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Auteur
Margaret Hiebert Beissinger is a Research Scholar and Lecturer in the Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures at Princeton University. Before teaching at Princeton, she was on the faculty of the Slavic Department and the Folklore Program at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Her research and publications focus on Slavic and East European folklore, oral epic, and Romani culture and music-making. She has authored numerous articles and chapters, as well as The Art of the Lautar: The Epic Tradition of Romania and coedited the volumes Epic Traditions in the Contemporary World and Manele in Romania: Cultural Expression and Social Meaning in Balkan Popular Music.
Texte du rabat
The Oxford Handbook of Slavic and East European Folklore provides a broad survey of the folklore of the Slavic and East European world: Russia, Ukraine, and the Baltics, as well as Central and Southeastern Europe. The volume contains forty-three chapters that offer an array of distinctive yet comparable traditions and genres. It includes folklore of the life cycle; calendrical-cycle traditions, magic, and folk belief; folktales, epic, lyric songs, proverbs, and jokes; local Romani, Muslim, and Jewish musical genres; and material culture. The handbook presents an assortment of oral traditions for an audience of folklorists, students, and scholars who wish to explore the rich expressive culture of the Slavic and East European world.
Résumé
The Oxford Handbook of Slavic and East European Folklore provides a wide-ranging survey of the oral traditions of the Slavic and East European world. It covers national, ethnic, racial, cultural, linguistic, and religious groups extending from the eastern zones of Russia to the western borders of the Czech Republic and from Estonia along the Baltic Sea to Greece at the southern tip of the Balkan Peninsula. The volume presents this broad world area - loosely connected by circumstances of geography, history, and politics - as a large and diverse cultural continuum. In forty-three chapters written by scholars ranging from folklorists who are natives of the Slavic and East European region to British and North American specialists in the field, Editor-in-Chief Margaret Hiebert Beissinger presents an extensive array of distinctive yet comparable traditions, rituals, and genres. Divided into five sections, the volume includes: the folklore and lyric genres of the life cycle (wedding, birth, and death rites); calendrical-cycle traditions, dance, magic, and folk belief; traditional prose and poetic narrative; oral traditions among minority ethno-religious and racial communities, as well as folk and popular music and song; and the folklore of everyday life, including aphoristic verbal forms and material culture. The volume's chapters focus on folklore of the nineteenth through the twenty-first centuries, from the very "traditional," to contemporary issues that influence folklore and expressive culture, such as life-changing pandemics, ethnic conflict, and war, as well as evolving gender roles. The handbook presents a wide assortment of materials for an audience of students and specialists alike: folklorists, ethnographers, anthropologists, ethnomusicologists, and literature scholars, as well as others who wish to explore the rich oral traditions of the Slavic and East European world.
Contenu
About the Editor
List of Contributors
Introduction
Margaret Hiebert Beissinger
Part I: Life-Cycle Folklore
Weddings
Natalie Kononenko
Olga Levaniouk
Sanja Zlatanovic
Ian MacMillen
C t lina Tes r
Childbirth
Mari Sarv
Jeanmarie Rouhier-Willoughby
Death Rites
Gail Holst-Warhaft
Bledar Kondi
Elizabeth Warner
Part II: The Traditional Calendar, Magic, and Folk Belief
Folklore of the Seasonal Cycle
Elo-Hanna Seljamaa
Selena Raköevi
Iva Niem i
Liz Mellish
Magic and the Power of Words
Dániel Bárth
Maria Vivod
Varieties of Folk Belief
James A. Kapaló
Michael Strmiska, Gatis Ozoli Odeta Rudling, and Dignen, Udre
Mariya Lesiv
Part III: Oral Traditional Narrative
Poetry: Epic and Ballad
Natalie Kononenko
Natalie Kononenko
David F. Elmer
Aida Vidan
Prose: Folktale and Legend
Maria Kaliambou
Jana Piro áková
Sibelan Forrester
Dorian Juri
Marta Wójcicka
Part IV: Music, Song, Identity, and Performance
Ethnoreligious Identity: Music and Song
Nirha Efendi
Michael Lukin
Walter Zev Feldman
Balkan Romani Music Traditions
Lozanka Peycheva
Speran a R dulescu and Margaret H. Beissinger
Alexander Markovi
Folk and Popular Music in Post-communist Eastern Europe
Lee Bidgood
Asya Draganova
Jane C. Sugarman
Part V: The Folklore of Everyday Life
Folk Wit, Wisdom, and the Spoken Word
Laura J. Olson and Svetlana Adonyeva
Anna T. Litovkina, Katalin Vargha, Péter Barta, and Hrisztalina Hrisztova-Gotthardt
Material Culture
Alison Hilton
Alexandra Urdea and Magdalena Buchczyk