Tag Archives: FA21

HEPsoween Run

General Information

  • Tradition
  • Language: English
  • Country of Origin: USA
  • Informant: VW
  • Date Collected: 11/17/2021

Informant Data

  • VW started running in first grade. She became serious about running in 8th grade when she began to train with the high school varsity team. She competes in the 800, 1500, and 3000 meter races. For indoor track, she competes in the 1k.

Contextual Data

  • Cultural Context: Sports teams often have team traditions and activities. The main purpose is to build cohesiveness as a group. Team spirit is crucial in team sports, and shared traditions help promote it.

Item

  • Each year the female track team joins the male track team in a tradition whereby they dress up in Halloween costumes and run around campus. They also knock on the President’s door.

Associated Audio Recording

Informant’s Comments

  • One of the main goals is for the team members to remember why they enjoy running and being part of a team.

Collector’s Comments

  • My high school teams had similar traditions. It is interesting to see completely different people from different schools come up with similar ways to promote the same values of team chemistry and bonding.

Collector’s Name

  • Alex Printsev

Lucky Socks

General information about item:

  • Tradition/superstition/ritual
  • Language: English
  • Country of origin: United States
  • Informant: CD
  • Date collected: 11/6/2021

Informant Data:

  • CD is a current Dartmouth College sophomore in the graduating class of 2024. He is originally from Hampton, New Hampshire and currently resides in Hanover, New Hampshire. CD is undecided on a major currently. He runs distance for the Dartmouth Cross Country team.

Contextual Data:

  • Cultural Context: Rituals are meant to bring positivity to the individual overall mindset- if that ritual they did before an event or competition allowed them to have a positive performance, they are more likely to repeat that ritual. At the same time, if the individual realizes that their ritual isn’t brining anything positive or negative towards them, they are likely to break away from it. CD explains how his rituals used to be wearing the same pair of lucky socks before a race and having the same prerace meal (whole wheat pasta with chicken sausage and pesto). However, he slowly started to break away from his rituals since he realized regardless of if he did these rituals his performance would be the same.
  • Social Context: The goal of rituals is to bring comfort for the individual, however if there is a change of mindset, they might associate ritual with a negative connotation. As a result, that individual will might stray away from rituals as a whole or that specific ritual they conducted.

Item:

  • “I think for pre-race traditions, I had a lot, especially in high school. I kind of broke away from them when I had good races regardless of when I did the traditions or not, but I used to wear the same pair of lucky socks every race. The lucky socks provided me with a feeling of comfort and security before a race in which there is so much I could not be in control of.”

Associate file (a video, audio, or image file):

  • Informant requested not to be recorded.

Collector’s Comments:

  • This informants lucky pair of socks was very similar to many superstitions I heard from other informants. Lucky clothing seems to be a trend among the track/xc athletes I talked to, and I assume this means athlete across the board take some sense of comfort in “lucky” clothing items.

Collector’s Name: Anna Brause

Tags/Keywords:

  • Superstition
  • Dartmouth
  • Track/XC
  • Lucky socks

Lucky Crystals

General information about item:

  • Tradition, superstition, ritual, material lore
  • Language: English
  • Country of origin: United States
  • Informant: NS
  • Date Collected: 11/6/2021

Informant Data:

  • NS is a female current Dartmouth College sophomore in the graduating class of 2024. She is originally from Colts Neck, New Jersey and currently resides in Hanover, New Hampshire. She plans to major in Environmental Studies at Dartmouth. NS runs the 1500, 3000, and 5000 for track and the 5k and 6k for cross country.

Contextual Data:

  • Cultural Context: Athletes often have rituals that they follow before big events or competitions. Not only do these rituals act as an way to soothe one’s mindset before they compete, but it leaves little room for the error. These rituals originate from a desire to feel as in control as possible as to leave no variable up to chance when leading up to such a high stakes event. Rituals can be seen as a global phenomenon for athletes in order to prepare themselves.For NS, she has specific crystals that she carries around and sleeps with the night before a race- her crystals resemble luck and purity.
  • Social Context: Rituals are accepted throughout the athletic community and beyond- it is something to make one feel more comfortable in a situation that they have little control over. Additionally, rituals are an individualized action even if many people in society are involved in this act- depending on the individual their ritual can be serious or playful. Rituals are used for individuals to feel connected to something they are used to before they enter a situation of the unknown.

