During my recent studies I
periodically encountered the Head of Department. He would usually beam at me
and ask engagingly ‘Are you sick of it yet?’ Funnily enough, I never actually
was, but by the end I was almost physically incapable of taking on anything
further. It’s been, therefore, a pleasure and a relief to have been able to
survey some recent folklore publications over the last couple of months, and to
be able to read more widely than just thesis-related subjects.
One delight has been the charming Galoshins
Remembered: ‘A Penny Was a Lot in These Days’, ed. Emily Lyle (Edinburgh:
National Museums Scotland, 2011). It’s an unassuming little book, and all the
better for that.
Galoshins
was a fairly typical folk play of the combat and recovery type. It was
performed as a house visiting play across the south of Scotland either on Old
Year’s Night or Halloween by groups of (usually) boys aged between nine and 14.
Its performance lasted well into the first half of the twentieth century. Such
was the enthusiasm for it that some former practitioners have also been active
in promoting its revival amongst local children, like the group shown on the
front cover. (When I was trying to find footage online all I came up with were
some consciously ‘traditional’ and rather overblown revival performances by
adults. They’re pleasant and entertaining enough – and rather wonderful in some cases – but not quite the same as a group of small boys in costumes fighting in
your front room).
The book provides an
overview of recent field research amongst surviving practitioners. It is
exemplary in its presentation of their words and its demonstration of field
interviewing techniques.
Emily Lyle’s wide-ranging scholarship
is formidable. She has combined some theoretically challenging approaches to a
very long cultural history in the ritual year (approaches I have not always found
convincing because of their historical and prehistorical sweep) with some sensitive
and nuanced work on ballads and singers. This book really shows her at her best,
working closely with informants in the field to document their lives and
practice.
From their recollection Lyle is able to reconstruct local texts of the play, and give musical notation for the short song that concluded the performance. More significantly, I think, she is able to capture something of the real joy and excitement involved in the performances.
This is the book’s strength. Although it provides good documentation of the artefacts of performance (the play, costumes, music etc) its real focus is its importance in the lives of performers and their communities. One informant here was even known locally, and introduced to strangers, by reference to his part in the play.
From their recollection Lyle is able to reconstruct local texts of the play, and give musical notation for the short song that concluded the performance. More significantly, I think, she is able to capture something of the real joy and excitement involved in the performances.
This is the book’s strength. Although it provides good documentation of the artefacts of performance (the play, costumes, music etc) its real focus is its importance in the lives of performers and their communities. One informant here was even known locally, and introduced to strangers, by reference to his part in the play.
By really placing the
participants at the heart of this book Lyle is able to provide a comprehensive
examination of the play as a limited and specific ethnographic practice. It is
probable that the book will mainly attract the attention of folk drama
specialists to begin with, but its strength, to my mind, is that it is really about
the practice as a part of local childlore, which is a rather wider subject. The
book is unlikely to satisfy those looking for deeper artefactual analyses of the
play, but I think it opens a much richer and more fruitful way of approaching
communities and their practices. It makes no great claims for itself, and is
likely to be the more enduring because of that.
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