Covering institutional, demo-geographical and political 'smallness', this book examines Europe's 'small ethnologies'. It discusses how 'smallness' characterizes the central structure of a nation or region and also determines its experiential horizon.
Máiréad Nic Craith is Professor of European Culture and Society at the Academy for Irish Culture Heritages, University of Ulster, UK. Ullrich Kockel is Professor of Ethnology and Folklife at the Academy for Irish Cultural Heritages, University of Ulster, UK. Reinhard Johler is based at Eberhard-Karls University of Tuebingen, Germany.
Contents: From national to transnational: a discipline en route to Europe, Máiréad Nic Crath; From CIAP to SIEF: visions for a discipline or power struggle?, Bjarne Rogan; Small national ethnologies and supranational empires: the case of the Habsburg monarchy, Bojan Baskar; How large are the issues for small ethnographies? Bulgarian ethnology facing the new Europe, Galia Valtchinova; Challenges to the discipline: Lithuanian ethnology between scholarship and identity politics, Vytis Ciubrinskas; When is small beautiful? The transformations of Swedish ethnology, Orvar Löfgren; The hybridity of minorities: a case-study of Sorb cultural research, Elka Tschernokoshewa; Turning the world upside down: towards a European ethnology in (and of) England, Ullrich Kockel; Ethnology in the North of Ireland, Anthony D. Buckley; Index.