Item:

  • “I have specific crystals that I carry around and sleep with the night before a race. To me, these crystals represent good luck and provide me with a sense of security. I have always been a very ritualistic and spiritual person. I have a lot of rituals in my everyday life. Racing brings out a lot of these rituals. I think these rituals have a lot to do with a desire to be in control and feel a sense of comfort in a situation that is very uncomfortable. However, I have learned to become more adaptable in college because it is not possible to maintain all of the same rituals here.”

Associate file (a video, audio, or image file):

  • informant requested to not be recorded.

Collector’s Comments:

  • I found this to be a very unique ritual/superstition out of the many that I collected. While many of my items had some overlapping features, the crystals that this informant uses were extremely unique to her which I admired.

Collector’s Name: Anna Brause

Tags/Keywords:

  • Track/XC
  • Dartmouth
  • Superstition
  • Crystals

Team Cheer

General Information

  • Tradition
  • Language: English
  • Country of Origin: USA
  • Informant: SM
  • Date Collected: 11/19/2021

Informant Data

  • SM was a soccer player in high school before switching to cross country. In high school he competed in the mile and 2 mile competitions. At Dartmouth he competes in the 5k and 10k for track and the 8k for cross country. He is the current captain of the cross country and track teams.

Contextual Data

  • Cultural Context: Collective traditions are prevalent on many sports teams. They help instill comradery among the members and can improve team spirit and morale.

Item

  • The captain, or the senior most member of the team, gathers everyone about 100 meters from the starting line and says “Men of Dartmouth set a watch”. The team then responds with “Lest the old traditions fail”.

Associated Audio Recording

Informant’s Comments

  • SM says that there have been some really talented runners that came from Dartmouth and the tradition is meant to emulate them. Performing it will hopefully allow the runners to perform as well as the most talented runners that came before them.

Collector’s Comments

  • This piece of folklore is particularly interesting because the point is for the current runners to perform as well as the runners of the past. This means that the traditions span across multiple decades and people of all ages that were a part of the team at some point share a common bond.

Collector’s Name

  • Alex Printsev

Wake-Ups

General Information

  • Tradition
  • Language: English
  • Country of Origin: USA
  • Informant: LS
  • Date Collected: 11/9/2021

Informant Data

  • LS did three sports in high school before she talked to a private coach and began to like running more. At Dartmouth she runs the mile and 3k races.

Contextual Data

  • Cultural Context: Lots of sports teams have traditions that are meant for team building. These traditions bring the members of the team closer together and help build comradery.
  • Social Context: Freshmen in college can sometimes be nervous about joining a new team or coming to college generally. Activities that bond the team together can help them mesh into their new environment and upperclassmen can act as guides.

Item

  • Everyone dresses up in flair (colorful clothes) and go to the dorms of freshman that they are assigned to. They wake them up and pretend that the coach wants to do a morning workout. They then run around and sing songs.

Associated Audio Recording

Informant’s Comments

  • This tradition builds comradery among the team. It makes sure everyone has the mindset and brings people together regardless of ability or status.

Collector’s Comments

  • Team building activities like this are great for building team morale. They help participants feel like they are part of a large organization of which they are an important part.

Collector’s Name

  • Alex Printsev

Hair Tie

General Information about Item

  • Tradition/Superstition
  • Language: English
  • Informant: GM
  • Date Collected: 11/9/2021

Informant Data

  • GM is from Northern California, outside of San Francisco. She competes in the 6k and an assortment of other races of varying distances – anywhere from a mile to 5k.

Contextual Data

  • Cultural context: According to GM, uptight members of the track team are very superstitious and have lots of pre-game rituals that they believe will help them perform well. Many athletes across many different sport have superstitions pertaining to certain articles of clothing.

Item

  • Before each race, GM ties two black ties to her hair. She then ties a bow to a third black hair tie.

Informant’s Comments

  • The point of the bow is to promote a “look good, feel good” mindset. She believes it will help her perform better in competitions.

Collector’s Comments

  • When I played soccer, I had a similar mindset. I always felt that making sure my apparel looked good was crucial to my actual performance on the field.

