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Word: folkloristics (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Russian Fairy Tales. There are nearly 200 stories in Translator Guterman's 662-page book. They were taken from the collection made in Czarist days by famed folklorist Alexander Nikolaievich Afanasiev...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Mouse & Moujik | 12/31/1945 | See Source »

...feathered folk, Impresario Disney signed up Nelson Eddy, Dinah Shore, the Andrews Sisters, Edgar Bergen. To supply the cartooned creatures with plots and dialogue, he has engaged such litterateurs as Novelist Huxley, Playwrights Marc Connelly and Edwin Justus Mayer, Author George Rippey Stewart, Author-Critic Sterling North and Folklorist Carl Carmer. Some Disney projects...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: Mickey's Coworkers | 12/3/1945 | See Source »

Carl Carmer, best-selling folklorist (Stars Fell on Alabama, Listen for a Lonesome Drum) went to court with Publishers Farrar & Rinehart to settle a baffling question: How big is a book? Author Carmer claimed that he had fulfilled his Farrar & Rinehart contract with a 40,000-word history of The Submarine Sturgeon, famed for Lieut. Commander William L. Wright's terse description of its baptism in battle: "Sturgeon no longer virgin." The publishers claimed that he still owes them a book because his submarine history was not "full-length." New York Supreme Court Judge Lloyd Church decided...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People: Fun & Games | 10/2/1944 | See Source »

...staffman ever since he left Princeton in 1929, managing editor of the radio March of Time since 1941. A redhaired, wry, witty compendium of universal fact and theory, Norris is also a not able Aberdeen Angus cattle raiser and barbershop tenor. Co-author of The World and America is Folklorist Carl Carmer (Listen for a Lonesome Drum), a specialist in local American history ever since he left a northern professorship to teach at the University of Alabama...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Radio: History on the Beam | 8/14/1944 | See Source »

...greensick pupil and his middle-aged churchwarden. That their adoration remained dumb was due to Lavinia's blissful inability to concentrate long enough to hear them out. Nevertheless they could try to protect her from each other, from Aunt Sissie's money, from a pesky lady folklorist home from Italy, and from the consequences of her own kind deeds. Only her two grown children appreciated how little protection Lavinia needed. In the end, when her witlessness and her ability to muddle through had proved a match for each other, Mrs. Brandon looked at her lovely hands and said...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Hammock-Perfect | 6/26/1939 | See Source »

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