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  4. 2019
Showing papers in "Acta Ethnographica Hungarica in 2019"
Journal Article•10.1556/022.2019.64.1.12•
‘A Whirlwind from the Puszta’. Hungarian and Hungarian Style Variety Acts in Berlin 1920-1961

[...]

Dániel Molnár
01 Jun 2019-Acta Ethnographica Hungarica

4 citations

Journal Article•10.1556/022.2019.64.1.4•
In the Footsteps of Julia Pastrana. Cultural Responses to an Ape-woman's Stay in Warsaw in 1858 and Reaction of Polish Press to Her Extraordinary Body

[...]

Izabela Kopania1•
Polish Academy of Sciences1
01 Jun 2019-Acta Ethnographica Hungarica

3 citations

Journal Article•10.1556/022.2019.64.2.14•
Stories of Traditional Magical Healing as Belief Narratives: Between the Supernatural and Secular(ised) Experience

[...]

Smiljana Đorđević Belić
01 Dec 2019-Acta Ethnographica Hungarica
TL;DR: This paper analyzed the distinctive features of stories of magical healing, including structural, structural, and ideological, and found that stories of magic healing occupy a liminal space, right at the crossroads of two semantic fields, the demonologically coded and the secularised, as the connection with the supernatural is sometimes only latently present.
Abstract: This study analyses the distinctive features of stories of magical healing – thematic (meeting of the natural and supernatural as the core of the narrative), structural (stability of motifs, incorporation of other folklore genres – curses, blessings; didactic statements, cumulativity), and ideological (being based on a system of beliefs). In the genre system of folklore, stories of magical healing occupy a liminal space, right at the crossroads of two semantic fields, the demonologically coded and the secular(ised), as the connection with the supernatural is sometimes only latently present. On the one hand, they introduce mythological-demonological elements into the everyday, and on the other, they make abstract demonic content concrete by linking it to the plane of experience. Stories told by cunning folk about successful magical healing are an important factor in their social positioning and the verification of magical practice. The circulation of such stories within a community facilitates the creation of a picture of specific practitioners, the domain of their competences, and the effectiveness of the ritual acts. Viewed more broadly, it also creates ideas about the natural and the supernatural, the worldly and the otherworldly, eschatology, morality, and codes of conduct in the broadest sense, even when tradition is rationalised, subjected to doubt, or disagreed with.

3 citations

Journal Article•10.1556/022.2019.64.1.2•
Popular Landscape of Entertainment in East-Central Europe, 1850–1939. An Introduction

[...]

Izabela Kopania1•
Polish Academy of Sciences1
01 Jun 2019-Acta Ethnographica Hungarica
TL;DR: In Passage-Panoptikum, the Dahomeys laid out. Twenty out of thirty posters announce and praise the spectacles so far unparalleled as mentioned in this paper, and I proceeded onwards to catch...
Abstract: “An outright abundance of amusements. Twenty out of thirty posters announce and praise the spectacles so far unparalleled. In Passage-Panoptikum, the Dahomeys laid out. I proceeded onwards to catch...

2 citations

Journal Article•10.1556/022.2019.64.1.9•
“They Stepped on Their Toes”. Reception of the Buffalo Bill's Wild West and Congress of Rough Riders of the World in Polish Press of Galicia, 1906

[...]

Bartosz Hlebowicz
01 Jun 2019-Acta Ethnographica Hungarica
TL;DR: At the turn of the 20th century many Native Americans took part in white man's enterprises: first Wild West shows, then silent movies as mentioned in this paper, and many of these Native Americans were killed by white men.
Abstract: At the turn of the 20th century many Native Americans took part in white man's enterprises: first Wild West shows, then silent movies. Wild West shows toured not only the United States but...

1 citations

Journal Article•10.1556/022.2019.64.2.11•
Albasty: A Female Demon of Turkic Peoples

[...]

Edina Dallos1•
Eötvös Loránd University1
01 Dec 2019-Acta Ethnographica Hungarica
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors focus on Turkic data from the Volga region (Chuvash, Tartar, Bashkir) and the Eurasian Steppe (Kazak, Kyrgyz, Nogay, Uzbek).
Abstract: Albasty is one of the most commonly known malevolent beings among Turkic peoples from the Altay Mountains via the Caucasus and up as far as the Volga River. This article focuses on Turkic data from the Volga region (Chuvash, Tartar, Bashkir) and the Eurasian Steppe (Kazak, Kyrgyz, Nogay, Uzbek). Various areas can be ascertained on the basis of verbal charms and folk-belief narratives. On the Eurasian Steppe, for example, Albasty was first and foremost a puerperal demon. In this territory, specialists (kuuču) were called in to keep away or oust the demon at birth. Many recorded legends and memorates concern healing methods and the process of becoming a healer. In contrast, epic texts or narratives are rarer,in the Volga region, yet there are certain verbal incantations against the Albasty, which here is rather a push or disease demon.

