URBAN LEGENDS AND THE SUPERNATURAL
First Year Seminar
Fall 2017
Instructor: Adam Andrews
Course Description
Did you hear about Slenderman? Have you ever played with a Ouija board and had something strange happen? Tales of the supernatural range from urban legends about ghosts and monsters to stories told by people who believe they encountered something out of the ordinary—angels, UFOs, and things that go bump in the night. In this course we will take a close look at the stories we tell in order to understand the social, cultural, and sometimes personal significance these stories have. In this class we will examine urban legends, myths, and ghost stories, as well as narratives of personal encounters of the supernatural. We’ll debate scholarship which has emerged in the last half-century trying to make sense out of these supernatural stories, and actively try to make our own kind of sense out of them, both as coherent genres of traditional narrative, and as a kind of experience with deeply rooted cultural, social, and personal meanings.
Course Learning Objectives:
In this class, you will:
1)Identify, describe, and analyze the traditional nature of the narratives we hear every day and their social and cultural significance, including how these narratives give shape and expression to our experiences, beliefs, values, and fears. [Inquiry and Analysis, assessed in weekly response papers and the final project]
2)Learn, critically question, and apply academic theories related to understanding traditional forms of narrative such as legends, memorates, folk tales, and myths. [Inquiry and Analysis, assessed in weekly response papers and the final project]
3)Develop your own scholarly voices/arguments in verbal and written form in weekly response papers and in a written final project. [Oral Communication; Written Communication, assessed in weekly response papers, the final project, and your project presentation]
4)Learn how to use print and electronic resources to examine course topics as part of developing college-level information literacy. [Information Literacy, assessed in the final project]
5)Develop an ethnographic research project investigating an urban legend or memorate tradition, which documents and explores the significance of that tradition using scholarly perspectives. [Problem Solving, assessed in the final project and reflective journal]
6)Examine and take a position on how various ideas about and theories of folklore are implicated in your own experience and in the narrative tradition explored in your research project, and what they suggest about the meaning or importance of the elements of those experiences, narratives, and traditions. [Critical Thinking, assessed in weekly response papers and the final project]
7)Examine legend and narrative traditions from other cultures and explain how their varying historical and social contexts are implicated in those traditions. [Global Learning, assessed in response papers for related readings]
8)Examine the ethical implications of folklore research and fieldwork, and make responsible decisions regarding the representation of research participants, their cultures, and their beliefs. [Ethical Reasoning, assessed in the final project and reflective journal]
GER Statement: Learning Outcomes for this Course
This course meets the UWM General Education Requirements in the division of the Humanities. All Humanities courses have the following learning outcome: “Students will be able to identify the formation, traditions, and ideas essential to major bodies of historical, cultural, literary, or philosophical knowledge.” In addition, this course addresses another Humanities learning outcome: “respond coherently and persuasively to the materials of humanities study; this may be through logical, textual, formal, historical, or aesthetic analysis, argument and/or interpretation.”
GER Assessment:
The first of these outcomes will be achieved through reading a selection of folklore scholarship and research about urban legends and memorates, and assessed through weekly response papers and the final project. The second outcome will be primarily assessed through the final project.
UW Shared Learning Goals:
This course, in the final project and the associated reflective journal, addresses the following four UW Shared Learning goals:
- Critical and Creative Thinking Skills including inquiry, problem solving, and higher-order qualitative and quantitative reasoning (Course Goals 1,2,5,6).
- Effective Communication Skills including listening, speaking, reading, writing, and information literacy (Course Goals 3, 4)
- Intercultural Knowledge and Competence including the ability to interact and work with people from diverse backgrounds and cultures; to lead or contribute support to those who lead; and to empathize with and understand those who are different than they are (Course Goal 7)
- Individual, Social, and Environmental Responsibility including civic knowledge and engagement (both local and global), ethical reasoning, and action (Course Goal 8).
Required Work/Grading
In this course you will read scholarship about various belief traditions, legends, and narratives of encounters with the supernatural, do your own original research on belief traditions and narratives among your own family and friends, and write a final project paper that uses class concepts to analyze and make sense of those narratives and beliefs. In the second half of the semester, each student’s own research will become part of the course. Students will do formal presentations of their work, and then we will work as a class to develop, critique, and think through each project. Students will then revise and extend their project papers into their final form. During the last part of the semester, students will also do reflective writing considering and recording their fieldwork experiences and observations, and thinking through their writing process for the final paper. This reflective writing will done in the form of a Reflective Journal that will be turned in with the Final Project. Grades in the class will be determined according to the formula below:
- Attendance, participation, and being prepared for class (15%),
- Weekly two-page papers responding to assigned readings (25%),
- Project Presentation (15%)
- Final Project Paper First Draft (5%)
- Final Project Paper-Revised (8+ pages) (25%)
- Reflective Journal (15%)
The Rubrics for weekly response papers, the presentation, the final project, and the reflective journal are available on D2L. You are responsible for reviewing the rubrics and understanding how you will be graded.
