Journal of American Folklore
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In The Last Decade
Journal of American Folklore
1.8k papers receiving 13.4k citations
Fields of papers published in Journal of American Folklore
This network shows the impact of papers published in Journal of American Folklore. Nodes represent research fields, and links connect fields that are likely to share authors. Colored nodes show fields that tend to cite the papers published in Journal of American Folklore.
Countries where authors publish in Journal of American Folklore
This map shows the geographic impact of research published in Journal of American Folklore. It shows the number of citations coming from papers published by authors working in each country. You can also color the map by specialization and compare the number of citations received by papers published in Journal of American Folklore with the expected number of citations based on a country's size and research output (numbers larger than one mean the country cites Journal of American Folklore more than expected).
- Course in General Linguistics (1960)
- Wisdom Sits in Places: Landscape and Language among the Western Apache (1998)
- Veiled Sentiments: Honor and Poetry in a Bedouin Society (1988)
- The Structural Study of Myth (1955)
- Women's Words: The Feminist Practice of Oral History (1994)
- Tradition, Genuine or Spurious (1984)
- Visual Anthropology: Photography as a Research Method (1988)
- The Study of Ethnomusicology: Twenty-Nine Issues and Concepts (1985)
- Alone of All Her Sex: The Myth and the Cult of the Virgin Mary (1979)
- Competence in Performance: The Creativity of Tradition in Mexicano Verbal Art (1990)
- The Types of the Folktale. A Classification and Bibliography (1963)
- Mapping the Invisible Landscape: Folklore, Writing, and the Sense of Place (1994)
- Differential Identity and the Social Base of Folklore (1971)
- Tourism and Cultural Displays: Inventing Traditions for Whom? (1989)
- Theory and History of Folklore (1986)
Rankless uses publication and citation data sourced from OpenAlex, an open and comprehensive bibliographic database. While OpenAlex provides broad and valuable coverage of the global research landscape, it—like all bibliographic datasets—has inherent limitations. These include incomplete records, variations in author disambiguation, differences in journal indexing, and delays in data updates. As a result, some metrics and network relationships displayed in Rankless may not fully capture the entirety of a scholar’s output or impact.