We are recirculating the following updated call for papers for the 
special journal issue “Disturbed Traditions: Folklore in the 
Anthropocene.” This issue will now be submitted for intended publication
 with the Journal of Folklore Research.
Call for Papers: Disturbed Traditions: Folklore in the Anthropocene.
Renowned folklorist Barre Toelken once described how, while growing 
up in one of the small Massachusetts towns that was destroyed in 1938 in
 order to build the Quabbin Reservoir, members of his local community 
“and their descendants [continued] to gather near the shore for picnics 
and nostalgic conversation, and photos from early times there were saved
 like holy relics” (Toelken 1996, 411). This maintenance of a shared 
sense of place and local identity in the face of human-induced 
destruction is not unlike many others that folklorists have documented. 
Timothy Tangherlini, for example, studied the process by which Korean 
Americans reasserted a sense of place in Koreatown, Los Angeles, 
following the 1992 riots though “the public staging of culturally 
informed performances…and the repeated telling of narratives that 
emphasized place” (Tangherlini 1999, 155). More recently, the wave of 
folklore scholarship that followed the 2005 Hurricane Katrina disaster 
examined the push for “narrative coherence,” often from outside the 
affected communities, in establishing a public memory of disaster (see, 
for example, Horigan 2018, 7), as well as the ways in which researchers 
can help empower affected communities, not by providing this coherence, 
but by offering the resources and social capital to allow them to 
reassert a collective sense of community and agency through the sharing 
of narrative (see, for example, Lindahl and Foster 2017). Working with a
 predominantly African American community in Pinhook, Missouri, 
folklorists David Todd Lawrence and Elain Lawless similarly traced the 
long road of survivors of a major flood event there toward the 
reestablishment of their community in the form of the strengthening of 
shared social and traditional bonds of place, even without the full 
reclamation of physical space; as Lawrence and Lawless put it, their 
participants built a sense that “community resides in a space separate 
from the physical location of their town” (Lawrence and Lawless 2018, 
5).[i]
While each of these projects, and many more, have offered us new 
insights into the ways in which community members use tradition, perhaps
 especially narrative, to heal, reveal, reclaim, revive, or remake the 
bonds of social and cultural support they shared with each other —as 
well as reassert claims to place and identity within a wider public— 
these works have generally homed in on specific disaster events and 
their aftermath. However, increasingly, we are coming to understand that
 the arc of human-induced disaster is broader than any single event. 
With the recognition that we are in the midst of the “anthropocene,” the
 geological age in which humans have come to be the most significant 
force in shaping the natural world, scholars have begun to reframe the 
often-discrete way we have treated disaster events, as well to question 
some of the grand narratives that have sustained the Western 
understanding of human relations with the natural world for centuries.
In a recent article for the New York Review of Books (December
 8, 2022), for example, philosopher Martha C. Nussbaum challenges the 
basic, everyday distinction we often make between human society and “the
 wild.” She writes:
Here, in a nutshell, is the Romantic idea of Nature: Human society is
 stale, predictable, effete. It lacks powerful sources of energy and 
renewal. People are alienated from one another and from themselves. The 
Industrial Revolution has made cities foul places where the human spirit
 is frequently crushed (as in Blake’s “dark Satanic Mills”). By 
contrast, out there somewhere—in the mountains, in the oceans, even in 
the wild West Wind—there beckons something truer, deeper, something 
uncorrupt and sublime, a type of vital energy that can restore us, 
because it is the analogue of our own deepest depths. Other animals are a
 large part of this “wild”: of Nature’s mysterious and vital energy 
(think of Blake’s “Tyger, tyger, burning bright”).
Interestingly, she also notes a point already familiar to 
folklorists: that this Romantic strain of thinking was also applied to 
different segments of human society (and correspondingly underwrote the 
foundations of our own discipline): “Many nineteenth-century Romantics 
even had the idea that peasants and other poor people were part of 
Nature or closer to Nature, and ought to stay there in rural poverty 
rather than venture into the city and try to get educated.”
