In "The Story-Time of the British Empire," author Sadhana
Naithani examines folklore collections compiled by British colonial
administrators, military men, missionaries, and women in the
British colonies of Africa, Asia, and Australia between 1860 and
1950. Much of this work was accomplished in the context of colonial
relations and done by non-folklorists, yet these oral narratives
and poetic expressions of non-Europeans were transcribed,
translated, published, and discussed internationally. Naithani
analyzes the role of folklore scholarship in the construction of
colonial cultural politics as well as in the conception of
international folklore studies.
Since most folklore scholarship and cultural history focuses
exclusively on specific nations, there is little study of
cross-cultural phenomena about empire and/or postcoloniality.
Naithani argues that connecting cultural histories, especially in
relation to previously colonized countries, is essential to
understanding those countries' folklore, as these folk traditions
result from both internal and European influence. The author also
makes clear the role folklore and its study played in shaping
intercultural perceptions that continue to exist in the academic
and popular realms today. "The Story-Time of the British Empire" is
a bold argument for a twenty-first-century vision of folklore
studies that is international in scope and that understands
folklore as a transnational entity.
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