Tania’s office: E2108

Sean’s office: Com 304B

Pat’s office: A2110


WEEK ONE: Introductions to the Folk and to Folklore

Assignments for Week One: READ: “Who Are the Folk?” pp. 1-19, and “The Number Three in American Culture,” pp.134-159 in Interpreting Folklore (Alan Dundes).

4/2:      
9:30-11:30         Introductions/Syllabus; What is Folklore? (Sean)
12:30-2:30         Seminars

4/3:      
9:30-11:30         Who are the Slavs? (Pat); Celts first on Slavic Territory (Tania)
12:30-2:30         Who are the Celts? (Sean)

4/4:     
9:30-1:00           Folklore: Preservation/National Identity/Authenticity (Sean, Tania, Pat); Video: Russia: Hidden Memory (documentary, 1995; https://vimeo.com/40973227)

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WEEK TWO: Foundational Knowledge

Assignments for Week Two: For Wednesday the 11th, locate, write down, and bring with you ten items of folklore: a proverb, a song, or a family expression.

READ: “The Pagan Background” from Russian Folk Belief (Linda Ivanits), pp. 3-18; “Preface,” and then pp. 13-33 from Supernatural Beings from Slovenian Myth and Folktales (Monika Kropej); “Why We Became Religious” and “The Evolution of the Spirit World” (Marvin Harris), pp.15-18, from Magic, Witchcraft, and Religion; and “The Well of Her Memory” (Patricia Monaghan), from The Red-Haired Girl from the Bog, pp. 137-166.

Recommended, not required, reading: “Spirits of the House and Farmstead,” pp. 51-63, and “Spirits of the Forest, Waters and Fields,” pp. 64-82 (Ivanits); and “Snake” and “Dragon” (pp. 101-118) from Supernatural Beings from Slovenian Myth and Folktales (Kropej).

NOTE: Your first essay – on traditional belief systems in either Celtic or Slavic cultures – will be due on April 18. Check the website (under “Assignments”) for the actual assignment.

4/9:      
9:30-11:30         Chthonic Forces and Animism (Sean)
12:30-2:30         Seminars

4/10:    
9:30-11:30         Slavic Cosmology and “Dvoeverie” (“double faith”) (Tania)
12:30-2:30         Pre-Christian+Christian Symbiosis in the Carpathians (Pat)

4/11:    
9:30-1:00           Students share folklore research

Ritual Bread: Faculty will make and discuss bread: Sean: arán donn (Irish brown bread); Pat:  Ukrainian Pascha Bread (Easter bread); Tania: kosti svätých (Slovak “saints’ bones”)

4/14:     all day Saturday! Sean-nós Northwest Irish Festival (COM building); Saturday workshops in music, dance, song, and the Irish language. Registration is already covered by your student fees. Note: Sat. evening concert will be in the TESC Recital Hall. If you wish to attend both days, go to https://www.seannos.org/ and pay $50 for the second day.

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WEEK THREE: Slavic Folklore

***Due 4/18: first essay–by 5 p.m.***

Assignments for Week Three: READ: Russian epic songs: “Volkh Vseslavyevich”; “Ilya Muromets and Nightingale the Robber”; “Alyosha Popovich, His Squire Yekim, and Tugarin”; “Sadko” from An Anthology of Russian Folk Epic (trans. by James Bailey and Tatyana Ivanova); “The Book of Doves,” “Yegorij (St. George) and the Dragon”; Ukrainian epic songs: “Duma about Marusia from Bohuslav”; “Duma about the Flight of Three Brothers from the city of Azov” from Ukrainian Dumy (trans. by George Tarnawsky and Patricia Kilina); South Slavic epic songs: “The Tsar and the Girl”; “The Building of Skadar”; “The Fall of the Serbian Empire”; “The Kosovo Maiden”; “Marko Kraljavić Drinks Wine at Ramadan”; “A Maiden Outwits Marko”; “The Wife of Hasan Aga [Hasanaginica]” from Songs of the Serbian People: From the Collections of Vuk Karadžić (trans. and ed. by Milne Holton and Vasa D. Mihailovich).

Recommended reading: “The Ballad of ‘The Walled-Up Wife’” (Dundes, pp. 185-204) from The Walled-Up Wife: A Casebook (ed. by Alan Dundes).

4/16:    
9:30-11:30         Slavic Epic Tradition among East and South Slavs: Epic Songs, Spiritual Songs, Ballads, and the Performance of epic songs by skomorokhi and kaliki (Pat and Tania)
12:30-2:30         Seminars

4/17:    
9:30-11:30         Film and discussion: Shadows of Forgotten Ancestors (110 mins., 1965)
12:30-2:30         Discuss folklore depicted in the film (Pat and Tania) 

4/18:    
9:30-1:00           Folk Customs and Beliefs: Moments of transition in life and in the calendar year; the Cult of the Ancestors (Pat and Tania)
[FIRST PAPER DUE TODAY AT 5 PM]

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WEEK FOUR: Celtic Folklore

Assignments for Week Four: READ: “Texture, Text, and Context,” pp. 20-32, in Interpreting Folklore (Dundes) and selected passages from The Táin (pronounced “tawn”).

NOTE: Your second essay – to choose one folktale each from the Celtic and Slavic traditions and view them through a particular lens – is due 5/9.

