See also: folk-hero

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Noun edit

folk hero (plural folk heroes)

  1. A real or mythical person who is widely revered by ordinary people, for championing their interests, values, or aspirations.
    • 1966 June 10, “Vocational Education: Cowhand School”, in Time[1]:
      That hallowed American folk hero, the lean cowboy with six-gun at hip, swinging smoothly into the saddle—somehow he never had to go to school to learn that stuff.
    • 1996, Robin Morgan, Sisterhood is Global: The International Women's Movement Anthology, →ISBN, page 571:
      Deuladeu Martins is a woman folk-hero dating from the 12th century; she is thought of as a hugely tall and strong woman whose actions were so feared by invaders that, because of her, the country of Portugal itself came into being.
    • 2012 August 18, Lawrence Downes, “As Woody Turns 100, We Protest Too Little”, in New York Times[2], retrieved 2013-04-16:
      The American folk hero Woody Guthrie will be honored at the Kennedy Center, but rabble-rousing, not respectability, was his goal.

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