|
Books > Humanities > Religion & beliefs > Myths & mythology
All regions and places are unique in their own way, but the Ozarks
have an enduring place in American culture. Studying the Ozarks
offers the ability to explore American life through the lens of one
of the last remaining cultural frontiers in American society.
Perhaps because the Ozarks were relatively isolated from mainstream
American society, or were at least relegated to the margins of it,
their identity and culture are liminal and oftentimes counter to
mainstream culture. Whatever the case, looking at the Ozarks offers
insights into changing ideas about what it means to be an American
and, more specifically, a special type of southerner. In Where
Misfits Fit: Counterculture and Influence in the Ozarks, Thomas
Michael Kersen explores the people who made a home in the Ozarks
and the ways they contributed to American popular culture. Drawing
on a wide variety of sources, Kersen argues the area attracts and
even nurtures people and groups on the margins of the mainstream.
These include UFO enthusiasts, cults, musical troupes, and
back-to-the-land groups. Kersen examines how the Ozarks became a
haven for creative, innovative, even nutty people to express
themselves-a place where community could be reimagined in a variety
of ways. It is in these communities that communitas, or a deep
social connection, emerges. Each of the nine chapters focuses on a
facet of the Ozarks, and Kersen often compares two or more cases to
generate new insights and questions. Chapters examine real and
imagined identity and highlight how the area has contributed to
popular culture through analysis of the Eureka Springs energy
vortex, fictional characters like Li'l Abner, cultic activity,
environmentally minded communes, and the development of rockabilly
music, and near communal rock bands such as Black Oak Arkansas.
|
Demoniality
(Hardcover)
Ludovico Maria Sinistrari, Montague Summers
|
R442
Discovery Miles 4 420
|
Ships in 12 - 17 working days
|
|
A folkloric research project on Sefer ha-ma'asim.
Baba Yaga is an ambiguous and fascinating figure. She appears in
traditional Russian folktales as a monstrous and hungry cannibal,
or as a canny inquisitor of the adolescent hero or heroine of the
tale. In new translations and with an introduction by Sibelan
Forrester, "Baba Yaga: The Wild Witch of the East in Russian Fairy
Tales" is a selection of tales that draws from the famous
collection of Aleksandr Afanas'ev, but also includes some tales
from the lesser-known nineteenth-century collection of Ivan
Khudiakov. This new collection includes beloved classics such as
"Vasilisa the Beautiful" and "The Frog Princess," as well as a
version of the tale that is the basis for the ballet "The
Firebird." The preface and introduction place these tales in their
traditional context with reference to Baba Yaga's continuing
presence in today's culture--the witch appears iconically on tennis
shoes, tee shirts, even tattoos. The stories are enriched with many
wonderful illustrations of Baba Yaga, some old (traditional "lubok"
woodcuts), some classical (the marvelous images from Victor
Vasnetsov or Ivan Bilibin), and some quite recent or solicited
specifically for this collection
Can the study of folklore survive brutal wars and nationalized
misappropriations? Does folklore make sense in an age of fearsome
technology? These are two of several questions this book addresses
with specific and profound reference to the history of folklore
studies in Germany. There in the early nineteenth century in the
ideological context of romantic nationalism, the works of the
Brothers Grimm pioneered the discipline. The sublimation of
folklore studies with the nation's political history reached a peak
in the 1930s under the Nazi regime. This book takes a full look at
what happened to folklore after the end of World War II and the
defeat of the Nazis. A special focus on Lutz Rohrich (1923-2006),
whose work spans the decades from 1955 to 2006, makes this book a
unique window into a monumental reclamation.
In 1945 Rohrich returned from the warfront at the age of
twenty-three, a wounded amputee. Resuming his education, he
published his seminal "Marchen und Wirklichkeit (Folktale and
Reality)" in 1956. Naithani argues that through this and a huge
body of scholarship on folktale, folksong, proverbs, and riddles
over the next decades, Rohrich transformed folklore scholarship by
critically challenging the legacies of Romanticism and Nazism in
German folklore work. Sadhana Naithani's book is the first
full-length treatment of this extraordinary German scholar written
in English."
|
|