Disciplines
History, Archaeology (10%); Sociology (90%)
Keywords
Abstract
This volume includes 24 studies on comparative culture analysis in the Southeastern-European and Mediterrean
area, as practizised in the "Ethnologia europaea" of Leopold Kretzenbacher, giving an idea of the plurality of
possible topics and issues of folk culture in history and presence of this oldest part of Europe, which has not yet
been really explored by interested readers. In t erms of subjects and methods these studies are partly located
beyond the traditional thematical set of folklore studies: theoretical and terminological problems are discussed,
cultural history since the late antiquity is involved, theological issues come together with research facts on customs
and rites, masques and disguisings, issues of gender studies and sociology af ages are brought together with
methodological critics on comparativism of the Victorian school of ethnography, the competitions of tournament
are analyzed in historical and functional context as symbols of power and superiority of Venice in the Eastern
Mediterrean, folk plays are examined as prefigurating structures of elaborated forms of folk theatre as well as the
influences of Byzantine ecclesiastic painting and iconography on orthodox folk culture; other chapters focus on
ethnosteretyps, on forms and functions of blood brotherhood (adoptio in fratrem) since late antiquity, the ways of
reception of popular reading material throughout the Balkan peninsula since the 16th century are presented. Other
studies are dedicated to the formation of religious traditions in West and East, between Catholicism and
Orthodoxy, to fairy tales between orality and literacy, but also topics like the public display of personal feelings,
forms of gestures, figures of demonology, narratives of oral autobiography, etymological and semantic questions
are examined and research projects on oral folk literature are presented. One chapter is also dedicated to the
ideological use of folklore studies in the nineteenth century. Chapters 15-24 focus more sepcifically on Greece
without lacking wider comparative views.
The Introduction and the Conclusion, the selected bibliography at the end of the volume and the indices integrate
these chapters in a unique perspective. The specific indices allow also a selective use of the volume.