4/23:    
9:30-11:30         Celtic Epic Performance (The Táin)
12:30-2:30         Seminars

4/24:    
9:30-11:30         Film and discussion: The Secret of Roan Inish (103 mins., 1994)
12:30-2:30         The Bard, Patronage, and Power

4/25:    
9:30-1:00           Celtic Folk Customs and Beliefs

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WEEK FIVE: Mary Across Cultures / the Beginning of Summer / Foodways

Assignments for Week Five: READ: “Stovelore in Russian Folklife,” (Snejana Tempest) pp.1-14; “Food in the Rus’ Primary Chronicle,” (Horace Lunt), pp.15-30, both from Food in Russian History and Culture, ed. by Musya Glants and Joyce Toomre. Also, read “Outcast from Life’s Feast: Food and Hunger in Ireland” (Hasia Diner) pp. 84-113, from Hungering for America: Italian, Irish, and Jewish Foodways in the Age of Migration. Keep working on your second essay, due 5/9.

4/30:    
9:30-11:30         Mary, the mother of Jesus, in Celtic Culture (Sean); Mary, the mother of God, in Slavic Culture (Pat, Tania)
12:30-2:30         Seminars

5/1:      
9:30-11:30         The Beginning of Summer and the Celtic Calendar (Sean); and how the Slavs celebrate(d) the end of winter/beginning of summer: Morena and Juraj (Tania)
12:30-2:30         Potluck (finish by 1 pm); Celtic and Slavic Foodways and Drinkways (Sean, Pat, Tania)

5/2:      
9:30-1:00           Pysanky Workshop (Pat)

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WEEK SIX: Folk Tales: The Bright Side (and some dark…)

***Due 5/18: second essay–by 5 p.m.***

Assignments for Week Six: READ: “The Hero Pattern and the Life of Jesus,” pp. 223-261, in Interpreting Folklore (Dundes). In addition, read the assigned folktales for this week.

NOTE: Begin preparations for your third and final essay. Identify one item/figure/event/custom/belief/etc. from either Slavic or Celtic folklore and folk life; research it; write up a 5-7-page research essay. Collect illustrations and plan a digital poster for the poster presentations in week 10. Rough draft is due May 16; final draft is due May 30.

 5/7:      
9:30-11:30         Tale Types and Archetypes (Sean)
12:30-2:30         Seminars: bring Dundes and the assigned folktales for discussion

5/8:      
9:30-11:30         Women and Water and the Cailleach (Sean)
12:30-2:30         Baba Yaga (Tania) SEE FILM: Mimino

5/9:      
9:30-1:00           Poster Workshops 

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WEEK SEVEN:            Folk Tales: The Dark Side (and some bright…)

***Due 5/16: rough draft of third essay–by 5 p.m.***

Assignments for Week Seven: READ: “Wet and Dry, the Evil Eye,” pp. 93-133, and “To Love My Father All” [re: King Lear], pp. 211-222, in Interpreting Folklore (Dundes), and “The Devil” from Russian Folk Belief, pp. 38-50 (Ivanits). In addition, read the assigned folktales for this week (three Slavic and three Celtic) and come to seminar prepared to discuss them.

Recommended reading: “Demons and Bewitched Souls,” pp. 179-215 from Supernatural  Beings (Kropej). Locate the “Dark Emerald Tales” website and peruse the article “Irish Harbingers of Death and Reapers of the Soul.”

5/14:    
9:30-11:30         Vampires, Sorcerers, and the Evil Eye (Sean and Tania)
12:30-2:30         Seminars

5/15:    
9:30-11:30         Film and discussion: The Celtic Trilogy
12:30-2:30         Cross-seminar workshop: bring the folktales for this week

5/16:    
9:30-1:00           Performance workshop and Prep for next week

[SECOND PAPER DUE 5/18 AT 5 PM]

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Week Eight:      Folk Sounds and Steps

***Send digital posters to printer: Instructions and exact date will be given for this.***

Assignments for this week: Consult our WordPress site for this week’s reading assignments.

5/21:    
9:30-11:30         Guest Presentation: Gerry O’Connor
12:30-2:30         Seminars

5/22:    
9:30-11:30         Slavic Folk Music and Dance: Variety in the Slavic world (Pat and Tania)
12:30-2:30         Why the Violin? Why the Fiddle? (Sean)

5/23:    
9:30-1:00           About Ethnomusicology and Folklore Fieldwork (Sean) 

5/24:    
8:00-11:00 PM   Concert by Chirgilchin, a group of traditional musicians from the Republic of Tuva (a federal subject within Russia) at the Octapas Café, 414 E 4th Street, Olympia (optional)
[ROUGH DRAFT OF FINAL PAPER DUE 5/25]

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Week Nine:       Cultural Appropriation and Refashioning

***Due 6/1: final draft of third essay–by 5 p.m.***

Assignments for this week: Consult our WordPress site for this week’s reading assignments.

NOTE: Posters are due to the poster printer this week (to be finalized later).

5/28:                            
Memorial Day; no classes; campus closed.  

5/29:    
9:30-11:30         Slavic Folklore and Nationalism; Folklore in the service of the state (Pat and Tania)                  
12:30-2:30         Celtic Folklore and Nationalism (Sean)

5/30:    
9:30-1:00           Neo-Paganism (Sean and Tania)
[FINAL DRAFT OF THIRD ESSAY DUE 6/1]

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Week Ten:        Student Poster Presentations and Final Potluck

Begin working on your self-evaluation and faculty evaluations.

NOTE: Bring something Slavic or Celtic for the Potluck on Wednesday!

6/4:      
9:30-11:30         Poster Presentations
12:30-2:30         Poster Presentations

6/5:      
9:30-11:30         Poster Presentations
12:30-2:30         Poster Presentations

6/6:      
9:30-1:00           Poster Presentations and Potluck