folk culture refers to the unifying expressive components of everyday life as enacted by localized, tradition-bound groups.[1] Earlier conceptualizations of folk culture focused primarily on traditions practiced by small, homogeneous, rural groups living in relative isolation from other groups.[2] Today, however, folk culture is more inclusively recognized as a dynamic representation of both modern and rural constituents.[3] Historically, handed down through oral tradition and now increasingly through dynamic computer-mediated communication, it relates to the cultivation of community and group identity. Folk culture is quite often imbued with a sense of place. If elements of a folk culture are copied by, or moved to, a foreign locale, they will still carry strong connotations of their original place of creation.