TALES OF ROŞIA MONTANĂ. ORAL NARRATIVE TRADITIONS AND STORY-TELLERS FROM SOUTHERN APUSENI MOUNTAINS Ileana Benga The Folklore Archive of the Romanian Academy.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
1 of 19 Organization and Management New Approaches to motivating Staff IMARK Investing in Information for Development Organization and Management New Approaches.
Advertisements

IR2501 – week 8 lectures II – Postcolonial Studies.
+ Credit-free certificates for new academics Why we tread this path Jo Peat, University of Roehampton.
Rosia Montana The Way It Is. Gabriel Resources (GR), a Toronto-based mining junior intends to develop a large part of Romanias Apuseni mountains. Rosia.
Why marketing is education. (And how to use that in your grants to make them far more compelling) Morgan Giddings, PhD Sept 26, 2012 Or how I greedily.
SCHOOL NO. 22 CRAIOVA, ROMANIA MIRCEA ELIADE. SCHOOL NO. 22 MIRCEA ELIADE DOCENDO DISCIMUS! School Motto Craiova, Romania By teaching, we learn!
William James ( )  Considered by many to be one of the top psychologists of all time  Principles of Psychology (1890)  Classic work in psychology.
Culture, Creativity, Identity Concept and Issues Michela Zucca.
Lecture 07 Marketing. Working Definition of the concept > – The process of determining customer wants and needs and – then providing.
ONCE AGAIN-ST ABANDON OPENING TO NEW COUNTRIES EXPERIENCES INSTITUTE OF EDUCATIONAL SCIENCES BUCHAREST 30 MAY 2008.
Intangible Cultural Heritage Section
The outsider Antonio Santangelo – University of Torino Cultural models that influence contemporary cinema.
Social Construction of Reality
Modernization Dr.Saramma Mathew. Modernization an evolutionary transition from a 'traditional' to a 'modern' society.
ANTHROPOLOGY THE STUDY OF HUMANITY FROM ITS EVOLUTIONARY ORIGINS TO TODAY’S CULTURAL DIVERSITY.
CSC 395 – Software Engineering Lecture 21: Overview of the Term & What Goes in a Data Dictionary.
Identity. Concepts of the Individual, self, person in anthropology Individual as member of humankind (biologistic) Self as locus of experience (psychologistic)
Parties, elections and the electoral systems Lubomir Kopecek CDK & Educational Initiatives, December 2011.
Cultural diffusion The process of spreading cultural traits from one place to another. Cultures change at different speeds across time and place. Can move.
Wednesday 18 February 2009 The Tactics of Imagination de Certeau & Appadurai at Everyday Practice.
Dangerous & Short-Circuit Practices Concerning Evangelization & Creating an Environment for Multiplication and a CPM to Occur Prepared by: Dr. Jim Slack.
Workshop: Museums and Intercultural Dialogue Chester Beatty Library, 4 April 2014 Museums as Places for Intercultural Dialogue and Learning Workshop Outline:
Social Sciences By: Jessica, Shayna, Caitlin, Kelli, Tyson and Nigen.
“ Crossing the boundaries” March 14 th 2012 My life My Choice.
Today’s Presentation To enhance your understanding of: To recognize the tragic consequences of the residential school system and how it impacts Aboriginal.
Designing effective self marketing tools
Higher education decisions in the UK & the 2004 Higher Education Act. This presentation reflects the view of the authors and not BIS or UCAS. This material.
Re-Thinking Competency through Media Norm Friesen, PhD Umea, Sept. 18, 2009.
Oring’s “On The Concepts of Folklore” Chapter One of the Introduction.
Creating a Sense of Belonging Joyously presented by: Kay Holman, Ph.D. Sara Egorin-Hooper Belonging encompasses a need “to be part of the story.” Elizabeth.
Introduction to Mythology Mythos=stories logy=the study of Why study mythology? Myths are humanity’s earliest imaginative attempt to explain the universe,
Introduction to Mythology Mythos=stories logy=the study of Why study mythology? Myths are humanity’s earliest imaginative attempt to explain the universe,
FOLKLORE Folklore can be defined as all the traditions, customs, and stories that are passed along by word of mouth in a culture. Folklore includes legends,
© 2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. 1 ©2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Quizzes added to syllabus First Quiz:ANTH : 9/25.
ALLUSION A passing reference to historical or fictional characters, places, or events, or to other works that the writer assumes the reader will recognize.
History of Ukrainian Culture Micro-teaching Vasyl Malikov Academic Teaching Excellence Kyiv 2015.
The Anthropological Approach Dr. Xu Dawei 徐大慰 Mobile: School of Social Administration Shanghai University of Political.
1. 2 Experimental project: “Let’s meet at school: welcome, mediation, interculturalism” – 2006/07 Plurality of voices and symbols: comparing cultures.
ORIGINS OF SOCIOLOGY CSI – Gorski DEFINITION OF SOCIOLOGY  The study of the development, structure, and functioning of human society  Study.
Business Solutions Team 157 When your business is inside out, We’ll turn it right side In! The Gold Standard in Leadership Excellence!
Part 5 Marketing: Developing Relationships © 2015 McGraw-Hill Education.
Marxism & the family “Families support capitalism by producing future workers to be exploited.” Zaretsky 1976.
Ways of Studying Religion. The Academic Study of Religion - Assumptions - One religion is neither better nor worse than another religion; they are simply.
Myths, Legends & Folktales. Storytelling is common to every culture. Most people enjoy listening to stories. Storytellers have catered for the need for.
Impacts of I.T. Ethical, Social, legal and economic impacts on I.T.
Social Sciences use research and data analysis to explain human behaviour – what people think, how and why they act the way they do
IB: Language and Literature
NATIONALISM AND COLLECTIVE CONSCIOUSNESS
Core Concepts History and Geography Skills. Measuring & Organizing Time VOCAB Historians – people who study events in the past Timeline – line marked.
Late Antiquity: The Transformation of the Roman Empire and the Triumph of Christianity Civ October 9, 2015 Class 20.
The Early Peoples of the Americas World History 9.
A123 A COURSE Introduction UNIT 1: GETTING STARTED.
oI feel like my media product has challenged forms and conventions of real media products a little bit because of the way I have placed my masthead.
Late Antiquity: The Transformation of the Roman Empire and the Triumph of Christianity CIV February 24, 2016 Class 16.
Complete the provided worksheet as you read Lessons 24 and 25 in your Student Manual over Values and Standards. Make sure you write your responses IN.
History of Ethnographic Research and Its Uses Part II.
Applied Linguistics Applied Linguistics means
Intro. To Psychology Intro. Unit Mr. Stalnaker. Psychology What is Psychology? Psychology is old as a study but young, vigorous, and growing as an organized.
The importance of optimism in maintaining healthy aging in rural Alaska.
PUBLIC RELATIONS Mrs. B.S.Shali M.Sc (N) Asst. Professor, Pediatric Nursing Department, Annammal College Of Nursing, Kuzhithurai.
“ VRIO framework is the tool used to analyze firm’s internal resources and capabilities to find out if they can be a source of sustained competitive advantage.”
EVIDENCE FOR EVIDENCE? How strong is the case for turning education into an evidence-based profession based on ‘what works’ knowledge? Gert Biesta University.
By: Mrs. Robold Genres of Fiction Today we will identify genres of fiction.
World Refugee Week  What is Refugee Week? Refugee week is a UK-wide programme of arts, cultural and educational events and activities that celebrates.
What is History? What is Historiography?
Theme № 6. Reliance on national - spiritual foundations - a necessary condition for building a democratic society in Uzbekistan.
Nations and Society.
Liberal Attitude Change in the Post-Industrial West
Introduction to Mythology.
The Question of European Identity and the Impact of the Changes of 1989/90 Michael Wintle Gauri S Nadig I39024.
Presentation transcript:

