Documentation and preservation of folklore in the states that formally united as
Germany in 1871 was initially fostered in the 18th and 19th centuries. As early as 1851, author
Bernhard Baader published a collection of folklore research obtained by oral history, called
Volkssagen aus dem Lande Baden und den angrenzenden Gegenden. The
Saxon author
Johann Karl August Musäus (1735–1787) was another early collector. Study was further promoted by the
Prussian poet and philosopher
Johann Gottfried von Herder. His belief in the role of folklore in ethnic nationalism – a folklore of Germany as a nation rather than of disunited German-speaking peoples – inspired the
Brothers Grimm,
Goethe and others. For instance, folklore elements, such as the Rhine Maidens and the Grimms'
The Story of a Boy Who Went Forth to Learn Fear, formed part of the source material for
Richard Wagner's opera cycle
Der Ring des Nibelungen. Some of the works of
Washington Irving – notably "
Rip van Winkle" and "
The Legend of Sleepy Hollow" – are based on German folktales. Within Germany, the nationalistic aspect was further emphasized during the
National Socialist era. James R. Dow has written that under National Socialism, "folklore became a propaganda instrument of anti-democratic, anti-socialist, and extremely inhumane terrorist policies". Folklore studies,
Volkskunde, were co-opted as a political tool, to seek out traditional customs to support the idea of historical continuity with a
Germanic culture.
Antisemitic folklore such as the
blood libel legend was also emphasized. == See also ==