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broad cooperation. Another highlight in this volume is the account of the 7th International Congress of the Société Internationale d'Ethnologie et de Folklore (SIEF), held in 2001 in Budapest, Hungary. The multidisciplinary SIEF (International Society for
In this paper, I try to explore whether, in light of folklore studies, the tale was a women's genre in 19th-century Hungarian society. The gendered aspects of the genre of tale can be examined through the possible actors, that is, along the lines of
in German of Ernő Tárkány Szücs two volumes in Hungarian related to the first period of his research career can be read. One of them, Mártély népi jogélete [The Legal Folklore of Mártély] (Kolozsvár/Cluj, 1944), is a work based on field research
, ZOLTÁN KODÁLY Zoltán 1913 see BARTÓK, Béla-KODÁLY, Zoltán KODÁLY, Zoltán 1923, A zenei folklore fejlödése [The development of music folklore]. Visszatekintés [Retrospection] II. 97
.C. Bull. Bot. Surv. India 1980 22 59 62 C.R. Tarafder , Folklore 26 (1985) 158
the Ural also. Tatras enjoy a very privileged position in collective Polish sentiment, owing to their breathtakingly scenic landscapes and a unique folklore, which draws from the richness of an entire Carpathian Basin. For summer holidays, Monika with
434 445 Poikalainen, V.: Paleolithic art from the Danube to Lake Baikal. Folklore (Tallinn), 2001, 18/19 , 1
New Results of Hungarian Legal Ethnography •
Guest Editors' Foreword
legal folklore in Hungary was nothing more than a research tradition that, like a hidden stream, emerged from time to time, was passed around, and consisted largely of individual accomplishments. The establishment of the Tárkány Szücs Ernő Legal
. Introductory material plus 486 pages with index and references Amanita muscaria is the most iconic mushroom in the world, with an ancient prehistory that can only be glimpsed in the remnants of myth and folklore. This fame of A
János Mailáth's manuscripts has not been identified. The first collection of folk literature and prose published in Hungarian was edited by the excellent poet, critic, literary scholar, and theoretician of folklore János Erdélyi (Kiskapos