Politics, Feasts, Festivals SZEGEDI VALLÁSI NÉPRAJZI KÖNYVTÁR BIBLIOTHECA RELIGIONIS POPULARIS SZEGEDIENSIS 36

Politics, Feasts, Festivals SZEGEDI VALLÁSI NÉPRAJZI KÖNYVTÁR BIBLIOTHECA RELIGIONIS POPULARIS SZEGEDIENSIS 36

POLITICS, FEASTS, FESTIVALS SZEGEDI VALLÁSI NÉPRAJZI KÖNYVTÁR BIBLIOTHECA RELIGIONIS POPULARIS SZEGEDIENSIS 36. SZERKESZTI/REDIGIT: BARNA, GÁBOR MTA-SZTE RESEARCH GROUP FOR THE STUDY OF RELIGIOUS CULTURE A VALLÁSI KULTÚRAKUTATÁS KÖNYVEI 4. YEARBOOK OF THE SIEF WORKING GROUP ON THE RITUAL YEAR 9. MTA-SZTEMTA-SZTE VALLÁSIRESEARCH GROUP KULTÚRAKUTATÓ FOR THE STUDY OF RELIGIOUS CSOPORT CULTURE POLITICS, FEASTS, FESTIVALS YEARBOOK OF THE SIEF WORKING GROUP ON THE RITUAL YEAR Edited by Gábor BARNA and István POVEDÁK Department of Ethnology and Cultural Anthropology Szeged, 2014 Published with the support of the Hungarian National Research Fund (OTKA) Grant Nk 81502 in co-operation with the MTA-SZTE Research Group for the Study of Religious Culture. Cover: Painting by István Demeter All the language proofreading were made by Cozette Griffin-Kremer, Nancy Cassel McEntire and David Stanley ISBN 978-963-306-254-8 ISSN 1419-1288 (Szegedi Vallási Néprajzi Könyvtár) ISSN 2064-4825 (A Vallási Kultúrakutatás Könyvei ) ISSN 2228-1347 (Yearbook of the SIEF Working Group on the Ritual Year) © The Authors © The Editors All rights reserved Printed in Hungary Innovariant Nyomdaipari Kft., Algyő General manager: György Drágán www.innovariant.hu https://www.facebook.com/Innovariant CONTENTS Foreword .......................................................................................................................... 7 POLITICS AND THE REMEMBraNCE OF THE Past Emily Lyle Modifications to the Festival Calendar in 1600 and 1605 during the Reign of James VI and I .............................................. 11 Božidar Jezernik St. Vitus Day: A Conflicted National Holiday .......................................................... 20 Skaidrė Urbonienė Park of Grunwald Battle: Victory, Visions and Reality ........................................... 30 László Mód Contesting Pasts? Political Rituals and Monuments of the 1956 Revolution in a Hungarian Town ........................................................... 39 Marija Klobčar Remembering and Forgetting: the Symbolic Power of Rituals in Kamniška Bistrica ............................................... 51 András Máté-Tóth – Gábor Attila Feleky Ritual Dimensions of Civil Religion ........................................................................... 65 Gábor Barna National Feasts, Political Memorial Rites - Feasts of Civil Religion? .................... 72 Katarina Ek-Nilsson New Political Agendas: the National Day Celebration in Sweden ........................ 81 Irina Stahl The Romanian Saints: Between Popular Devotion and Politics ............................. 86 POLITICS AND THE TraNsforMatioN OF RITUals Laurent Sébastien Fournier Intangible Cultural Heritage and the Birth of International Festival Politics .... 111 István Povedák A Pan-Hungarian ‘Vessel Ritual’ in Romania ......................................................... 121 Žilvytis Šaknys Politics and Festivals: Lithuania’s Shrove and Midsummer................................. 136 Sergey Rychkov Participation of Political Leaders in Ethnic Feasts as an Element of Political Ritual .............................................................................. 151 Hee Sook Lee-Niinioja “Yeongsanjae” as a Religious and Political Ritual, Exercised by Buddhist Monks in Korea ................................................................... 159 Bożena Gierek Interference of Politics in Celebrating “Dożynki”— The Festival of Harvest in Poland in 1950s ............................................................. 171 Cozette Griffin-Kremer Political ‘Creatures’: the Lily-of-the-Valley Festival in Rambouillet, France ..... 193 David Stanley The Hídivásár: A Changing Festival in Hungary ................................................... 209 Tatiana Minniyakhmetova Ethno-futurism as a New Ideology .......................................................................... 217 POLITICS IN RITUals Mihailo Smiljanic Serbian Orthodox Church and Student’s Protest in 1996/97: A Case Study of Temporary Altering of Rituals ..................................................... 227 Irina Sedakova The Ritual Year of Russian Political “White-Ribbon” Opposition (2011 – 2012) .............................................................. 234 Robert Benedicty Sacral Transfiguration of Civil Society. ‘Āshūra’ Celebrations in Lebanon ...... 243 POLITICS OF FOLK RITUals Aigars Lielbārdis The Office of the Dead in Latgale ............................................................................. 253 Marlene Hugoson The Politics of Tradition: Folk Healing on Two Continents. Part 1 ..................... 265 Nancy Cassell McEntire The Politics of Tradition: Folk Healing on Two Continents, Part 2 ..................... 