Author(s): Eleonora Sava / Language(s): French
Issue: 2/2009
Contemporary Narrations: the Internet Folklore. The present study
suggests an anthropological “radiography” of messages that can be named Internet
Folklore since they have a theoretically infinite number of addressees, do not convey a
personal content for a unique recipient; on the contrary, they imply a largely general
character and in the end can contain the indication to be sent to as many recipients as
possible. Messages of this type verify a series of folklore defining features, mentioned
by the classical textbooks: the anonymous character (the message’s initial transmitter is
often unknown), the syncretic character (they use text, images and sound at the same
time, being multimedia messages), the traditional character (many of them are built on
familiar epic structures, typical for the oral narrations). At the same time, they require a
redefinition of the folklore because the conveying way is not oral, non-mediated (man
to man and mouth to ear) but written, mediated, through a non-traditional channel
(Internet) that in its turn involves a series of contextual modifications.
The group of messages on which I base my analysis was gathered during two
years (2007 – 2008) and contains mostly narrations. From a typological point of view,
they can be integrated in four great categories: jokes, urban legends, rumors and chain
messages. The addressees and addressers were teenagers and adults, mainly girls and
women (it’s about messages received by this study’s author). Most of the texts are
written in Romanian but there are some in other languages, too: English, French.
The chosen examples show the vitality of the folklore, contradicting the opinions
which supported its disappearance, since the contemporary societies, like the
traditional ones are creators and carriers of folklore. The addressee of these messages is
a public that has never ceased to tell stories and to trust the power of story to take
possession and signify the reality. The comparison of folklore-traditional narrations
with those sent through Internet shows only superficial differences: the medieval or
rustic settings, the mythical characters and the conflicts that motivated the heroes’
actions have disappeared; the texts have neither the complexity nor the amplitude of
the old fairy tales. In essence though, they are built on the same logic of symbolic
nature and resort to the same narrative elements – action schemes, characters,
significance systems – that exist within the cultural register shared with both the
recipient public and the old narrations.
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