TALES OF ROŞIA MONTANĂ. ORAL NARRATIVE TRADITIONS AND STORY-TELLERS FROM SOUTHERN APUSENI MOUNTAINS Ileana Benga The Folklore Archive of the Romanian Academy Institute, Cluj-Napoca

Motivation Applying for this programme on teaching anthropology made twice a missionary tool from my work: once, for the fate of folklore studies in the academic panorama, and second, for the fate of the mountains in the area of Roşia Montană; i.e. the awkward position of practising ethnologia militans, in front of an almost unknown audience. The missionarys zeal was the first to fail. Translating folkloric relevance for anthropological understanding is wrong for a goal. Worse always possible: aiming to transform the folklorist in anthropologist. What stands: especially since the teaching side of the field research means raising potential colleagues, the decision was that we should stay with what we know best: collecting folklore. What we know best: collecting narratives; more specifically: narratives of oral tradition; memories, in one word.

Parti-pris Dilemmas of choosing/assuming intellectual affiliation – always hard to pinpoint. The meanings of folklore assume different attributions inside different epistemic traditions. Unfortunately, what has become homonymy lately is taken abusively for identity. Folklore (En), folklore/folclore (It), folklor (up to WWII-Ro) designates the object of the research, not the technique of researching (such as anthropology, e.g.); the technique about folklore is folklore studies, Ro: studii de/în folclor, studii folkloristice.

Who is folklorist? Perhaps the one that studies folklore? Is folklore the correct unitary concept, regardless of the society we apply it to? Does it designate just any kind of popular tradition, be it more or less orally transmitted? (suggestions always welcome) My only mark, so far: Mircea Eliades technical term ofculturi folklorice(folkloric cultures). His meaning is precise and rather narrow: it assembles societies who share sameness in the following traits: rurality, oral traditions, temporal layer of existence, potential and often proven continuum inter se. For example, we may speak of folkloric cultures for the Classic Antiquity, we may speak of the European/south- eastern European/Romanian folkloric culture(s) etc.

