[10] FOLK TRADITIONS AND CULTURAL IDENTITY IN KANNADA LITERATURE
ARTICLE INFO: Date of Submission: Mar 22, 2026, Revised: Mar 31, 2026, Accepted: Apr 03 , 2026, CrossRef d.o.i : https://doi.org/10.56815/ijmrr.v5i4.2026.105-113. HOW TO CITE: Rekha B V, Chandrashekara R A & Kumara B S (2026). Folk Traditions and Cultural Identity in Kannada Literature, International Journal of Multidisciplinary Research & Reviews, 5(4), 105-113.
Abstract
Kannada literature represents one of India's most ancient and culturally rich literary traditions, deeply rooted in the folk life of Karnataka. Folk traditions encompassing oral narratives, songs, rituals, myths, proverbs, and performance arts — have played a central role in shaping the thematic, linguistic, and ideological foundations of Kannada literary expression over more than a millennium. This paper offers a comprehensive and critical examination of the role of folk traditions in the construction and continuity of cultural identity in Kannada literature across classical, medieval, modern, and contemporary periods. Adopting a qualitative and interpretative research methodology grounded in secondary sources, the study analyzes how folk elements function as repositories of collective memory, social values, and indigenous knowledge systems. The paper explores the intersections of folk traditions with agrarian life, ecological consciousness, gendered experiences, subaltern voices, and cultural resistance. It argues that folk traditions are not
peripheral influences but constitute the cultural core of Kannada literary consciousness. By integrating folk idioms, ritual practices, and oral aesthetics, Kannada writers have consistently negotiated identity, modernity, and social transformation. This research contributes to interdisciplinary scholarship in folklore studies, literary criticism, and cultural studies, offering insights relevant to regional literature and identity-based literary discourse.













