Electronic Library of Scientific Literature



SLOVENSKY NARODOPIS / SLOVAK ETHNOLOGY



Volume 43, 3/1995


THE ETHNO-CULINARY IMPORTANCE OF CEREAL

PhDr. Rastislava Stolicna, CSc.,
Institute of Ethnology of Slovak Academy of Sciences, Jakubovo nam. 12, 813 64 Bratislava, Slovakia

Cereals were the basic food of the majority of human cultures. The paper looks at all the cultivated species on the territory of Slovakia, and assigns them to their wider historico-cultural context. It emphasizes the culinary conditions of cereals, which had decisive importance during their varied use in food. At the same time it introduces rich Slovak material about cereal foods, and places them in an inter-ethnic context.
pp. 287-300


INTEREST IN THE PROBLEM OF TRADITIONAL TRADE IN JOURNALISM

PhDr. Lubica Faltanova, CSc.,
Institute of Ethnology of Slovak Academy of Sciences, Jakubovo nam. 12, 813 64 Bratislava, Slovakia

The paper gives a review of the main ethnographic and ethnological findings in the area of the picture of traditional trade, as they arose in Slovakia from the beginning of the formation of an academic discipline to the present. In the course of the development of interest in folk culture, the intensity of emphasis on understanding traditional trade as an independent whole varied. An extensive material basis is found within the framework of other themes (domestic production, folk crafts). The paper looks at the various developmental circumstances of definition of the problems of traditional trade. It summarizes the state of research on individual questions concerning trade.
pp. 301-312


THE PRESENT REPERTOIR OF WOMEN'S AND MENS' DANCES IN SLOVAKIA

PhDr. Stanislav Duzek, CSc.,
Ustav hudobnej vedy SAV, Dubravska cesta 9, 841 05 Bratislava, Slovakia

In Slovakia, independent dances for women and men were quite common but unevenly distributed in the first half of the 20th century. They belong to various types and less defined typological groups of folk dance. Four national questionnaire surveys and research projects carried out in the last fifty years are significant sources of data about their representation in the folk dance repertoir. These surveys show a progressive narrowing of the repertoir and a growing disconnection of the territorial occurrence of folk dances, especially in West Slovakia. In comparison with couple and communal dances, womens' and mens' dances are particularly threatened types of folklore dance.
pp. 313-321


SOURCES FOR FOLK MUSICAL CULTURE IN ZAHORIE REGION - MANUSCRIPT EVIDENCE

Mgr. Peter Michalovic,
Ustav hudobnej vedy SAV, Dubravska cesta 9, 841 05 Bratislava, Slovakia

Manuscripts are an important source which preserve folk musical culture in a particular way. A whole series of manuscript song books from the 18th and 19th centuries is connected with the region of Zahorie. The majority of them contain only texts. Some are anonymous, or without closer localization. A catalogue of these written records outlines the history of musical culture in this south-western region of Slovakia.
pp. 322-347


DAS BILD DER ZIGEUNER UND SEINE REFLEXION IN DER SLOWAKISCHEN FOLKLORE

PhDr. Eva Krekovicova, CSc.,
Ethnologisches Institut der Slowakischen Akademie der Wissenschaften, Jakubovo nam. 12, 81364 Bratislava, Slowakei

The paper traces the reflection of the „Gypsy" (Romany) in Slovak folklore, on the basis of folk songs, proverbs, stories and above all anecdotes. The figure of the Gypsy in folklore is ambivalent. There is an expression of a certain degree of tolerance from the side of the majority community. This tolerance is a result of the long-term coexistence, especially of settled Romanies with the rural population of Slovakia. At the same time, the tolerance was limited by formulated barriers. Strict endogamy was one of the most important of these. Further barriers were mainly of a social, cultural and moral-ethical character, even when they were supposed to be ethnic. In connection with the genre rules of folklore, the image of the Gypsy was different to some degree in songs, proverbs and prose. The frequent cycle of anecdotes about the comic figure of the Gypsy deserves special attention. He mostly receives a positive evaluation.
pp. 348-364