1 citations

Journal Article•10.1556/022.2019.64.2.12•
Child-threatening Mythical Creatures in Traditional Lithuanian Culture: Between Real and Constructed Threats of the Mythical World

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Vita Džekčioriūtė-Medeišienė1•
Vilnius University1
01 Dec 2019-Acta Ethnographica Hungarica
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present child-threatening mythical creatures, their expressions and functions in Lithuanian folklore, and analyze three types of folklore genres were used to frighten children: fairy tales, folk legends, and short, frightening expressions.
Abstract: The article presents child-threatening mythical creatures, their expressions and functions in Lithuanian folklore. Threats of the mythical world can be divided into two groups: real and constructed threats. The ones of the first group, real threats, are perceived as threats to children by adults. Real threats arise from two types of representations of the mythical world: mythical creatures and mythologised persons. The second group, constructed threats, is the is the phenomenon in which adults use folklore narratives to evoke fear in children, but adults do not perceive those narratives as real threats. Three types of folklore genres were used to frighten children: fairy tales, folk legends, and short, frightening expressions. This article focuses on the latter. The research analyses Lithuanian customs, beliefs, and narratives from the late 19th century and the first half of the 20th century.

1 citations

Journal Article•10.1556/022.2019.64.2.13•
Man versus Demon: Interconnections Between Incantations and Belief Narratives

[...]

Danijela Popović Nikolić1•
University of Niš1
01 Dec 2019-Acta Ethnographica Hungarica
TL;DR: In this paper, the relationship between incantations and belief narratives, two types of oral genres based on human contact with the supernatural, is examined, and the authors analyse the following aspects of interconnection between these oral genres: 1) the display of a genre within a genre, e.g., about dispersing hailstorm clouds; 2) the types of verbal communication in belief narratives (swearing, cursing, command, reproach) and their equivalents in incantation; 3) various motifs of protection from demons (counting the uncountable, using
Abstract: The present paper examines the relationship between incantations and belief narratives, two types of oral genres based on human contact with the supernatural. Such contact attests to a dangerous disruption of the boundary between the human and demonic worlds and to the intensive efforts to reinforce it so that participants may return to the space they belong in. For this purpose, various verbal and nonverbal tools are used in belief narratives (gestures, objects, plants, sound or light signals, certain activities – such as walking backwards, placing a cap over the forehead, etc.). In contrast, incantations, an inseparable part of vernacular magical practices, rely solely on verbal communication with impure forces. This paper will analyse the following aspects of interconnection between these oral genres: 1) the display of a genre within a genre – the presence of incantations in belief narratives, e.g., about dispersing hailstorm clouds; 2) the types of verbal communication with the supernatural in belief narratives (swearing, cursing, command, reproach) and their equivalents in incantations; 3) various motifs of protection from demons (counting the uncountable, using bodily fluids; thorn, fire, metal, broom, etc.). The consideration of shared elements in these genres that preserve the relationship with the mythological narrative include elements of the ceremonial context in which incantations are performed. I argue that some of these elements appear also in belief narratives, where they undergo a transformation.

1 citations

Journal Article•10.1556/022.2019.64.2.15•
Dilemmas of Corpus Construction beyond Folklore Collections: Threat as a Speech Act in Early Modern Witchcraft Trials

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Emese Ilyefalvi1•
Eötvös Loránd University1
01 Dec 2019-Acta Ethnographica Hungarica
TL;DR: The Digital Database of Hungarian Verbal Charms (DBVMV) as discussed by the authors is a corpus-building project for Hungarian verbal magic which includes witness statements of witch trials conducted in early modern Bihar County and the town of Debrecen.
Abstract: During the corpus-building operation of the Digital Database of Hungarian Verbal Charms we tried to augment the available material by the inclusion of witness statements of witch trials conducted in early modern Bihar County and the town of Debrecen. My paper explores the kinds of dilemmas and issues we were faced with concentrating especially on generic questions of verbal charms. As regards the exploration of early modern written sources of vernacular language use the most relevant recent approaches came from historical speech act research. Therefore, in the context of the corpus building project I shall also discuss to which extends the results of historical pragmatics, historical speech act research can offer any help (and if so, what kind of help) in solving the generic problems and questions of verbal magic.1

1 citations

Journal Article•10.1556/022.2019.64.2.7•
Charms and Wands in John the Lazy: Performance and Beliefs in Argentinean Folk Narrative

[...]

