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Why Folktales? By Rafe Martin This article originally appeared in the January 1999 edition of Storytelling Magazine My answer is that folktales, perhaps better called traditional tales, return
us, not to the literal world but to the imagined one. They are doorways
into a constant realm of universal dreaming through which archetypes may
be embodied, characters and roles and life paths explored.
They are old, as the psyche is old, as the imagination is; old and enduring.
The patterns of cause and effect, good and evil which run through these
old tales underlie all cultures, underlie even the current dream of unbounded
technological accomplishment and success. Folktales, the unauthored, cumulative
recasting of many generations’ experience explores the old, that
is, fundamental areas of ourselves, areas so common they remain at the
bedrock of our humanity.
And because they are old, they are mature. Honed by centuries of telling and
retelling they have become concise models of narrative, real building
blocks of the imagination. Worn to the nub, all superfluity washed away,
they retain a consistency of their own. In them only what needs to happen,
happens. And yet, the promise of that happening fulfills our dreams.
For what folktales give us, is a language of wish-fulfillment. In these stories
we can make what we wish to happen finally happen. In the mind. In the
imagination. We can see and feel core places that we may have to strive
all our lives to bring into actual being. But in the folktale it is completed
and we live and feel it, too, in the unique terms of our own images. A
kind of promise of fulfillment, of a destined, some-day-to-be fulfillment
is made temporarily real. In a Cinderella tale for example we can experience
justice -- see good rewarded and evil punished. When was the last time
reading the newspaper brought that? How could it? Our daily news is built
on tales of injustice. That is the world. But not the world we wish for.
Traditional tales put us into a real human world; not the literal one,
but one we really wish might be. That wish is part of our truth as human
beings. If we lose it we lose a deep part of ourselves, the very part,
perhaps, that motivates our constant effort to improve society and recreate
the world to accord with wish -- to bring into being a world of integrity
and equality. Traditional tales keep the flame of such possibility alive.
Fiction, however, turns us to the literal characters and places of the outer world.
As for movies they do that always and completely so. The literal streets,
cars, houses, pollution of our daily world are all there, as are the literal
faces and mannerisms and voices of this or that character, this or that
actor.
But in folktales the smoke curls yet from the cottage beside the sea. There
the fisherman’s wife still explores the parameters of greed through
the grace of the flounder. The little parrot still flies through smoke
and fire to fulfill the one little task she has envisioned for herself
and the Rough-Face Girl, after torments, at last weds the Invisible Being.
Ships set forth on the blue sea and the wolf prowls the green forest.
The soul’s stories, the ones always needing to be enacted within
the imagination, are brought to life. To retell them is perhaps as primary
an act of the imagination as the constant repainting, by traditional peoples
and, at one time, by all our ancestors world-wide, of cave walls and petroglyphs.
It has the tone of ceremony.
Folktales, traditional tales, are the eternal literature of humanity. They speak
not to reason, logic, fact and that jumbled pile of one-time events we
call history, but to the portals of dream. They speak to creative powers
lying dormant and unrecognized, unconjured, unprotected, as devastated
as wilderness; to wild territories of our own being. They speak to what
is not, yet must always be.
And they do it in language that is clear, finely honed, precise. Behind the
words on the page one hears the echo of an actual, human voice. The characters,
too, are simple and clear, the kind that a single narrator could have
brought to life. They are the elemental beings of our own psyche -- the
disguised yet spirited prince or princess, the tyrannical king or queen,
the animal-helper, the wise old woman or man to name a few. Implicit in
all such tales too, is the nurturing presence of human community and all
the social contexts of told stories. The tales arise from a time when,
if you wanted to hear a tale, you had to join with others and share the
experience in common in a social, communal event. This is so entirely
unlike the experience of reading a book as to be almost unimaginable today.
When reading one can stop and start as one chooses. One can pick up one
book, put it down, begin another. One remains always in control. The told
tale reminds us of a more complete participation, in which the imagination
and long-held, stable traditions and entire communities of people all
joined in the act of restoring and being restored by, the tale.
