The Folkstories of Children
The Folkstories of Children
BRIAN SUTTON-SMITH
David M. Abrams
Gilbert J. Botvin
M’Lou Caring
Daniel P. Gildesgame
Daniel H. Mahony
Thomas R. Stevens
Series: Publications of the American Folklore Society
Copyright Date: 1981
Published by: University of Pennsylvania Press
Pages: 328
https://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctt3fh904
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Book Info
The Folkstories of Children
Book Description:

What prompts children to tell stories? What does the word "story" mean to a child at two or five years of age? The Folkstories of Children, first published in 1981, features nearly five hundred stories that were volunteered by fifty children between the ages of two and ten and transcribed word for word. The stories are organized chronologically by the age of the teller, revealing the progression of verbal competence and the gradual emergence of staging and plot organization. Many stories told by two-year-olds, for example, have only beginnings with no middle or end; the "narrative" is held together by rhyme or alliteration. After the age of three or four, the same children tell stories that feature a central character and a narrative arc. The stories also exhibit each child's growing awareness and management of his or her environment and life concerns. Some children see their stories as dialogues between teller and audience, others as monologues expressing concerns about fate and the forces of good and evil. Brian Sutton-Smith discusses the possible origins of the stories themselves: folktales, parent and teacher reading, media, required writing of stories in school, dreams, and play. The notes to each chapter draw on this context as well as folktale analysis and child development theory to consider why and how the stories take their particular forms. The Folkstories of Children provides valuable evidence and insight into the ways children actively and inventively engage language as they grow.

eISBN: 978-0-8122-0739-2
Subjects: Sociology
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  1. Front Matter
    Front Matter (pp. i-vi)
  2. Table of Contents
    Table of Contents (pp. vii-viii)
  3. PREFACE
    PREFACE (pp. ix-xiv)
  4. INTRODUCTION
    INTRODUCTION (pp. 1-44)

    The major purpose of this work is to make a collection of children’s stories available to a larger public. Such a collection, systematically taken, has not been available since Children Tell Stories, by Pitcher and Prelinger (1963). The present collection extends the range from two-year-olds to ten-year-olds, whereas the earlier work ended with five-year-olds.

    The title of this work, The Folkstories of Children, presents something of an anomaly. The stories that are dealt with in this book were made up by the children and so do not, on the surface, seem to be of a folk character—not if folklore...

  5. Part 1: Verse Stories:: Ages Two through Four
    • Two Years
      Two Years (pp. 47-68)
    • Three Years
      Three Years (pp. 69-98)
    • Four Years
      Four Years (pp. 99-116)
  6. Part 2: Plot Stories:: Ages Five through Ten
    • Five Years
      Five Years (pp. 119-143)

      I’ll tell you a story. He’s going to be a pumpkin man. Once upon a time, there was a pumpkin man. And he lived in a little pumpkin house close by the city. And he wanted to go to the city, so he went to the pumpkin-mobile and he went faster than the speed bullet, more powerful than a locomotor. He could go down the highest hill in a single bound. And he went so fast that he past-ted the store that he wanted to go to. Then when he got back home, he went to bed. And that’s the...

    • Six Years
      Six Years (pp. 144-175)

      One night I slept on the floor with my dog Ruff, Ruff. And I was sleeping with my dog on the rug. But the rug started to open and then I went down into a Wonder World. I fell into a bowl of lava. And when I fell into it, I could swim in it and it hurt just a little [he pinches me a little on the arm] and my dog fell in and got burned. And then I jumped in to save him. ’Cept when I got there, it was too late. But then one day I got...

    • Seven Years
      Seven Years (pp. 176-215)

      This is how it started. Do you know Michael in our class? He had this monster and was trying to destroy the British. But then the Americans were also trying to destroy it. And the Germans were trying to destroy sea monster, too. But then the Americans changed their minds. They found out that the British would have been destroyed and even the whole world would have been destroyed by that monster. And then Americans called up the Germans and the Germans caught the monster, because they wanted the world to be all right. And the reason why they wanted...

    • Eight Years
      Eight Years (pp. 216-262)

      Once there was a cheetah. The cheetah was his name and he lived in the forest. He was a very smart cheetah. Once in the middle of the night he heard footsteps. He thought it was a hunter he ran up a tree. He said, “yum” because he saw a big deer walking along the path in which he came. So since he was so hungry, he crept down to the top of the trunk of the tree and he waited until the deer got near him. When the deer got very near him, he jumped on him. Then the...

    • Nine Years
      Nine Years (pp. 263-288)

      Once upon a time there was a boy named Jerome and he was walking down the street and he saw his friend that wasn’t in school for a week and his name was Miles, and he was playing with my brother. When I was coming back from school, ’cause my brother didn’t go to school that day. So I started playing with them. We were playing tag. It was fun and then Miles had to go home. We walked Miles home and the next day we were going on a camping trip and I went and it was for four...

    • Ten Years
      Ten Years (pp. 289-311)

      Once there was a man who was very poor and he was fishing out by the sea. And he caught a fish that could talk. And the fish said, “I’m a magic fish and I’ll grant you any wish you want if you let me go.” So the man went back up to his house and asked his wife for what she wanted. She said she wanted a cottage. So the man went back to the fish and asked him for a cottage and the fish said, “Go back to your house and there will be a cottage.” So the...

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