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Articles included: Emotional Geography. Authenticity, Embodiment
and Cultural Heritage; Anniversaries and Jubilees. Changing
Celebratory Customs in Modern Times; The Meaning of Weaving.
Textiles in a Museum Magazine; Contested Modernities. Politics,
Culture and Urbanisation in Portugal: A Case Study from the Greater
Lisbon Area; The Outsiders Gaze as Part of the Methodological
Toolkit?; Reflections on the Research Project the
"Musikantenstadl"; The Camino de Santiago. The Interplay of
European Heritage and New Traditions.
This volume starts out with two contrasting studies of monuments.
How does the seemingly stability of stone and bronze hide a
constantly changing cultural use? Anne Eriksen looks at the history
of ruins in Norway. The murmur of ruins turns out to be a speech of
modernity, a way of emotionalising place and history. Viktoriya
Hryaban discusses the fate of socialist monuments in Ukraine and
shows how the attempts to create alternative post-socialist
memorials reproduce a traditional Soviet cultural grammar. Lace is
a dominating decorative element in many Turkish Dutch homes. It has
become a sign of "Turkishness" but as Hilje van der Horst points
out, peoples relations to this mundane domestic element mirror some
important conflicts and ideas about modernity and ethnicity. From
the cultural media of monuments and lace, the discussion moves on
to two more classic mass media and their role in identity politics.
Stijn Reijnders explores a popular Dutch game show that has managed
to survive for decades, becoming something of a national
institution for some, an example of an outmoded genre for others.
How does the involvement mirror ideas of an imagined national
community? Finally, Silke Meyer looks at an 18th century national
stereotype of The German quack in English popular debate and mass
media. How did this caricature of Germanness become an alter ego of
the English?
Shifts, both visible and imperceptible, are a common denominator of
the papers gathered in this issue of Ethnologia Europaea. The
increasing diversification of religious manifestations in civil
society is analysed by Peter Jan Margry, while Mats Lindqvist
traces the impact of transnational business practices in the Baltic
forest. Luis Silva questions the effect of the heritage regime on
individuals working with and living in Portuguese dwellings turned
patrimony. The adjustments to life that an individual body and mind
must undergo following an organ transplantation are documented by a
team led by Katrin Amelang. Each of these papers profits from
emerging or recently established analytic interests and topoi in
cultural research. The final paper in this issue turns to shifts
and reactions within scholarship itself, as Anna Malewska-Szalygin
uses her fieldwork in Poland to question some anthropological
tenets current in work on post-socialist societies.
Have you ever heard of the cream effect or witnessed the power of
cultural backdraft? Have you watched the slow process of
fossilization or used the tactics of cultural stealth? You might be
waiting for just the right word to describe what you have seen and
done. This collection revitalizes the study of the cultural
processes of stability and change. The 25 essays invent new
processes for a rapidly changing world. They illustrate how
different perspectives enrich cultural analysis and add a bit of
playfulness and experimentation to a longstanding academic issue.
The authorsfrom anthropology, European ethnology, sociology, and
cultural studiesare peeking into blind spots and looking under the
furniture in order to understand why and how some kinds of social
life become visible, while so many others remain unseen. This book
will inspire researchers and students to develop new approaches in
cultural analysis. This is a reprint of the journal Ethnologia
Europaea - Journal of European Eth
"Explains brilliantly the structures and processes of middle-class
culture in historical perspective."--Robert Nye, Rutgers University
" This] illuminating study of the Swedish middle class around the
turn of the century . . . is one welcome sign that bourgeois, too,
are once again recognized as parts of society worth studying . . .
to be understood rather than to be savaged. Culture Builders is a
welcome sign of yet another development: the ease with which
historical studies may be integrated with neighboring
disciplines."--Journal of Modern History "The authors take an
impressively broad intellectual perspective. . . . The everyday
routines of bourgeoisie, peasantry, and working class are
dramatically portrayed through a skillful weaving together of
excerpts from ethnological archives, schoolbooks, memoirs, novels,
and etiquette manuals . . . provides insight into the sociocultural
complexities, conflicts, and contradictions that are ignored in
widely held national stereotypes."--American Anthropologist "Unites
historical and ethnological approaches so as to present a way of
life that will be of interest not only to scholars of Scandinavia
but to historians, sociologists, and everyone trying to describe
and interpret the bourgeois Western culture during the nineteenth
century."--Ethnos Jonas Frykman and Orvar Lofgren teach in the
Department of European Ethnology at the University of Lund, Sweden.
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