Scholarship and Approaches 119
ton, Colorado, and then killed themselves. This horrifying
massacre elicited com-
mentaries from people around the world, including concerned folklorists. In 2002
the
Children’s Folklore Review
published a special issue on the Columbine massacre
and adolescence. Examining both folk traditions and popular culture, the authors
of essays in this special issue express significant insights related to adolescents’ needs
and cultural patterns. Bill Ellis’s “Hitler’s Birthday: Rumor-Panics in the Wake of
the Columbine Shootings” puts rumor-panics following the Columbine massacre
in historical and cultural context. Citing similar but less widely known rumor-
panics that occurred in 1987 and 1989, Ellis analyzes them as “an
emergent form of
folk narrative” (23). JoAnn Conrad’s “The War on Youth: A Modern Oedipal Trag-
edy” examines representations of youth as “the object of adult violence and rage,
the object of adult moralistic anti-violence campaigns (violently implemented),
and the object of adult desires” (39). Within the culture of high schools, certain
behavior patterns contribute to outbreaks of violence. Allen Berres’s “ ‘Everybody
Is Their Enemy’: Goths, Spooky Kids, and the American School Shooting Panic”
closely examines Columbine High School’s “Trench Coat Mafia” and other rebel-
lious groups of adolescents. Recognizing the “environment of fear” engendered by
school shootings and subsequent lawsuits, Berres suggests that adults will continue
to worry as long as groups or cliques of adolescents resist societal control (52).
After terrorists’ attacks on the United States on September 11, 2001, children’s
play and games reflected Americans’ struggle to
come to terms with what had
happened. Ann Richman Beresin’s “Children’s Expressive Culture in Light of
September 11, 2001” perceptively analyzes how children played in Philadelphia
shortly after the attacks occurred. Explaining that children’s folklore has “always
served as a window into the anxieties and ambivalence concerning specific wars
and tragedies,” Beresin discusses examples of post–September 11 play (331). Most
of these forms of play build on traditional patterns. Four children, for example,
make weapons out of iced-tea containers and pebbles. Forming two teams to
shoot pebbles at each other, they call one team “Americans” and the other “Ter-
rorists” (333). A little boy playing blocks crashes a wooden block “missile” into
tall “buildings” that he has built. Seven- and nine-year-old boys give the nursery
rhyme “London Bridge Is Falling Down” new words:
World TRADE
Center is FALLING DOWN
FALLING DOWN, FALLING DOWN
World TRADE Center is FALLING DOWN
Oh—ON TOP of US. (331)
Beresin argues that educators should recognize the importance of such creative,
open-ended play, which cannot happen at school unless time is allotted for re-
cess. Her examples of children’s play after September 11 support her contention
that “the boundary between the rational and irrational is finer than we often
120 Children’s
Folklore
acknowledge, that violence has its rationale for those who perpetuate it, and that
children’s irrational play indeed makes a lot of sense” (335). She also makes the
interesting point that “cultures linked by hatred and cultures linked by play”
converge at times of trauma (335).
In the years since the Columbine High School massacre and the September 11
terrorist attacks, some adults have viewed certain kinds of children’s and adoles-
cents’ folklore as sources of danger. My article “ ‘Mean Girls’: The Reclassification
of Children’s and Adolescents’ Folklore” (2002–03)
gives examples of American
school administrators’ prohibition of such forms of children’s folklore as slam
books, pranks, insults, and graffiti. Since the fall of 2001, pranks involving fake
bombs in middle schools and high schools have resulted in severe penalties, in-
cluding expulsion from school and jail sentences. A
New York Times Magazine
article by Margaret Talbot, “Girls Just Want to Be Mean” (2002), brought the
public’s attention to girls’ exclusion rituals that resulted in school administra-
tors’ hiring of professional intervention specialists. Soon afterwards, a number
of books on girls’
traditional behavior, including Rosalind Wiseman’s
Queen Bees
and Wannabes
(2002), became popular among parents and teachers.
Since children’s folklore scholars understand the dynamics of children’s play
and games, they can interpret the meaning of children’s expressive behavior dur-
ing difficult times. Knowing how children tend to respond to crises, they can
reassure concerned adults that reactive play gives children an important oppor-
tunity to express themselves. In
Th
e People in the Playground
(1993), Iona Opie
invites readers to enjoy the “defiant light-heartedness” of children’s play. With
refreshing insight, she observes, “The children are clowning. They are making
fun of life; and if an enquiring adult becomes too serious
about words and rules
they say: ‘It’s only a game, isn’t it? It’s just for fun.
I
don’t know what it means. It
doesn’t
matter
’ ” (15).
Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: