Category Archives: 20S Dartmouth Greek Life: Rush Folklore

“You will be happy wherever you end up”

Title: Sorority Saying 2

Information about Item:

  • Form of verbal folklore
  • Informant: Female ’22, affiliated.
  • Date Collected: 5/8/2020, 5/17/2020

Informant Data:

  • The informant is a female member of the Class of 2022 at Dartmouth. She is affiliated with Greek Life.

Contextual Data:

  • Cultural and Social Context:

Since rho gammas are supposed to support the rush participants and since the rush process for women is not about their choice in where to rush for the most part, rho gammas tend to come up with supportive sayings to make the participants trust the process.

Item:

  • “You will be happy wherever you end up”

Collector’s Name: Shadi Ali Ahmad

Collector’s Comments:

  • Item collected through Zoom.

Tags/Keywords:

  • Verbal folklore
  • Sorority rush

Fraternity Rush Party Themes

Title: Fraternity Rush Party Themes

General Information about Item:

  • Customary/Material Folklore
  • Informant: W.M.
  • Date Collected: 05/25/2020

Informant Data:

  • W.M. is a male Dartmouth College student. He is unaffiliated.

Contextual Data:

  • Cultural Context: The celebration of new members into a fraternity is celebrated amongst the brothers in a social event open to campus as well. The celebrations include a theme, sometimes a traditional theme of the house or decided on each year. Members of the house, new and old, dress in costumes in accordance with the theme and celebrate together.
  • Social Context: Social gathering is a common event put on by a fraternity and open to the campus. In these instances, a theme for the party is decided on by the house and is put on, usually around the end of the rush process.

Item:

  • Many fraternities hold social gatherings before, during, and after the rush process. It is common for these to have themes decided on by the members, new and old, of the house hosting the gathering. Typically the new members are celebrated as the members all dress in costume and decorate the house for the gathering.

Collector’s Comments:

  • I found this tradition to be an interesting custom as it is open to non-members. The fraternity members are typically the ones deciding and dressing in theme, but then they open up the celebration to the campus as well.

Collector’s Name: Charlie Wade

Tags/Keywords:

  • Celebration
  • Costumes
  • Fraternity

Joint Rush Parties

Title: Joint Rush Parties

General Information about Item:

  • Customary Folklore
  • Informant: E.W. ’22
  • Date Collected: 05/22/2020

Informant Data:

  • E.W. is a female Dartmouth Student. She is affiliated.

Contextual Data:

  • Cultural Context: Fraternities and Sororities at Dartmouth both partake in rush and bid night parties. These are parties for the new members of their respective houses. Sometimes a Fraternity and Sorority will together throw a joint party for their new members.
  • Social Context: The celebration of new members of a house is usually some form of social gathering. The combining of two different houses for a social gathering meant for the new members is a common social practice.

Item:

  • The joint parties of a Fraternity and Sorority refer to parties thrown by two houses together to celebrate their new class of members. These are therefore much larger and grander than celebrations done just by members of the house themselves. 

Collector’s Comments:

  • I found this to be a cool tradition as it mixes the somewhat separate processes of rushing a Fraternity versus a Sorority.

Collector’s Name: Charlie Wade

Tags/Keywords:

  • Customary Lore
  • Celebrations
  • Fraternity/Sorority

House Families

Title: House Families

General Information about Item:

  • Customary Folklore
  • Informant: R.C. ’22
  • Date Collected: 05/19/2020

Informant Data:

  • R.C. is a male student at Dartmouth College. He is affiliated.

Contextual Data:

  • Cultural Context: Families are small units of close individuals. The adoption of this technique into fraternity culture serves a similar purpose.
  • Social Context: House families are smaller groups in the house new members are sorted in to. These act as smaller and closer social groups for the new members in the house.

Item:

  • This specific fraternity gives its new members “families” within its members. These families consist of one to two new members and a handful of older members to serve as a resource during and after the rush process.

Collector’s Comments:

  • I found these families to be an interesting and useful way to help new members during the rush process. They stay families for life, long after active membership in the fraternity ends. In this specific example, the family the informant was in was easily dated back to Dartmouth alumni from 2014.

Collector’s Name: Charlie Wade

Tags/Keywords:

  • Customary Lore
  • Family
  • Social

Fraternity House Song

 

General Information about Item:

  • Verbal folklore
  • Informant R.C.
  • Date Collected: 05/18/2020

Informant Data:

  • The informant is a current Dartmouth student. He is a member of the class of 2022 and is affiliated.

Contextual Data:

  • Cultural Context: When rushing a fraternity, there is a sense of pride and community associated with the house and its members. Members are seen as “brothers” and the house is the “home” of its members. The singing of a song honors these two traditions.
  • Social Context: The collective act of singing together has always been associated with the idea of community. The singing of a house song is a social activity new and old members participate in to foster this principle.