María Palleiro1•
National Scientific and Technical Research Council1
01 Dec 2019-Acta Ethnographica Hungarica
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors deal with the formulaic use of a magic charm in this Argentinean folktale, collected in fieldwork in 1988, and propose a metapragmatic consideration of such charms that, as Urban (1989) says, deal with speech about speech in speech about action.
Abstract: “Virtue wands” do appear in Argentinean folk narrative as useful devices used by the hero to achieve his dreams. Using the correct charm and waving his wand, the Argentinean folk hero John the Lazy manages to marry the princess and to live without working. Charms show in this way how to do things with words, pronouncing the proper words in the right situation. In this presentation, I deal with the formulaic use of a magic charm in this Argentinean folktale, collected in fieldwork in 1988. This charm deals with an invocation to the “Wand of virtue” given to the hero by God`s mercy, whose proper use shows the performative force of language. The tension between the absence of effort and the need of working is solved in this tale in a world of dream, in which the real effort is to learn how to use the correct words. Social beliefs in the supernatural are expressed in this tale, in which the wand is a God`s gift that allows the hero to avoid struggling. But the main gift is actually the knowledge of language which permits the hero to make an accurate usage of formulaic discourse, structured in the charm in an epigrammatic way. In this way, I propose a metapragmatic consideration of such charms that, as Urban (1989) says, deal with “speech about speech in speech about action”. In the Argentinean context in which I collected this folktale, the hero is the young son of a rural peasant family, poor and struggling, like the narrator and his audience. The lazy poor boy who marries the princess thanks to the force of the dreams shows how the language is the key both to repair social gaps and to restore collective order.

1 citations

Journal Article•10.1556/022.2019.64.1.5•
Entertainment Landscape and Ethnographic Shows in Gdańsk, 1860–1914

[...]

Dagnosław Demski1•
Polish Academy of Sciences1
01 Jun 2019-Acta Ethnographica Hungarica
Journal Article•10.1556/022.2019.64.2.2•
Piety, Practices of Reading, and Inquisition. A Catalan Saint Cyprian Prayer from 1557 and Its Context

[...]

Bernadett Smid1•
Eötvös Loránd University1
01 Dec 2019-Acta Ethnographica Hungarica
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors focused on a defendant of an Inquisition trial and its sources, namely a healing hermit and the Saint Cyprian prayer, published in Catalan in 1557 and used by the hermit as a verbal charm.
Abstract: The author of this article focuses on a defendant of an Inquisition trial (1641–1644) and its sources, namely a healing hermit and the Saint Cyprian prayer, published in Catalan in 1557 and used by the hermit as a verbal charm. Beyond the philological and folkloristic study of the prayer text, this paper presents the vulgarisation of reading skills and the realization of reading practice in a specific social context in the Principality of Catalonia. The author uses the most important and relevant theological literature of the period and the attestations of the trial as keys of reading. She pays special attention to the context of prayer and its actual social use. Her aim is to analyse the textual elements and gestures of the healing rite; hence, she investigates the probable readings of the healing specialist, which makes possible to reach a deeper understanding of the hermit’s role as a cultural mediator.
Journal Article•10.1556/022.2019.64.2.8•
Iranian Belief Narratives and Verbal Charms. A Preliminary Survey

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Kinga Markus Takeshita
01 Dec 2019-Acta Ethnographica Hungarica
TL;DR: The role of charms in Iranian belief narratives remains largely unexplored as mentioned in this paper, and a preliminary survey can be found in the introduction of this article. But the role of the magic spell in Iranian folklore is still unexplored.
Abstract: The role of charms in Iranian belief narratives remains largely unexplored. Hereby, I attempt a preliminary survey. First, I examine the text of the Iranian national epic, the Shahname of Ferdowsi (X–XI century A.D.), in which the word afsun denotes charm or magic spell. In contemporary folktale texts (I mainly rely on the voluminous Dictionary of Iranian Folktales), an Arabic loan-word verd (which also means a kind of prayer) is used to mean a charm which facilitates supernatural results such as shape-shifting, transformation or miraculous healing. Ritual prayer (namaz) and supplication (do’a) also function as charms in folk narratives. I also give a brief overview of the Iranian folklore scholarship.
Journal Article•10.1556/022.2019.64.1.6•
The Sarrasani Circus in Opole. On Entertainment in the City in the First Decades of the 20th Century

[...]

