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ENG474: Studies in Pacific Literature: Children’s Literature in Oceania: Pacific folklore

This guide was created for ENG474, Studies in Pacific Literature: Children’s Literature in Oceania, in Spring 2023.

Folklore, the Pacific and Children's Literature

A large portion of children's literature published in the Pacific draws either directly or indirectly from folklore, so it is useful to keep the following definitions in mind, many of which come from the academic discipline of folkloric studies. When using the library's OneSearch tool, these terms can help to refine your searches for specific types of stories -- though sometimes the terms end up being used interchangeably, they do each have a more specific meaning. One simple way to search specifically for children's literature is do a keyword search that includes one of the terms below, a geographic place (or a deity's name) and either of the terms "juvenile" or "children." For instance, folklore Palau juvenile or myth Maui juvenile (pro tip: After you've done your search, you can use the "Resource Type" limit on the left of the search results to narrow down to "Books," which will help to locate kids' books in particular. Alternatively, if you don't have a specific place or deity in mind, you can do a broad search using terms like folklore juvenile or myth juvenilelimit the results to "books" and then use the "location" limit to select "Pacific" or "Pacific (library use only)" to narrow down to books that are in the Pacific Collection.)

Basic reference texts (plus a database)

Examples of children's literature that draws from folklore