AFS Position Statements
American Folklore Society Statement on Promotion and Tenure
Preamble
Folklore scholarship embraces a wide array of topics, research methods, and modes of presentation and publication. While folklorists
consider this diversity of scholarly practice a great strength of their field, it brings with it potential difficulties as
well. Notable among these is the complexity of assessing records of scholarship that include elements not easily captured by
the typical categories used in tenure, promotion, and merit review.
The American Folklore Society recognizes, of course, that each case of professional assessment is an internal matter of departments,
colleges, and universities with their own evaluative standards. Folklorists expect to be assessed with the same rigor as their
colleagues in other fields. This document offers the Society’s perspective on the value of scholarly practices that,
though distinctive of folklore research, may not be as familiar to scholars and reviewers in other fields.
As preamble to the more specific topics addressed below, there are three broad and highly valued characteristics of folklore
scholarship worth identifying:
1. Much folklore research is rooted in fieldwork, which is to say that many folklorists expend great effort to gather their
own primary information through direct, extended contact with individuals and communities outside academe. This has implications
both for the speed with which folklore scholarship may come to fruition and for the forms in which research findings are recorded
and disseminated.
2. Deeply rooted in the scholarly mission of many folklorists is the role of mediator between the communities and individual
practitioners they study and the wider public. In fulfilling this mission, many folklorists generate research products that
cross the boundary between publication in the narrow sense and service or outreach. Such research outcomes as archival collections,
museum exhibitions, and festivals (see below) are familiar and highly valued in the field of folklore.
Also, the explosion of electronic media technologies has greatly facilitated the dissemination of folklorists’ work.
Audio and video recordings are becoming ever more available as forms of scholarly publication, and of course the dissemination
of research through the internet (e-journals, websites, etc.) is becoming increasingly common in all academic fields. Folklorists
have been active in the scholarly use of all such media.
3. It is the nature of much folklore research to be collaborative. This is true both in the fieldwork process, where the scholar
engages in direct exchange with traditional communities, performers, and practitioners, and in those forms of research presentation
that often require multiple scholars and teams of experts (e.g., exhibitions and festivals).
Like scholars in other fields, folklorists engage in standard scholarly publication of books, monographs, and articles. However,
many folklorists also produce work with the above features that, by the accepted standards of the field, are understood as
legitimate scholarship worthy of evaluation on the same level as refereed publication. What follows are some suggestions about
how such evaluation might be conducted.
Guidelines
1. The production of exhibitions, festivals, archives, audio recordings, videotapes/films, and digital media works should
be seen as evidence of scholarly research, interpretation, and dissemination similar to the production of books, monographs,
and articles. The research is often ethnographic, involving field-based interviews and observations. Interpretations of behavior
inhere in the exhibit, festival, or video themselves, and are frequently supplemented by other works (e.g., catalogues or study
guides). Such scholarly creations as exhibitions, films, and festivals are juried--similar to peer-reviewed publications--by
panels at the institutions sponsoring them and agencies funding their production.
2. The American Folklore Society further considers the application of folkloristic research to be an important form of outreach
and the scholarship of service. This might include activities that apply and disseminate scholarly perspectives, such as workshops
with social workers and public school teachers on the folklore of minority groups, symposia on folk medicine for health care
professionals, panel discussions with arts organizations on the nature of folk arts, and consultation with groups concerning
historical and cultural preservation. Such service, owing to the research involved and the extent of interpretations presented,
may be considered equal to or greater than a paper given at a professional meeting.
3. The individual folklorist can provide both personal statements and outside evaluations that speak to these folkloristic
research and community service activities. The Society is willing to assist academic institutions in the identification of
appropriate senior faculty for the purpose of confidential evaluations.