Still, why should we care whether the imagination is nourished or not? Isn’t
it time to grow up? To get real and let all this old stuff go? Ah, but
it is not out of logic and reason, as useful tools as they may be, that
we actually create our lives but, rather, out of wish and dream. If the
imagination is undeveloped how can a life be dreamed well? To dream, to
imagine is the beginning of creating. We dream our self-image, dream our
careers, dream our possibilities for love and family. Our maturation and
inner growth is a kind of redreaming, a revisioning of possibility and
reality. Out of these dreams our actual life unfolds. And more. The airplane,
telephone, computer, all of it, everything not of Nature, began as a dream
in the mind. Now it is real. Out of the imagination comes our real life.
Traditional tales are food for this imagination. They nourish and develop it by getting
us to see what cannot be seen outside the tale. They let us see the interplay
of causes and effects. The king’s son wandering the earth returns
the salmon to the water. The princess, lost in the wilderness, shakes
the heavy apples down from the burdened tree, releasing the branches.
From such kind deeds benefits will flow. How we limit this process by
calling it simply, “values”. In traditional tales we explore
the dynamics of compassion and selfishness as well as other fundamental
areas of our own nature. We become the good and evil characters, the animals,
cities, forests and seas. They are our nature made visible as in dream.
And things impossible to touch outside of dream can again enter our waking
lives -- shadows, memories, aspirations, possibilities, a sense of connection
to an old, true, always real world in which humans and animals do converse
freely and the wolf is our brother, the raven our sister, the eagle our
mother.
Folktales are soul’s nourishment; are food. Without them we are never quite
ourselves, never who we might have been. And they must be recast in words.
Only then can they come alive in our own interior images, only then can
they live, becomes us, enter our bloodstream, hearts and bones and empower
our lives.
The relationship between the human mind and folktales may be reciprocal. Perhaps
the tales are a kind of wildlife of the psyche, capable of roaming, foraging
and reproducing, of living their own lives, in a tentative way, without
us. Perhaps they wander, in somewhat differing form, through plant and
animal, and other non-human minds. Perhaps they were in the mind of the
earth itself before other life-forms began. Perhaps, they predate, in
their essence, the green earth itself. Perhaps, to them, mind is a doorway
and body a vehicle for the reenactment of story.
Then, do we imagine stories? Yes. But they also are the dream dreaming us.
Could we live without them? As we could live without love, without the earth,
skies, and trees if absolutely necessary. But such a life would be a kind
of prison is, in fact, what we mean by “hell.” If imagination
is possibility, a starved imagination implies a pinched, starved, and
diminished life; a trapped and truncated one. We suffer from lack of imagining.
Which is why I choose so often to work with traditional tales. They teach us
how to imagine. It is why they are the foundation of children’s literature.
In childhood the imagination is such a primary sense it must be trusted.
As children what do we know except what we observe and feel and imagine.
The street beyond our door -- where does it lead? We imagine it. Where
do our parents go, what lives do they live when they walk out the door?
We must imagine it. We imagine mountains and seas, the moon and Mars,
the past and future, the mind and life of a bug, a bird. As children we
trust what we imagine because it is our primary way of knowing, a kind
of intuiting. It is how the world comes to us. Perhaps it is the basis
of what adults call, “faith.”
In part this is why the invasion of the imagination by expensive and so,
exclusive, special effects as well as by heavily merchandized correlations
of story and toys is so disturbing. It is a kind of literalizing of the
imagination when we need to find and trust it most. If that doorway is
closed too early a barrenness sets in. The places of the imagination with
their own dark forests and clear ponds and our potential journeys there,
never form. The newspapers abound with awful proof of such loss of interior,
soul, possibility, and hope.
There is an early, romantic poem of Yeats’ titled “To the Realists”
which goes like this:
This was written in 1914. It seems terribly truer now. What can be done?
Being limited by time, talent, vision and will, by culture and genes we
each try to do the little things we can. One little thing is simply to
let old tales live.
The twenty-five hundred year old Buddhist tale of “The Brave Little
Parrot” (which I recently turned into a picture book for G.P. Putnam’s
Sons), suggests that little things can have large effects, effects which
neither logic nor reason could predict. In that tale a little parrot struggles
to sprinkle drops of water on a raging forest fire. It seems hopeless.
Yet in the end it changes everything.
Is this a false hope? A foolish and naive one? Or are such whispers from
the imagination, faint embers of an old world buried in our childrens’
tales, among the few things we can still reasonably trust to light our
way, even today?
Read and share old tales. Think about them and recreate them. And see. home about rafe appearances books recordings articles gallery contact Copyright ©
Rafe Martin, 2000. All rights reserved. |