Folklore is one of the arts, and like all the arts it shows and reminds us of important senses of being human. (If art didn’t, it would not last.) About these important senses, Benjamin Botkin wrote:
And these are the values that folklore can restore to the individual and that the individual should seek to recover from folklore for literature – a sense of the continuity of human nature; a sense of art as a response instead of a commodity; a sense of social structure, based on social intelligence and good will; and a sense of pattern in its primitive use as a model and a guide rather than a limit.
Social intelligence is a wonderful and rarely mentioned idea, which offers lots of possibilities for exploring.
(Quoted on page 135 of “The Folk and the Individual: Their Creative Reciprocity,” by B. A. Botkin. English Journal, 27: 121-135.1938.)
For a brief biography of Benjamin Botkin, click here. For images of or relating to Benjamin Botkin, click here.
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