Don Yoder (August 27, 1921– August 11, 2015) was an American folklorist specializing in the study of Pennsylvania Dutch, Quaker, and Amish and other Anabaptist folklife in Pennsylvania who wrote at least 15 books on these subjects. A professor emeritus at the University of Pennsylvania,[1] [2] he specialized in religious folklife and the study of belief. He is known for his teaching, collecting, field trips, recording, lectures, and books. He also co-founded a folk festival in Pennsylvania, which is the USA's oldest continual annual folklife festival,[3] and is credited with "bringing the idea of "folklife" to the United States".[4]
Yoder was born in Altoona, Pennsylvania.[5] He was the ninth generation of a Pennsylvania German lineage. Yoder graduated with a B.A. in history from Franklin and Marshall College in 1942. He received a Ph.D. in American church history from the University of Chicago in 1947.
He taught at Union Theological Seminary, Muhlenberg College, and Franklin and Marshall College. At the latter, he co-founded – with Dr. Alfred Shoemaker and Dr. William Frey – the Pennsylvania Dutch Folklore Center and the journal The Pennsylvania Dutchman. In 1950, Yoder, Shoemaker and Frey founded the Pennsylvania Dutch Folk Festival – now the Kutztown Folk Festival. This is the oldest continuously operated annual folklife festival in the United States.
At the festival, Yoder and his colleagues aimed to showcase an entire way of life rather than just the expressive culture of a community (as other American folk festivals did). Taking inspiration from scholarship and museum practice in Germany and particularly Scandinavia (Volkskunde[6] ), they used the term "folklife" – distinguished from "folklore" – to describe this all-encompassing view.[7]
In 1956, Yoder joined the University of Pennsylvania.[8] Yoder was key to the creation of the university's Department of Folklore and Folklife, where his colleagues included MacEdward Leach (who he took over from as Head of Department in 1966), Dell Hymes, Henry Glassie, Barbara Kirshenblatt-Gimblett, John Szwed, Roger Abrahams, Dan Ben-Amos, Kenneth S. Goldstein, Margaret Mills, and Regina Bendix (and Anthony F.C. Wallace and Ward Goodenough who were in the Department of Anthropology). He was a fellow and former president of the American Folklore Society.
Yoder wrote about many aspects of folklife studies, specializing in religion, religious music, Fraktur, foodways, costume, and other material culture. His books, especially American Folklife (1976) and Discovering American Folklife (1990) and his articles on folklife studies in the 1960s and 1970s are seminal texts in the field of folkloristics.[9] He co-founded the Pennsylvania Folklife Society in 1949.[10] He served as editor of the journal, Pennsylvania Folklife, for many years. In 1951 he was scheduled to lead a 46-day tour of Europe offered through Franklin and Marshall College.[11] He also regularly conducted research in Europe, especially Germany and Switzerland, the ancestral homelands of many Pennsylvania cultures.
Yoder served as president of the American Folklore Society in 1981. An annual lecture at the Society is named in his honour as well as a graduate award.[12]
Yoder was influential in the creation of the American Folklife Center. In 1970, Yoder was one of the witness before Congress as part of the hearings examining the concept of an American Folklife Foundation, where he testified in favour of such a foundation. When the American Folklife Center was founded six years later, Yoder was named as one of its original Trustees.
The University of North Carolina has a Don Yoder Collection of American Hymnody.[13] His art and ephemera collection is now housed in the library at Cabrini University.