Collector’s Name

  • Alex Printsev

Bequest (Nathan Zhang)

Title: Bequest

General Information:

         Customary Lore: Tradition

         Verbal Lore: Slang

         Language: English

         Country of Origin: United States

         Informant: JV ’22

         Date Collected: 11/03/21

         Location Collected: Topliff Tennis Courts at Dartmouth

Informant Data: 

JV ’22 is a 22-year-old male from Newton, Massachusetts. He is a member of the Dartmouth Class of 2022, and he is majoring in Computer Science. Outside of the classroom, JV ’22 is involved with the Club Tennis team, DREAM, and Alpha Chi Alpha. He plans to work in the technology industry as a software engineer upon graduation.

Contextual Data:

  • Social Context: JV ’22 and I were playing tennis at the Topliff Tennis Courts when he shared this piece of folklore with me. The piece of folklore is a tradition, and he first learned of the tradition and the slang term used to describe it during the spring term of his freshman year at Dartmouth. Specifically, he learned about this piece of folklore in the context of one of the clubs he is involved with, the club tennis team. Here, the graduating senior members of the club tennis team handed down different physical items to the other members of the team before graduating. These items, and the tradition of seniors handing down meaningful items, is referred to as ‘bequests’. JV ’22 and all of the members of the club tennis team were present when the folklore was performed. Here, the seniors at the time were performing the tradition of handing down items, and everyone else in the club was happy and positively impacted by the folklore performance, as they received meaningful things from students that were their friends and graduating. This folklore is normally performed within different clubs and organizations, especially clubs and organizations that are smaller, more exclusive, and more tight-knit. The tradition is always when seniors will hand down items to other members of the organization. These items typically have some meaning behind them.
  • Cultural Context: Here, the relevant cultural context is that the informant is a student at Dartmouth College who is involved with smaller, exclusive, tight-knit clubs and organizations. First, this customary folklore is known to all Dartmouth students and performed by many graduating seniors. More importantly, however, it is performed by students who are graduating and are involved with clubs and organizations that are small, exclusive, and tight-knit. This is likely because the items handed down during these traditions are meaningful, and, as a result, seniors will give them to other students that they have spent a lot of time with. Furthermore, many of these items that are handed down stay within a club or organization. Bequest have a positive connotation, because they are meaningful things that are handed down by seniors to other students. They typically have a positive impact on one’s Dartmouth experience.

Item: 

Bequest: A customary lore in which seniors, typically within a club or organization, will hand down different items to other non-graduating students, typically within the same club or organization as the seniors. It is also used as verbal lore to refer to the tradition, as well as the items that are handed down during the tradition. For example, used in a sentence: “I was bequested this shirt from a ’20 in my fraternity.”

Associated File: 

“Bequests, I think, are a really cool tradition at Dartmouth. I remember freshman year on the club tennis team when one of the seniors bequested me an old wooden racquet that had been passed down through the club for almost a decade. It was very meaningful because I was very close with this senior. That was when I first learned about bequests, and the entire club tennis team had met at one of the senior’s apartment for the seniors to do bequests. Everyone at Dartmouth should know this word, but the actual tradition itself is performed pretty much exclusively within clubs. I think bequest is an actual word, but here at Dartmouth we just use it to describe this specific tradition.”

Informant’s Comments: 

Bequests are really meaningful to both the senior handing it down and the person who receives it. When I graduate this year, I’m excited to pass down a lot of the bequests that I got from seniors, as well as a lot of my own belongings that I plan to hand down.

Collector’s Comments: 

The term bequest means the act of bequeathing something, typically in one’s will. At Dartmouth, it specifically refers to a meaningful tradition that is performed within clubs. As mentioned, it is both customary lore and verbal lore. It is customary in that it is a tradition that many students participate in within the context of a club. It is verbal in that it is a slang term that every student at Dartmouth knows and uses.

Collector’s Name: Nathan Zhang

Tags / Keywords: FA21, FA21-Grp-03, Dartmouth, Customary Lore, Tradition, Verbal Lore, Slang, Students, Dartmouth Clubs

Blitz (Nathan Zhang)

Title: Blitz

General Information:

         Verbal Lore: Slang

         Language: English

         Country of Origin: United States

         Informant: SW ’22

         Date Collected: 11/04/21

         Location Collected: First Floor Baker-Berry Library

Informant Data: 

SW ’22 is a 21-year-old female from Houston, Texas. She is a member of the Dartmouth Class of 2022, and she is majoring in Linguistics modified with Economics and minoring in French. Outside of the classroom, SW ’22 is involved with the Sugarplum dance group, Women in Business, Women in Student Business, Social Impact Nonprofit Consulting, and Kappa Kappa Gamma. She plans to work in the consulting industry upon graduation.

