2005;Ryan, 1998;Scott, 1996;Seal 1994Seal & 1995. Other colloquial terms specific to the Australian folklore context, include: scrub (bushland area lying beyond a farming community), yarn (a story, tale or anecdote passed on via oral traditions), and watering-hole (a local hotel, bar, pub or similar establishment where Australian's gather socially) (Johansen, 1996).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Due to the specific focus, it is necessary to clarify key terminology. Australia is somewhat disparate from the rest of the 'West', and within Australian folklore, an accepted convention is that the phrases 'urban legend' and 'urban myth' are used interchangeably (Gilding, 2005;Ryan, 1998;Scott, 1996;Seal 1994Seal & 1995. Other colloquial terms specific to the Australian folklore context, include: scrub (bushland area lying beyond a farming community), yarn (a story, tale or anecdote passed on via oral traditions), and watering-hole (a local hotel, bar, pub or similar establishment where Australian's gather socially) (Johansen, 1996).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%