folkliterature
Folkliterature is the body of literary material that arises from folk tradition or draws on it. It includes both oral genres circulated among communities—folktales, myths, legends, ballads, chants, proverbs, riddles—and their written forms, such as fairy tales, epic poems, and folkloric novels, as well as modern media that reinterpret or imitate folk motifs. The term also covers scholarly study of these materials, including how they are transmitted, transformed, and interpreted within cultures and across periods.
Traditionally, folktales and related narratives served functions of entertainment, instruction, social cohesion, and cultural memory. They
Scholarship in folkliterature uses methods from ethnography, philology, and literary analysis. It employs cataloging systems such
Historically, modern interest in folktales emerged in the 18th–19th centuries with Romantic nationalism and the work
Folkliterature thus lies at the intersection of folklore studies and literary criticism, informing our understanding of