Moving beyond the Romantic view means, Nussbaum argues, understanding
 that these dichotomies (whether they are between human society and “the
 wild” or between civilized elites and rustic peasants) no longer exist,
 if they ever did. Therefore, to talk about, for example, a need to 
reestablish “wild” spaces to counteract human environmental degradation 
is to talk nonsense. This line of thought, Nussbaum writes, “presupposes
 that there is such a thing in the world as “wild” Nature: spaces that 
are not under human control and domination. It presupposes that it is 
possible for humans to leave animals alone. That presupposition is 
false. However large the tracts of land may be, all land in our world is
 thoroughly under human control.”
Nussbaum’s view echoes that of anthropologist Anna Lowenhaupt Tsing, 
who argues that the condition of the Anthropocene, a creation of modern 
capitalism, is not one of stability at the center and precarity around 
the edges, but rather one in which precarity is the norm of human 
society and the natural world (Tsing 2015, 20). As a result, Tsing calls
 for a revised understanding of the interconnections of human society, 
the global economy, and the natural world, one that also jettisons 
notions of progressive, scalable advancement that have frequently 
dominated both critical and celebratory discourses from the 
Enlightenment onward:
For humanists, assumptions of progressive human mastery have 
encouraged a view of nature as a romantic space of antimodernity. Yet 
for twentieth-century scientists, progress also unselfconsciously framed
 the study of landscapes. Assumptions about expansion slipped into the 
formulation of population biology. New developments in ecology make it 
possible to think quite differently by introducing cross-species 
interactions and disturbance histories. In this time of diminished 
expectations, I look for disturbance-based ecologies in which many species sometimes live together without either harmony or conquest (Tsing 2015, 5).
Folklorists are starting to become invested in this kind of holistic,
 interconnected, anthropogenic view of the world as well, and to contend
 with what our role in addressing it may be. For example, a 2023 
conference of the UK’s Folklore Society will tackle the topic “Folklore,
 Geography and Environment: Ways of Knowing Water, Landscape and Climate
 in the Anthropocene.” It presents as its centrals questions: 1) 
What…kinds of knowledge might inform our responses to the challenge of 
increasingly volatile relationships with water: what can 
anthropologists, folklorists, and human geographers tell flood and 
climate science about human/water/landscape relationships? and 2) How we
 can make that other knowledge intelligible to mainstream climate and 
flood science: how is knowledge about the human/water/landscape 
relationship coproduced and reproduced? What distinctive perspectives 
can scholarship from outside the physical geosciences bring to the 
urgent need to develop realistic, Anthropocene-ready resilience 
strategies?
To these excellent questions, the present special issue adds several 
broader ones: how should a recognition of the pervasiveness of human 
influence, in the form of commodity chains, global flows of media, and 
the intervention into or disruption of the natural environment, reorient
 our thinking about folklore? How should looking at disaster events not 
as discrete occurrences, but as part of this larger web of human-induced
 changes in the environment shift how we understand the processes of 
recovery, resilience, and sustainability through folklore that we have 
so well demonstrated in the past? How should we acknowledge the 
significance of digital spaces as local and global focal points for 
shared social memory, commiseration, and recuperation within the 
framework of expanding environmental crises and place-based folklore? 
This Special Issue relaunching at The Journal of Folklore Research will 
seek to offer answers to these and other pressing questions. We call for
 the submission of works that address one or more of these or related 
questions, and are particularly interested in essays that can also 
examine how these impacts and responses should be understood in terms of
 larger questions around issues such as race, ethnicity, class, 
identity, and inequality.
We request that, prior to submitting a manuscript, interested authors
 initially submit a proposed title and a long abstract of 400–600 words 
summarizing their intended contribution. Please send this to the guest 
editors (abb20@psu.edu and sed287@psu.edu).
 Abstracts will be reviewed by the guest editors for the purposes of 
ensuring proper fit within the scope of the special issue. Full 
manuscripts will undergo peer review prior to acceptance with JFR.
Works Cited
Andersen, David M. 1974. “The Los Angeles Earthquake and the Folklore of Disaster.” Western Folklore 33 (4): 331–36. https://doi.org/10.2307/1498550.