Kamila Baraniecka-Olszewska1•
Polish Academy of Sciences1
01 Jun 2019-Acta Ethnographica Hungarica
Journal Article•10.1556/022.2019.64.2.9•
The Etiology of a Disorder (Dis-ease) and the Restoration of Order (Therapy). Α Case of a Greek Belief Narrative Connected with Charms against Abdominal Diseases

[...]

Haralampos Passalis1•
University of Amsterdam1
01 Dec 2019-Acta Ethnographica Hungarica
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors show that the parallel analysis of legends and charms, where possible, is necessary since it can provide useful information, not only on the ways by which the charm text is produced and reproduced, but also on the position and status of the genre in the context of a wider folk religious system.
Abstract: Although belief narratives and charms are regarded as two different folklore genres with different modes of transmission, performance and function, they are both in a constant dialectical relationship, yielding mutual feedback. One of the main forms of this interactive relationship concerns the etiology of a dis-ease (construction of a dis-order, i.e. belief narratives) and its therapeutic treatment (restoration of order, i.e. charms). This relationship between the cause of diseases and their treatment is clearly reflected in a Christian content belief narrative closely associated with incantations used to heal abdominal diseases. The basic personage embodying this belief narrative – registered in many and different areas of Greece – is the figure of a monk or Christ himself, who, often disguised as a beggar, is hosted by a family. Violations of both religious norms associated with fasting and social ethics connected with accepted behaviour towards a guest have as a result the manifestation of an abdominal disease, which eventually the monk or Christ treats using an incantation. This article shows that the parallel analysis of legends and charms, where possible, is necessary since it can provide useful information, not only on the ways by which the charm text is produced and reproduced, but also on the position and status of the genre in the context of a wider folk religious system. Furthermore, it could contribute to the understanding of the charm text, without which the knowledge of the belief narrative is often incomprehensible, if not nonsensical.
Journal Article•10.1556/022.2019.64.1.10•
Slovaks on display. Otherness of the 'Eastern brothers' at the czechoslavic ethnographic exhibition in Prague 1895

[...]

Milan Ducháček1, Milan Ducháček2•
Technical University of Liberec1, Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic2
01 Jun 2019-Acta Ethnographica Hungarica
Journal Article•10.1556/022.2019.64.1.13•
The Buddhist Temple in the Imperial City of Saint Petersburg. A Different Way of Cultural Integration

[...]

Oyungerel Tangad1•
Polish Academy of Sciences1
01 Jun 2019-Acta Ethnographica Hungarica
Journal Article•10.1556/022.2019.64.1.7•
Consuming Masculinity and Race. Circus Bodies in Strength Shows and Wrestling Fights

[...]

Dominika Czarnecka1•
Polish Academy of Sciences1
01 Jun 2019-Acta Ethnographica Hungarica
Journal Article•10.1556/022.2019.64.1.3•
Staged Otherness in American Academia. A Reading

[...]

Andrea Zittlau1•
University of Rostock1
01 Jun 2019-Acta Ethnographica Hungarica
Abstract: : In the American academic tradition, the freak show as a research topic appeared in the late 1970s, focusing on othered bodies and popular culture, considered revolutionary at the time. This article looks at the history of the discourses staged otherness provoked in the American context. While it was launched together with other discussions of othering – such as ‘the ethnic other’, which eventually led to the field of postcolonial studies – otherness based on physical difference led to discussions that established a perception of the freak show as an American phenomenon. Scholars like Leslie Fiedler used the othered body to cope with personal crisis, while Edward Said criticized Western European and American forms of colonial thinking. However, physical otherness seduced academics to argue along the dichotomies of self and other to eventually position the self. This article looks at this development historically, involving psychoanalysis, postcolonial studies, literary criticism, and popular culture, to question the American element of the freak show and encourage a rewriting of its cultural significance.
Journal Article•10.1556/022.2019.64.2.10•
The Devil in Latvian Charms and Related Genres