Required Texts
·Electronic readings available on D2L (in .pdf Adobe Reader format)
·Selected contemporary films (shown in class)
COURSE READING LIST (All Readings Available on D2L, as .pdfs, for free):
Adler, Shelley. 1991. Sudden Unexpected Nocturnal DeathSyndrome among Hmong Immigrants: Examining the Role of the Nightmare.Journal of American Folklore104, no. 411:54-71.
Ben-Amos, Dan. 1993. "Context" in Context. Western Folklore, Vol. 52, No. 2/4, Theorizing Folklore: Toward New Perspectives on the Politics of Culture (Apr. - Oct.), pp. 209-226
Bennett, Gillian. 1987. “The Dead” from Traditions of Belief: Women and the Supernatural. Penguin Books, 36-81.
Bennett, Gillian. 1998. “The Vanishing Hitchhiker at Fifty-Five.” Western Folklore, Vol. 57, No. 1 (Winter), pp. 1-17
Bennett, Gillian. 1999. “From Private Experience to Public Performance: Supernatural Experience as Narrative.” Alas, Poor Ghost! Traditions of Belief in Story and Discourse. Utah State University Press, 115-137.
Blecourt, Willem de. 2007. "I Would Have Eaten You Too": Werewolf Legends in the Flemish, Dutch and German Area. Folklore, Vol. 118, No. 1:23-43
Dewan, William. 2006. “A Saucerful of Secrets: An Interdisciplinary Analysis of UFO Experiences.” Journal of American Folklore 119(472):184-202
Ellis, Bill. 1994. “Speak to the Devil: Ouija Board Rituals Among American Adolescents.” Contemporary Legend 4: 61-90.
Evans, Timothy. 2005. A Last Defense against the Dark: Folklore, Horror, and the Uses of Tradition in the Works of H. P. Lovecraft. Journal of Folklore Research, Vol. 42, No. 1 (Jan. - Apr.), pp. 99-135
Foster, Michael Dylan. 2012. “Haunting Modernity: Tanuki, Trains, and Transformation in Japan. Asian Ethnology, Vol. 71, No. 1: 3-29
Jones, Pamela. 1988. "There Was a Woman": La Llorona in Oregon.Western Folklore 47: 195-211.
Keyworth, David. 2002. “The Socio-Religious Beliefs and Nature of the Contemporary Vampire Subculture.” Journal of Contemporary Religion, Vol. 17, No. 3, pp. 355–370
Koven, Mikel. 2003. “Folklore Studies and Popular Film and Television: A Necessary Critical Survey.” The Journal of American Folklore, Vol. 116, No. 460 (Spring), pp. 176-195
Letcher, Andy. 2001. “The Scouring of the Shire: Fairies, Trolls and Pixies in Eco-Protest Culture.” Folklore, Vol. 112, No. 2 (Oct.), pp. 147-161
Lindahl, Carl. 1996. “Psychic Ambiguity at the Legend Core.” Contemporary Legend: A Reader, eds. Gillian Bennett and Paul Smith. Garland Publishing, 69-90.
Oring, Elliot. 1986. On the Concepts ofFolklore. In Folk Groups and Folklore Genres: An Introduction, ed. Elliott Oring, pp. 1-22. Logan, UT: Utah State University Press.
Primiano, Leonard Norman. 1998. Angels and Americans. America 179, no. 10 (October 10):15-17.
Reider, Noriko. 2003. “Transformation of the Oni: From the Frightening and Diabolical to the Cute and Sexy.” Asian Folklore Studies, Vol. 62, No. 1, pp. 133-15
Tolbert, Jeffrey. 2013. “The sort of story that has you covering your mirrors”: The Case of Slender Man Originally published by Semiotic Review, Issue 2:Monsters – – November 2013
Tucker, Elizabeth. 2005. “Ghosts in Mirrors: Reflections of the Self.” Journal of American Folklore 118, no. 468: 186-203
Tucker, Elizabeth. 2007. “Campus Ghostlore,” and “Sensory Evidence.” From Haunted Halls: Ghostlore of American College Campuses. University Press of Mississippi, 3-72.
Victor, Jeffrey. 1990. Satanic Cult Rumors as Contemporary Legend. Western Folklore, Vol. 49, No. 1, Contemporary Legends in Emergence (Jan.), pp. 51-81
Wilson, William A. 1986.Documenting Folklore. InFolk Groups and Folklore Genres: An Introduction, ed. Elliott Oring, pp. 227-244. Logan, UT: Utah State UniversityPress.