Folklorists
Folklorists are scholars who study folklore—the traditional knowledge, beliefs, stories, songs, customs, and practices of communities. They document how these elements are created, shared, adapted, and transmitted across generations, and how they vary by region, language, and social group. Folklorists work in fields such as anthropology, ethnology, literature, and cultural studies, using methods that include fieldwork, interviews, participant observation, archival research, and textual or musical analysis.
The work often combines descriptive and comparative aims. The descriptive approach seeks to document living traditions
Folklorists study tales, myths, legends, folk songs, proverbs, jokes, rituals, customs, crafts, and festivals. They analyze
Historically, folklore study emerged in the 19th century within nationalistic and ethnographic projects, followed by developments