Tag Archives: skates

Yale Superstitions

Title: Yale Superstitions – Addie Burton

General Information about Item:

  • Customary Lore, Magic Superstition
  • Language: English
  • Country of Origin: United States
  • Informant: Addie Burton
  • Date Collected: 11/08/21

Informant Data:

  • Addie Burton is a 19 year old female from Orono, MN. She is a female student-athlete in the class of 2024. She went to a private school in Minnesota before going to the University of Minnesota, which she transferred from this year to attend Yale. At Yale she is on the women’s ice hockey team and is in an acapella group.  She has 2 superstitions that she follows strictly before games.

Contextual Data:

  • Cultural Context: The cultural context is that putting on gear in a specific order is common amongst hockey players, and re-taping your stick is a very common action that hockey players perform before games. 
  • Social Context: The social context is interacting with people who also re-tape their sticks before games, and interacting with others who put a certain side of their gear on before the other side.
  • The magic substance in the superstition about taping her stick is stick tape. 

Item:

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

Transcript:

  • “I re-tape my hockey stick and put the blade in the air so it does not touch the ground until game time, and when I get dressed I put my right skate on before my left.”  

Informant’s Comments:

  • Addie described the feeling of dread and disdain if her stick touched the ground after she re-taped it, needing it to stay in the air in order to play well. She 

Collector’s Comments:

  • I was very intrigued by Addie’s superstitions because while some of her superstitions are common amongst most players, she has a spin on them such as keeping her newly taped stick in the air, something she told me she started doing after watching her older teammates do it. 

Collector’s Name: Currie Putrah 

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