Who is folclorist? If other scientific traditions could maintain their meaning for folklore, good for them. Ours, the Romanian, was not that lucky. After WWII, the soviet format for our intellectual performance was THE way, with no real options to make. Hence the exclusive philological trend in interpreting folkloric facts: popular literature, new folklore – i.e. highly praising the golden socialist achievements and their acculturating impact on very much conservative peasant minds – made for decades the core of folkloric studies. Folklore as literature was the refuge, and the cover for any other insight. It is the same ideological background that brings folclor in the linguistic usage of peasants:

Indeed? Peasants themselves received the foreign word via ideologically-manipulated festivalry: Cântarea României, in between scar and dear memory for most of us. (so that nowadays, when we introduce ourselves as coming from the Institute of Folklore, what we get is the splendid metathesis: Aha!... Institutul de Floclor... Acolo faceti servici, săracii! Asta-i cu Marioara Murărescu, nu?...) Surprisingly, we, the folklorists/folcloriştii, have become post-socialist avant-la-lettre, following an inner epistemological need for width. Surprisingly, the ones to get stuck in analysing new folklore and easy festivalry and to deny existence to oral transmission under socialism are anthropologists.

Professional maladies Our (folkloric) sinful assumption: that we have reachable temporal kindred: the quest for origins, that is, for distinctive ancestors. Their (anthropological) sinful assumption: that we have reachable spatial kindred: the quest for uniformity, that is, for common ancestorship. Unilaterality condamns both endeavours to be stranded: we cannot afford to ignore, as it suits us on the moment, that both time and space are continuum, and yet series of fractures, at the same time. Small folkloric personal satisfaction: much healthier anthropology looks at human dramas – like the destruction in Roşia Montană – as we look at myths: with no emotional involvement, with placid contemplation. This is healthily coded as objectivism.

Maceration from top to bottom: the mountain in Roşia The mountain (four of them, actually) in Roşia Montană means: - the pseudo-urban, once multi-ethnic, community; - the surrounding village communities, economically dependant on the old mining; - the old galleries and surrounding old settlements, archaeologically available (beginning with pre-Roman kilometers of galleries; continuing with one of the most important urban settlements of the Roman province, with its unique, in the Roman world, net of galleries, unique ensemble of temples, unique necropolis; and with late mines, from Austrians on); - the mountain itself: a sanatorium scenery, for varied ailments, such as depression, greed, & many more, - gold and adjacent precious ores.

The Threat The Canadian company Gabriel Resources, owned by a former Romanian, bought from the Romanian state the right to exploit gold in Roşia and in the surrounding mountains with cyanides. They began to buy land and houses and churches and cemeteries with higher prices than normal; they offered resettlement in two variants: a new Roşia on a neighbouring hill, or money to leave indistinctively; even so, after having bought everything that was for sale, about one third of the population refuses to leave and continues the stand. Time for civil solidarity; some were bought, some were not. See attitudes: Mass Media/Romanian Academy/Fânfest. Pressure grows: all means are used to chase Roşia from history. Aggressive terms for the combat (saliently mediatic).

The Stand Locals that found they had what to stand for; the association Alburnus Maior; imported enthusiasm welcome, intelligently used. Academics that found they have what to defend: archaeological, historical patrimony; natural and human ecology; the longer-term economic Romanian interest. From our niche: the school-field research tried at first anthropological objectivism- and it seemed to work, with discourse analysis of the parties involved; it seemed to work with reading Roşia as community, to be dismantled and recomposed elsewhere, with logical consequences impending on local specificities. But we were blocked in front of the sight of what was termed as costs and benefits of resettlement: folkloric blindness, afflicting any possible benefit foresight.

Home to Folklore Impossible to continue an empty investigation; therefore we were happy to return to our living narratives: orally transmitted, circulated in every single canonical folkloric variant; transgressing geographical area boundaries and speaking of living local narrative traditions. To portraits of powerful local story-tellers, linking instinctively folkloric items more coherently than the most skilled interview technique. And so gold became for us the tale of gold, the tale of buried treasures in ancient times, of curses upon the unworthy digger, of privileged encounters with local daemons and fairies and tricksters, all available to the insider alone. We could touch the tale. Gold and silver are here today, are here for so long, but for how long yet? They gradually cease being the core of things.

... better than silver and gold... The Tales of Roşia Montană are the only form of salvage we may attempt. Collect them, as accurately as we can, store them on a proper archive shelf, and access them once in a while for what they are: our only memory about a lost world.... And keep your fingers crossed for the last standing campaign, to last alive as long as possible. It is called M I N D B O M B.