8 Children’s
Folklore
insightful
Not Just Child’s Play: Emerging Tradition and the Lost Boys of Sudan
(2007) explores how DiDinga youths who immigrated from the Sudan to Syra-
cuse playfully use songs, dances, and art forms learned in childhood as strate-
gies for adaptation to their new lives in the United States. Rather than viewing
themselves
as victims, these young men take pride in sharing and preserving Di-
Dinga culture through public performances and gatherings with fellow refugees.
McMahon’s book provides a model for further folkloristic studies of displaced
children’s adjustment through performance of cherished folk traditions.
In their 1995 essay “The Past in the Present: Theoretical Directions for Chil-
dren’s Folklore,” Felicia R. McMahon and Brian Sutton-Smith ask “how it is that
our adult culture so typically suppresses the power-related aspects of children’s
lives” (308). Unfortunately, the massacre of 12 students and a teacher at Colum-
bine High School in Littleton, Colorado, in 1999 showed everyone how sud-
denly children could turn on
each other and their teachers, with resultant loss of
life. Since Columbine, teachers and administrators have feared sudden outbreaks
of violence at school. Most school shootings have taken place in high schools,
but some have occurred in middle schools and elementary schools. In 2002 the
Children’s Folklore Review
devoted a special issue to the implications and effects of
the Columbine massacre. Several essays in that issue are discussed in chapter 4.
Further anxiety has resulted from terrorist attacks on the United States on Sep-
tember 11, 2001. Before that date, American children and their parents felt rela-
tively safe from attack within their nation’s borders. As in the aftermath of other
stressful events, children’s play has mirrored the difficulty of both children’s and
adults’ adjustment to a change in worldview caused by unexpected violence.
Also noteworthy have been effects of the political
correctness and risk-
management trends from the 1980s to the early twenty-first century. Efforts to
eradicate racism and facilitate fairness to all have influenced people’s attitudes to-
ward some kinds of children’s folklore. Jokes that disparage certain ethnic groups
and rhymes that include derogatory terms have fallen into disfavor. Since the
advent of Anti-Social Behaviour Orders in England in 1999, police have ordered
children to stop playing noisy ball games; earlier, some British schools outlawed
conker (chestnut) battles, jump ropes, and paper airplanes because children might
get hurt while playing with them. Conn and Hal Iggulden’s
Th
e Dangerous Book
for Boys
(2007) has provided a counterweight to political correctness and judi-
cial control, explaining
how to play with conkers, slingshots, and other “danger-
ous” things. This book’s best-selling status in both England and the United States
shows how exciting old-fashioned games and playthings can seem when adults
limit children’s entertainment. Similar accolades have greeted Andrea J. Buchanan
and Miriam Peskowitz’s
Th
e Daring Book for Girls
(2007).
Other changes in the world since 1988 have been economic and technological.
Since the rise of the Internet in 1991, people have radically changed how they
Introduction 9
do business and communicate with each other. Thomas L. Friedman’s perceptive
study
Th
e World Is Flat
(2007) explains that the availability of cheap, instantaneous
communication has made nations part of a closely connected realm. Technology
specialists for Internet problems may not live
anywhere near their customers; for
example, a woman having problems with her Internet connection in Peoria, Il-
linois, may receive a solution from a technician in Bombay, India. Globalization
of the world’s economy has profoundly influenced people’s expectations.
Children’s folklore has always reflected adult society, and it has certainly shown
the influence of rapid changes in communications and marketing. One case in
point is the development of legends and beliefs about the dangers of drinking
Coca Cola and eating candy that seems to cause an explosion. In the 1960s and
1970s, children told each other that placing a tooth in a glass of Coke would
result in the tooth’s disintegration. L. Michael Bell’s essay “Cokelore” (1979)
lists beliefs that Coke corrodes teeth and, in combination with aspirin, upsets
stomachs; Gary Alan Fine’s essay “Folklore Diffusion
through Interactive Social
Networks” (1979) documents preadolescents’ legends about deaths as a result of
eating Pop Rocks candy. Now such legends and beliefs have taken a new turn;
kids tell each other that a combination of Diet Coke and Mentos mints will
cause a huge explosion, as discussed by Trevor Blank. While this legend resembles
the Pop Rocks legend, its transmission works differently. Besides hearing about
Coke and Mentos in day-to-day conversation, kids watch combustible mixtures
of these two ingredients on the television show
Mythbusters;
they
also watch seg-
ments of this show on the Internet. Any individual who has made a video of
exploding Coke and Mentos can post the video on YouTube, where people find
it quickly and easily. The most popular videos show huge jets of Coke exploding
into high columns, which may reflect concern about terrorism; then again, they
may simply show that young people (and some older folks as well) enjoy turning
quiet bottles of Coke into impressive displays of chemical power.
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