Community Belonging in Local Character Anecdotes Cover Image

Community Belonging in Local Character Anecdotes
Community Belonging in Local Character Anecdotes

Author(s): Katherine Borland
Subject(s): Customs / Folklore, Culture and social structure , Social Theory, Sociology of Culture, Identity of Collectives
Published by: Institut za etnologiju i folkloristiku
Keywords: local character anecdote; storytelling rights; positioning; identity; Maine;

Summary/Abstract: Local character narratives offer a fruitful corpus for exploring the relation between community belonging, identity and narrator stance. After summarizing North American scholarship on the local character genre, I explore the ways two narrators establish their storytelling rights to a rural Maine narrative tradition. Adopting an interactionist orientation toward discourse, I map the ways that the narrators position themselves with respect to each other and to their internalized other, the local character. I demonstrate that community belonging, and the storytelling rights that such belonging confers, is a discursive accomplishment that transcends stable class and geographic positions. The character story offers narrators a way to simultaneously identify with the most marginal, most emblematic members of their community while at the same time distinguishing themselves as normative citizens. Recognizing identities as plural, multi-voiced and sometimes conflicting, I challenge folklorists to explore how differently situated narrators can participate in a tradition that is attached to a particular place. I suggest we replace the notion of positionality –an enumeration of fixed identity features – with that of positioning – a discursive and social accomplishment – in our discussions of storytelling rights.

  • Issue Year: 59/2022
  • Issue No: 1
  • Page Range: 23-27
  • Page Count: 15
  • Language: English