Urban Legends: Their Role in Cultural Identity
Eve Tibererwa
Humanities Education Kampala International University Uganda
Email eve.tibererwa@kiu.ac.ug
ABSTRACT
Urban legends are a pervasive form of modern folklore that reflects society’s fears, morals, and cultural values. While often dismissed as trivial or fictional, these narratives offer critical insight into collective identity, social anxieties, and informal systems of moral instruction. Rooted in oral traditions and evolving with technological advancement, urban legends adapt to contemporary settings, offices, schools, and cities and maintain relevance through their emotional appeal, narrative flexibility, and the internet’s viral capabilities. This paper explores the historical development, typologies, psychological mechanisms, and media transformations of urban legends. It also examines their function in shaping and reinforcing cultural identity, particularly as substitutes for fading religious narratives or traditional mythologies. By analyzing case studies such as the “Kidney Theft” and “Halloween Candy Tampering,” the paper reveals how urban legends serve as cautionary tales that help individuals navigate a complex, modern world. Ultimately, urban legends remain a dynamic cultural force, part entertainment, part moral compass, and wholly a reflection of society’s shifting norms.
Keywords: Urban legends, modern folklore, cultural identity, oral tradition, internet myths, social anxiety, collective memory, cautionary tales.
CITE AS: Eve Tibererwa (2025). Urban Legends: Their Role in Cultural Identity. NEWPORT INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CURRENT ISSUES IN ARTS AND MANAGEMENT,6(3):26-30 https://doi.org/10.59298/NIJCIAM/2025/6.3.2630