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The Archer Taylor Lecture Series

An invitational lecture given by a notable folklorist.

About Archer Taylor

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Archer Taylor

Archer Taylor was born August 1, 1890 and died September 30, 1973. Taylor wrote many books and a vast number of articles, some extended studies of the subject at hand and others short notes or queries. He grew up in a world in which academic-minded students learned Latin and Greek in grammar school, and he learned. In the years that followed, he continued to learn. Ultimately he read and spoke thirteen languages, with varying degrees of proficiency to be sure.

His large library is now with the University of Georgia in Athens, excepting his ballad collection with the University of California, Berkeley. In 1960 Archer Taylor was rightfully and deservedly honored by a most impressive "Festschrift" which his two friends Wayland D. Hand and Gustave O. Arlt edited with the befitting title Humaniora, Essays in Literature, Folklore, Bibliography, Honoring Archer Taylor on His Seventieth Birthday (Locust Valley/ New York 1960).

Visitors wishing to find out more about Archer Taylor himself should visit ArcherTaylor.com.

If you know someone who would make a great speaker for the Archer Taylor Lecture, please visit our Nominations page.

The Archer Taylor Lectures

2002

Margaret K. Brady. Back to the Hearth: The Politics of Reflexivity and Representation in Context.

2001

Patricia A. Tuner. Pots, Kettles, and Interpretations of Blackness in the Use of Proverbs.

2000

Wolfgang Mieder. In lingua veritas: Proverbial Rhetoric in Victor Klemperer's Diaries of the Nazi Years.

1999

 Jan Harold Brunvand. My Summer with Archer, and Some Unfinished Business.

1998

Barre Toelken. The End of Folklore.

1997

Jay Mechling. Folklore and the Civil Sphere.

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Western States
Folklore Society

Committed to the study of regional, national, and international folklore in all its aspects.

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