Horigan, Kate Parker. 2018. Consuming Katrina: Public Disaster and Personal Narrative. Jackson: University Press of Mississippi.
Lawrence, David Todd, and Elaine J. Lawless. 2018. When They Blew the Levee: Race, Politics, and Community in Pinhook, Missouri. Jackson: University Press of Mississippi.
Lindahl, Carl, and Michael Dylan Foster, eds. 2017. We are all Survivors: Verbal, Ritual and Material Ways of Narrating Disaster and Recovery. Vol. 58 (1–2). Special Issue of Fabula. https://www.degruyter.com/document/doi/10.1515/fabula-2017-0001/html.
Mechling, Jay. 1986. “The Folklore of a Public Disaster: An Editor’s Introduction.” Western Folklore 45 (4): 241–42.
Milspaw, Yvonne J. 1981. “Folklore and the Nuclear Age: ‘The Harrisburg Disaster’ at Three Mile Island.” International Folklore Review: Folklore Studies from Overseas 1 (Journal Article): 57.
Nussbaum, Martha C. December 8, 2022. “A Peopled Wilderness.” New York Review of Books. Accessed March 7, 2023. https://www.nybooks.com/articles/2022/12/08/a-peopled-wilderness-martha-c-nussbaum/.
Tangherliini, Timothy R. 1999. “Remapping Koreatown: Folklore, Narrative and the Los Angeles Riots.” Western Folklore 58 (2): 149–73. https://doi.org/10.2307/1500164.
Toelken, Barre. 1996. Dynamics Of Folklore. 1 edition. Logan, Utah: Utah State University Press.
Tsing, Anna Lowenhaupt. 2017. The Mushroom at the End of the World: On the Possibility of Life in Capitalist Ruins. Reprint edition. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
Tentative completion schedule:
- Abstract submission deadline: 15 March 2024
- Notification of abstract acceptance: 1 April 2024
- Full manuscript deadline: 1 July 2024
Dr. Anthony Bak Buccitelli
Sean Edward Dixon
Guest Editors
Manuscript Submission Information
All submissions must be in either Microsoft Word (.doc or .docx) 
format or Rich-Text Format (.rtf). The text, quotations, and endnotes 
should be single or double-spaced with 1-inch margins for copy-editing 
and should conform to the 17th edition of the Chicago Manual of Style. 
If you do not have ready access to the Chicago Manual, please consult a recent issue of the Journal of Folklore Research or consult their style guide.
The following sample article gives a sense of the content and style of JFR articles:
If a manuscript includes notes, endnotes should be used rather than 
footnotes. All submissions should be accompanied by an abstract of no 
more than 200 words, as well as a 50-word author biographical statement.
Visual elements should be submitted in digital form. Please scan 
images (including slides) at a resolution of 300 dpi, in TIF or EPS 
format. Size all images to no more than 5 inches horizontally. All 
images, tables, diagrams, and figures should be uploaded as supplemental
 files rather than embedded in the manuscript itself. In the text file, 
please indicate where each graphic should appear by placing a "callout" 
description in the appropriate location (e.g., <figure 1 about 
here>). Drawings and maps must be submitted in a form suitable for 
publication without redrawing. Submit captions for all graphic elements 
by completing the supplemental file information form during the 
manuscript submission phase.
All articles should include keywords of the author's choosing. These help to index JFR
 publications when they are electronically distributed through services 
like JSTOR. If you are uncertain which keywords to use, consult the 
American Folklore Society's Ethnographic Thesaurus.
Contact Info: 
Dr. Anthony Bak Buccitelli
Associate Professor and Chair
American Studies Program
Pennsylvania State University, Harrisburg
abb20@psu.edu
 
Sean Edward Dixon
PhD Candidate
American Studies Program
Pennsylvania State University, Harrisburg
sed287@psu.edu
 
[i]
 And, of course, folklorists have been documenting folk responses to 
disasters, human-induced, and otherwise for decades. See, for example, 
Andersen 1974, Milspaw 1981, and Mechling 1986.