Trickster’s Economics: Conservation and Innovation in the Game of Jinx

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Jeffrey G. Howard

Abstract

Forty years ago, as of the time I am writing this, Herbert and Martha Knapp published an article in The Journal of American Folklore called “Tradition and Change in American Playground Language.” Their article dealt with national—rather than regional—distribution of language and terminology types whose long-lasting presence on the playground had separated certain games from more trendy and faddish types of activities practiced by schoolchildren (Knapp and Knapp 1973, 131). These language types included the truce terms “Time Out” and “King’s X,” the tag terminology involving “cooties,” and finally — and perhaps the most significant and popular phenomenon — “jinks.”

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