274 FOREWORD This is not the first time that the Department of Ethnology and Cultural Anthro- pology, University of Szeged, and – since July 2013 – the MTA-SZTE Research Group for the Study of Religious Culture have dealt with the connections between politics and festivals. Back in 1999 the Department organized the 3rd conference of the SIEF’s Working Group on Ethnology of Religion under the title Politics and Folk Religion.1 The narrower topic of feasts, festivals and religion has always been a focus of interest in our researches. This is also reflected in the publications of the Department. One of our series of publications is devoted to textual and vis- ual sources on religious life, another series publishes analyses, monographs and conference papers. In the 1990s and the early 2000s the Department published a large number of books on the subject of rites, rituals, customs, ceremonies, feasts, national/state/political festivals. Calendar feasts, or in a wider interpretation, the ritual year are traditional topics of the research activity of the Department. The roots of this interest go back to the early 1930s when Sándor Bálint (1904-1980), the later professor of the Department, became assistant and then Privatdocent at the Ethnographical Institute which was established some years earlier, in 1929. In the second half of the 1930s he published the first writings and books on calendar feasts. The topic remained his main field of interest in the following decades, too. Sándor Bálint’s seminal comprehensive work, Karácsony, húsvét, pünkösd [Christmas, Easter, Pentecost] and the two volumes of Ünnepi kalendárium [Feast Calendar] appeared in the 1970s. These books are considered to be his chefs- d’oeuvre. They are dazzling displays of his knowledge of ethnology, folkloristics, cultural history, ecclesiastical history, literary history, heortology, theology, litur- gical history, music history and linguistics. He places everything in a historical and Central European context and takes into consideration the Romanian, Serbian, Croatian, Slovenian, Slovakian, Czech, German and Austrian material. Karácsony, húsvét, pünkösd surveys the traditions related to the major church feasts and the liturgical and paraliturgical phenomena that infiltrated into eve- ryday life. The two volumes of Ünnepi kalendárium review the feasts of Mary and the saints in the order of the church year, month by month. These offer a rich source material of an almost forgotten world. As a result, multi-directional research on religion and festivals continues to be an important part of the department’s teaching and research activity. Over the past 20 years, through its publishing and conference activity, our department has become an important workshop of ethnology of religion, including also feasts and festivals. National feasts have also been examined. We especially studied our new national feast, 23rd October, the commemoration day of the 1956 revolution which 1 The contributions of the conference were published in a volume edited by Gábor Barna: Politics and Folk Religion. Szegedi Vallási Néprajzi Könyvtár 6. Szeged, 2001. 7 before the change of political system in 1990 was an alternative but prohibited feast. At first glance politics and culture are two different spheres of human culture. However, if we make a deeper analysis several intersections emerge. Feasts in particular can express political, cultural, religious or ideological contents with individual and communal variants, thus they often use symbolic forms. Both the system and the content of feasts change from time to time, manipulated by political ideologies. Feasts as extraordinary time offer a possibility for the con- nection of high and low tradition, the accommodation of elements of folklore and/or popular culture and their association with local or high politics. Therefore politics and political regimes always want to control the world of feasts, have a special feast-policy and may have different attitudes toward feasts. The concept of (folk) culture played a diverse role in the historical development of national/ patriotic, religious/church, and regionalist movements as well as in processes of community-, nation- and region-building directed by the society/state. In recent decades the intersection between politics and (folk) culture greatly intensified, creating a strong emphasis on the political aspects of the appro- priation of the elements of folklore, stressing its contemporary uses by cultural activists and policy makers, and by national, regional and ethnic movements. All these aspects and transformations can be best analysed on the basis of ritu- als, the changes in the structure, function, and symbolic meaning of folk/political and newly invented rituals. That is why we held the conference on the biggest

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