“…The almost universal existence of Robin Hood legends across the world suggested, on the contrary, their profound historical, political and social significance. 12 As a consequence, both sympathizers of the social bandit thesis and those sceptical of the thesis, and occasionally also of the politics behind it, began to take a closer and more contextualized look at the folklore itself, interrogating the production, transmission, transmutation, and, perhaps most importantly, reception, of stories of bandit heroics. A number of case studies painstakingly deconstructed bandit legends, tracing their manipulation within the strategic discourses of power-seeking elites, particularly an urban nationalist intelligentsia.…”