Item:

  • There is a song made up by the fraternity members, that is sung to honor the house and its members. This is meant to help new members feel welcomed during the rush process (or directly after).

 

Collector’s Comments:

  • The use of a song to help new members feel part of a new community is not uncommon. I thought it was interesting to see the same type of welcoming folklore displayed in this process.

Collector’s Name: Charlie Wade

Tags/Keywords:

  • Verbal Folklore
  • Fraternity Rush
  • New Members

“Act boring, not mean”

Title: Sorority Saying 1

Information about Item:

  • Form of verbal folklore
  • Informant: Female ’22, affiliated.
  • Date Collected: 5/8/2020, 5/17/2020

Informant Data:

  • The informant is a female member of the Class of 2022 at Dartmouth. She is affiliated with Greek Life.

Contextual Data:

  • Cultural and Social Context:

Female rush participants have to visit all the sororities on campus, they cannot pick and choose the ones they like. Thus, if someone goes into the rush process knowing which sororities they want or don’t want, they should not be mean to the members of the sororities they dislike otherwise they could get disqualified.

Item:

  • “Act boring, not mean”

Collector’s Name: Shadi Ali Ahmad

Collector’s Comments:

  • Item collected through Zoom.

Tags/Keywords:

  • Verbal folklore
  • Sorority rush

Rho Gamma at Collis

Title: Sorority Pref Night Clothing

Information about Item:

  • Form of  customary folklore
  • Informant: Female ’22, affiliated.
  • Date Collected: 5/8/2020, 5/17/2020

Informant Data:

  • The informant is a female member of the Class of 2022 at Dartmouth. She is affiliated with Greek Life.

Contextual Data:

  • Cultural and Social Context:

Rho gammas are anonymous women who are chosen from sororities to guide and support rush participants through the rush process. The informant reported that meeting their rho gamma at collis strengthened the relationship between rush participants and the rush process in general, and possibly encouraged them to promote rush even after the old members graduate.

Item:

  • On bid night, participants go to Collis to meet their “rho gamma”.

Collector’s Comments:

  • Item collected through Zoom.

Collector’s Name: Shadi Ali Ahmad

Tags/Keywords:

  • Customary folklore
  • Sorority rush

Sorority Bid Night Glitter

Information about Item:

  • Form of material and customary folklore
  • Informant: Female ’22, affiliated.
  • Date Collected: 5/8/2020, 5/17/2020

Informant Data:

  • The informant is a female member of the Class of 2022 at Dartmouth. She is affiliated with Greek Life.

Contextual Data:

  • Cultural and Social Context:Bid night is the night when the chosen women who participated in rush are invited to their future sororities to celebrate. The significance of using glitter as an accessory, as reported by the informant, is so that all the new members feel like they are part of the same group.Item:
  • On bid night, the women who get in a sorority accessorize their outfits with glitter.

Collector’s Comments:

  • Item collected through Zoom.

Collector’s Name: Shadi Ali Ahmad

Tags/Keywords:

  • Material folklore
  • Customary folklore
  • Clothing
  • Sorority rush

“babes”, “sprouts”, “babies”

Title: “babes”, “sprouts”, “babies”

Information about Item:

  • Form of customary and verbal folklore
  • Informant: M.N.
  • Date Collected: 5/10/2020

Informant Data:

  • M.N. is a female member of the Class of 2022 at Dartmouth. She is affiliated with Greek Life, and she is from Boston.

Contextual Data:

  • Cultural: These terms are used for every incoming new member of the sorority. They are used to help make incoming members easily identifiable and to also help them feel more connected with each other.
  • Social: This information was collected through a video chat interview.

Item:

  • Terms that refer to the incoming new members of the sorority.

Collector’s Name: Gia Kim

Tags/Keywords:

  • Verbal folklore
  • Customary folklore
  • Saying
  • Sorority rush

Pre-rush events

Title: Pre-rush events

Information about Item:

  • Form of customary folklore
  • Informant: S.I.
  • Date Collected: 5/8/2020

Informant Data:

  • S.I. is a female member of the Class of 2021 at Dartmouth. She is affiliated with Greek Life, and she is from California.

Contextual Data:

  • Cultural: Events where sororities invite potential new members to the house. This allows the potential new members to meet sisters and check out the house before the official rush process begins.
  • Social: This information was collected through a video chat interview.

Item:

  • An event associated with sorority rush that happens before the official rush process begins.

Collector’s Name: Gia Kim

Tags/Keywords:

  • Customary folklore
  • events
  • Sorority rush