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Aigars Lielbārdis1•
University of Latvia1
01 Dec 2019-Acta Ethnographica Hungarica
TL;DR: In Latvian folklore, the Devil is a relatively common image, represented in all the genres. as discussed by the authors analyzed the verbal charms that mention the Devil or Thunder together with the motif of pursuing the Devil.
Abstract: In Latvian folklore, the Devil is a relatively common image, represented in all the genres. This paper analyses the verbal charms that mention the Devil or Thunder together with the motif of pursuing the Devil. The corpus of charms consists of texts taken from the first systematic collection of Latvian charms, published in 1881. Examples of charms are accompanied by a comparative analysis of folk legends and beliefs. There are correspondences in charms, legends and beliefs regarding the appearance and traits of the Devil as well as his activities and dwelling places. These genres also share the motif of pursuing the Devil. Texts from different genres complement each other by providing missing narrative fragments and aspects of meaning. In the legends and charms, black and red dominate in the Devil’s appearance, and the Devil can also appear in the form of animals. The Devil’s activities and presence are linked with the origins of evil and associated with a variety of diseases which, like the Devil himself, are overcome by similar techniques. These legends and beliefs help us understand the similarities expressed in the charms, deepen and expand the semantics of the images, and explain the associative links and anchoring of specific actions in the broader folklore material. The plot and length of texts in charms are determined by the specific style, structure, and function of this genre. Therefore, content is not expanded in detail; instead, only key figures or images, the foundation of the plot, and its most important elements are mentioned. The comparative material found in legends and beliefs provides more in-depth explanation of the concise messages expressed in the charms.
Journal Article•10.1556/022.2019.64.2.6•
Narrative Charms in Late Medieval and Early Modern Wales

[...]

Katherine Leach1•
Harvard University1
01 Dec 2019-Acta Ethnographica Hungarica
TL;DR: In this article, the general development of Welsh narrative charms from the earliest examples up to the first decades of the Early Modern Era in Wales (mid-to-late sixteenth century).
Abstract: In this article I will consider the general development of Welsh narrative charms from the earliest examples (late fourteenth century) up to the first decades of the Early Modern Era in Wales (mid-to-late sixteenth century). I will focus on the most common narrative charm types of this time: those that feature the motifs of Longinus, the Three Good Brothers, and Flum Jordan or Christ’s birth in Bethlehem. The development of these charms over time can provide insights into changing attitudes in Wales towards healing, religion, superstition, and even language. By the onset of the Early Modern era, Welsh narrative charms were increasingly subject to rhetorical expansions of the religious narratives that constituted the efficacious component of the charm. Additionally, by the end of the fifteenth century and into the early sixteenth, charms that once commonly featured Latin as the predominant language demonstrated an increased preference for the vernacular.1
Journal Article•10.1556/022.2019.64.2.5•
Native and Non-native Saints in Eighteenth and Nineteenth-Century Irish-Language Charm Historiolas

[...]

Nicholas M. Wolf1•
New York University1
01 Dec 2019-Acta Ethnographica Hungarica
TL;DR: This paper examined the long-term status of highly localized saints in religious and medical discourse, the effect of church centralization in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth century, and the rise of select national saints as factors in the feature of the Irish charms.
Abstract: An examination of surviving healing charm texts originating in Ireland between 1700 and the mid-nineteenth century suggests a strong link between the contents of this corpus and a select few national saints (Columcille, Bridget, and Patrick) and international Catholic religious figures (Christ, Mary, and the Apostles). By contrast, local Irish saints, which otherwise figure so prominently in religious practices of the time, are significantly underrepresented in the Irish charm corpus of this time period. This essay looks at the long-term status of highly localized saints in religious and medical discourse, the effect of church centralization in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth century, and the rise of select national saints as factors in this feature of the Irish charms.
Journal Article•10.1556/022.2019.64.1.8•
Bending the Bed of Procrustes. Gogea Mitu from the Circus Stage to the Boxing Ring

[...]

Timea Barabas1•
University of Bucharest1
01 Jun 2019-Acta Ethnographica Hungarica
TL;DR: In the context of the urban landscape of entertainment in Central and Eastern Europe, staged otherness in early 20th-century Romania remains a relatively uncharted field as discussed by the authors, and the following pap...
Abstract: In the context of the urban landscape of entertainment in Central and Eastern Europe, staged otherness in early 20th-century Romania remains a relatively uncharted field. The following pap...

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