Contextual Data:

  • Social Context: SW ’22 was studying in the Baker-Berry Library when she shared this piece of verbal lore with me. She first learned the term as a first-year student during First-Year Trips. Trips is an orientation experience where incoming first-year students spend a few days in the outdoors with 6-8 other first-year students and two upperclassmen mentors. On her trip, SW ’22 learned about the verbal slang ‘Blitz’ when her two upperclassmen mentors did an activity with her and the other first-year students on her trip where they specifically listed off a number of Dartmouth slang terms and defined them. Blitz was one of those words, and SW ’22 and the other 6-8 first-year students learned how to perform this piece of folklore. This piece of verbal slang is performed reguarly and used by all students at Dartmouth.
  • Cultural Context: Here, the relevant cultural context is that the informant is a student at Dartmouth College. This piece of folklore is known to and used by all Dartmouth students and is a type of verbal slang. It is commonly used casually between students when referring to emails that are sent from one Dartmouth email account to another Dartmouth account – or accounts. It is specifically used in reference to emails sent from Dartmouth clubs or organizations to large groups of students, or in reference to emails sent in academic settings. Blitz can have both a positive and negative connotation, depending mostly on the situation. For example, for a first-year student, a campus-wide email blitz sent by a club that they may be interested in would be exciting, and thus blitz would have a positive connotation. That same campus-wide blitz, however, could be found as annoying to an upperclassmen student who knows they are not interested in the club, and thus blitz would have a negative connotation.

Item: 

Blitz: Short for “Blitz Web Access”. Blitz refers to an email sent from one Dartmouth account to another. For example, used in a sentence: “Did you get that campus-wide blitz about COVID restrictions?”

Associated File: 

“A word I learned while on trips was ‘Blitz’. Blitz is basically a Dartmouth email sent between two Dartmouth accounts. I learned it when my trip leaders sat down with me and my other tripees and explained a bunch of different Dartmouth slang words to us. This term is used by everyone at Dartmouth, and it came to be because it’s short for ‘Blitz Web Access’.”

Informant’s Comments: 

Dartmouth likes to be niche about a lot of things, and they have their own lingo. Blitz is just one of those words.

Collector’s Comments: 

Blitz is a piece of Dartmouth slang that is known to and used by everyone. There may be some Dartmouth students that do not know that it is short for ‘Blitz Web Access’.

In her transcript, SW ’22 refers to the terms ‘trip leaders’ and ‘tripees’. ‘Trip leaders’ references the upperclassmen mentors on first-year trips, and ‘tripees’ refers to the other incoming first-year students who are on someone’s trip.

Collector’s Name: Nathan Zhang

Tags / Keywords: FA21, FA21-Grp-03, Dartmouth, Verbal Lore, Slang, Students, Email, Dartmouth Clubs

BEMA (Nathan Zhang)

Title: BEMA

General Information:

         Verbal Lore: Slang

         Language: English

         Country of Origin: United States

         Informant: NC ’23

         Date Collected: 11/07/21

         Location Collected: Thayer School of Engineering at Dartmouth

Informant Data: 

NC ’23 is a 20-year-old male from Chicago, Illinois. He is a member of the Dartmouth Class of 2023, and he is studying Engineering and History. Outside of the classroom, NC ’23 is involved with the Triathlon team, Hillel, DOC, Ledyard, and Alpha Chi Alpha.

