Cultural Analysis: An Interdisciplinary Forum on Folklore and Popular Culture

Volume 19.2, 2021
Tracking Knowledge:
On The History of Changing Disciplinary Identities After 1945
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ARTICLES

Konrad J. Kuhn
University of Innsbruck, Austria
Magdalena Puchberger
Volkskundemuseum Vienna, Austria
Tracking Knowledge: On the History of Changing Disciplinary Identities after 1945. Introductory Remarks

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Kaisa Langer
University of Tartu
Becoming a Folklorist in Early Soviet Estonia: Learning the Rhetoric of the Socialist Research

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Rita Grīnvalde
Institute of Literature, Folklore and Art of the University of Latvia Riga, Latvia
Scholarly Infrastructure: Latvian Folklore Editions in Exile

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Eija Stark
Åbo Akademi University, Finland
Was folklore studies Finlandized? Changing scholarly trends in Finnish folklore studies in the Cold War

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Indrek Jääts
Estonian National Museum Tartu, Estonia
The Revival of Finno-Ugric Studies in Soviet Estonian Ethnography: Expeditions to the Veps, 1962-1970

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Hande Birkalan-Gedik
University Frankfurt, Germany
Folklore “Outside” the Academe: Tracking and Critically Reassessing Folklore Knowledge in Turkey 1950s-1980s

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Ingrid Slavec Gradišnik
ZRC SAZU, Institute of Slovenian Ethnology Ljubljana, Slovenia
Against the “Aversion to Theory”: Tracking “Theory” in Postwar Slovenian Ethnology

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RESPONSES

Jiří Woitsch
Institute of Ethnology, Czech Academy of Sciences, Prague
RESPONSE: The power of the individual and the power of the system: A response

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Simon J. Bronner
University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee
RESPONSE: Nation-Thinking, the State, and the “Fruitbearing Field” of Folklore

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Dr. Karin Bürkert
Ludwig-Uhland-Institut for Cultural and Historical Anthropology, University of Tübingen
RESPONSE: Different but somehow congruent: The crisscrossed paths of transformation of Folklore

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