Tag Archives: Laces

Princeton Superstitions

Title: Princeton Superstitions – Emma Kee

General Information about Item:

  • Customary Lore, Magic Superstition
  • Language: English
  • Country of Origin: United States
  • Informant: Emma Kee 
  • Date Collected: 11/16/21

Informant Data:

  • Emma Kee is a female Princeton student in the class of 2023. She is from Cincinnati, Ohio but left home to go to boarding school in Faribault, MN in 8th grade. She is currently living in Princeton, NJ. Emma is on the ice hockey team and recently completed an internship in Washington, DC, which she hopes to return to full-time next year. Emma performs a superstition on game days that has been passed down throughout her family and is very meaningful to her.  

Contextual Data:

  • Cultural Context: The cultural context is that putting gear on in a specific order is very common amongst hockey players in any league. 
  • Social Context: The social context is that Emma performs this superstition with her sister after following their brothers’ lead.

Item:

  • This item is a customary type of folklore under the genre of magic superstition. Emma performs these before each home game. 

Transcript:

  • “My older brother used to tie his skates before he put on his shin pads after seeing one of his teammates do it, and I always looked up to him growing up. Now I do as well, and my sister and I both follow his lead before our games, creating our own family superstition  in order to play well.”

Informant’s Comments:

  • Emma recommended others who have siblings to create their own family superstitions that can be passed down for generations to create meaning to each time they play the game that they love. 

Collector’s Comments:

  • I found this superstition to be very interesting. Emma told me her father performed the superstition, as well as her uncle, and knows her relatives did before them. This small way for her family to stay connected is very enlightening to me about how folklore is prevalent in our everyday lives. 

Collector’s Name: Currie Putrah 

Tying Skates in Specific Order

Title: Tying Skates in Specific Order

 

Genre: Customary, Ritual, Magic

Language: English

County of Origin: USA

Informant Data: Regina Yan ’19 is currently enrolled at Dartmouth College. She was born in Eden Prairie, Minnesota and moved to Overland Park, Kansas when she was seven. In addition to being on the Dartmouth Figure Skating Team, Regina is also an active member of the Dartmouth Outing Club and a leader in the Dartmouth Mountaineering Club.Regina started to skate when she was 10 years old after watching the 2006 Torino Olympics. She skated for five years with the Silver Blades Skating Club but due to health problems, stopped skating in high school. She began again her freshman year at Dartmouth College.

Social/Cultural Context: Informant was interviewed alone at Dartmouth College. The informant was asked to talk about figure skating folklore in relation to the Dartmouth Figure Skating Club.

Regina encountered this piece of folklore and began to engage in the practice during her time at the Silver Blades Skating Club. She had seen other skaters engage in this piece of folklore but only started to participate after a particularly memorable performance. This is a common piece of folklore across all skating communities and she continues to engage in it here at Dartmouth. , causing new skaters to pick it up as well.

Item:

Often times, skaters will always tie one skate before the other (right before left or left before right). Which skate the skater ties first stems back to exceedingly excellent performance he/she had in the past.

Transcription of Interview

“I always have to tie the left skate first. I never tie the top hook…. I skated well once when I tied my left boot first so I’m going to tie that boot first every single time. I won my first competition tying my left boot first so you always like to attribute good things.

” 

Collector’s Comments:

This is a form of homeopathic magic. Skaters are attempted to channel a previous performance by recreating the conditions that they believe led to that performance.

Collectors: Samuel Lee

Tags/Keywords:

  • Skating, Dartmouth Figure Skating Club, DFSC, Ritual