Contextual Data:

  • Social Context: NC ’23 was studying in Thayer when he shared this piece of folklore with me. He first learned the term as a first-year student while participating in the Twilight Ceremony. The Twilight Ceremony is where members of the newest incoming class at Dartmouth – in this case, the Class of 2023 – are passed candles from the graduating class and participate in a procession. At the ceremony, upperclassmen and faculty used the term “BEMA” to describe the location they were walking to. The entire Dartmouth Class of 2023 was present, though they were not partaking in the performance. In addition, upperclassmen and faculty were present to help with the ceremony, and they were participating in the use of this verbal slang. After the ceremony, most of the Class of 2023 students learned about this piece of folklore and likely participated in future use of the term. While this specific performance was generated by the Twilight Ceremony, this piece of verbal slang is performed regularly and by all students at Dartmouth when referencing this geographical location.
  • Cultural Context: Here, the relevant cultural context is that the informant is a student at Dartmouth College. This piece of folklore is known to and used by all Dartmouth students and is a type of verbal slang. It is commonly used in extracurricular settings and when large gatherings take place outdoors at this location. BEMA typically has a positive connotation, as it refers to a location where friends or people with common interests may gather to meet.

Item: 

BEMA: An acronym short for “Big Empty Meeting Area”. BEMA refers to a specific geographical location at Dartmouth. It is a large field that is a common gathering area, and it is located just past the Fayerweather dorm cluster. For example, used in a sentence: “Our club meets at BEMA every week.”

Associated File: 

“One phrase I picked up freshman year was ‘BEMA’. It’s short for ‘Big Empty Meeting Area’, and is that large grass field by the [Fayerweather dorms]. I first learned this word during the candle ceremony my freshman year. I was with my friends, and we were confused where everyone was walking to, and someone told us that we were walking to BEMA, which I soon realized was just a large grassy field where people commonly meet – hence the acronym. All of Dartmouth uses this term, but being involved with a lot of the ‘outdoorsy’ clubs here, I probably use it more than others because my clubs will meet at BEMA a lot of the time. This slang came to be probably because people didn’t have a name for the place they were meeting at, and so they came up with ‘Big Empty Meeting Area’ and shortened it to ‘BEMA’ because it’s easier to say. Used in a phrase: ‘My friends and I are going to hammock at BEMA.'”

Informant’s Comments: 

When it’s not too cold out and the weather is nice, I’d really recommend going to BEMA, if even just to get a breath of fresh air. You can go see the Robert Frost statue too, if you haven’t seen it before.

Collector’s Comments: 

BEMA is a piece of Dartmouth verbal slang that most, if not all, Dartmouth students should know and at one point have used. Less commonly known, however, is the fact that it is an acronym short for “Big Empty Meeting Area”. Personally, I learned that while collecting this piece of slang and previously had not known why the location was called BEMA.

Collector’s Name: Nathan Zhang

Tags / Keywords: FA21, FA21-Grp-03, Dartmouth, Verbal Lore, Slang, Students, Dartmouth Clubs, Meeting Area

Good Sam

General Information:

         Verbal Lore, Slang

         Language: English

         Country of Origin: United States

         Informant: LG

         Date Collected: 11/4/2021

         Location Collected: Dorm Room over a FaceTime Call

Informant Data: LG is a ’23 from Maui, Hawaii. She is 20 years old, and a Government and Geography double major. She is a member of the equestrian team.

Contextual Data:

Social Context: Good sam is used when someone is under the influence to the point that medical assistance is required. It is rarely used by people on campus, as people rarely drink to the point where they need to go to the hospital. All of campus knows this word.

Cultural Context: Good sam is a program used by Dartmouth to encourage safety. If you good sam someone you are exempt from getting into any trouble for underage drinking. Dartmouth students often use this in a joking manner, saying things such as “slow down we don’t want to have to good sam you”. Most students learn this early on during their freshman year, as it is a matter of safety stressed by the college. It has a negative connotation, and can often be a source of shame if you are “good sam’ed”.

Item: Good Sam: To call 911 and request medical assistance for someone who has had too much to drink or is otherwise incapacitated. Example: “John had too much to drink last night so we had to good sam him”.

Associated File: Notable quotes

“Good sam means to call the hospital for someone who has had too much to drink at a party or a night out”.

“Yeah the term is often used when someone is drinking a lot and we want to tell them to slow down, saying something like ‘don’t want to have to good sam you'”.

Informant’s Comments: LG said she has luckily never had to use this word herself on campus.

Collector’s Comments: I have never had any experience with using good sam directly, but friends of mine have. It is certainly a negative word, and people talk about others getting good sam’ed and spread rumors about it.

Collector’s Name: Ben Ryan