Scandinavian Folk Belief and Legend

Forsideomslag
U of Minnesota Press, 1988 - 429 sider
 

Indhold

III
43
VI
44
X
45
XII
46
XVI
47
XVIII
48
XX
49
XXII
50
CCLXIII
218
CCLXIV
219
CCLXV
220
CCLXVII
221
CCLXVIII
222
CCLXIX
223
CCLXX
224
CCLXXII
225

XXIV
51
XXVI
52
XXX
53
XXXII
54
XXXIII
55
XXXV
56
XXXVI
57
XXXVIII
58
XL
59
XLII
60
XLV
61
XLVII
62
XLVIII
63
L
64
LII
65
LIV
66
LVI
67
LVIII
68
LX
69
LXIII
70
LXV
71
LXVIII
72
LXIX
73
LXXI
74
LXXII
75
LXXIV
76
LXXVI
77
LXXVII
78
LXXIX
79
LXXXI
80
LXXXV
81
LXXXVI
87
LXXXIX
88
XC
89
XCII
90
XCIII
91
XCV
92
XCVI
93
XCVII
94
XCIX
95
CI
96
CIII
97
CIV
98
CV
99
CVII
100
CIX
101
CXI
102
CXIII
103
CXIV
104
CXVII
105
CXVIII
106
CXX
107
CXXII
108
CXXIV
109
CXXVI
110
CXXVII
111
CXXX
112
CXXXII
113
CXXXIV
114
CXXXV
115
CXXXVII
116
CXXXVIII
117
CXXXIX
118
CXLII
119
CXLIII
120
CXLVI
121
CXLVIII
122
CLII
123
CLIII
124
CLV
125
CLVI
131
CLVIII
132
CLIX
133
CLX
134
CLXI
135
CLXIII
136
CLXV
137
CLXVI
138
CLXVIII
139
CLXIX
140
CLXXI
141
CLXXIII
142
CLXXV
143
CLXXVI
144
CLXXIX
145
CLXXXI
146
CLXXXIII
147
CLXXXV
148
CLXXXVII
149
CLXXXIX
150
CXCI
151
CXCIII
152
CXCV
153
CXCVII
154
CXCVIII
161
CC
162
CCI
163
CCIII
164
CCV
165
CCVI
168
CCVIII
169
CCIX
170
CCXI
171
CCXIV
172
CCXV
173
CCXVII
174
CCXVIII
175
CCXX
176
CCXXII
177
CCXXIII
178
CCXXIV
179
CCXXV
180
CCXXVII
181
CCXXVIII
183
CCXXX
184
CCXXXI
185
CCXXXII
187
CCXXXIV
188
CCXXXV
189
CCXXXVI
190
CCXXXVII
191
CCXXXVIII
193
CCXXXIX
195
CCXL
196
CCXLI
198
CCXLII
199
CCXLIII
205
CCXLV
206
CCXLVII
207
CCXLVIII
208
CCL
209
CCLII
211
CCLIII
212
CCLV
213
CCLVI
214
CCLVIII
215
CCLX
216
CCLXI
217
CCLXXIII
226
CCLXXIV
227
CCLXXV
228
CCLXXVII
229
CCLXXVIII
230
CCLXXX
231
CCLXXXI
232
CCLXXXII
233
CCLXXXIII
234
CCLXXXV
235
CCLXXXVII
236
CCLXXXVIII
237
CCLXXXIX
238
CCXC
239
CCXCII
240
CCXCIII
241
CCXCIV
242
CCXCVI
243
CCXCVII
244
CCXCIX
245
CCC
246
CCCII
247
CCCIII
248
CCCVI
249
CCCVIII
250
CCCX
251
CCCXII
252
CCCXIV
253
CCCXV
254
CCCXVIII
255
CCCXIX
256
CCCXX
257
CCCXXII
258
CCCXXIV
259
CCCXXVI
260
CCCXXVIII
261
CCCXXX
262
CCCXXXII
263
CCCXXXIII
264
CCCXXXIV
266
CCCXXXV
267
CCCXXXVI
268
CCCXXXVIII
269
CCCXL
270
CCCXLI
271
CCCXLII
272
CCCXLIV
273
CCCXLVI
274
CCCXLVIII
281
CCCXLIX
282
CCCLI
283
CCCLII
284
CCCLIII
285
CCCLIV
286
CCCLVI
288
CCCLVIII
290
CCCLIX
292
CCCLX
293
CCCLXI
294
CCCLXIII
295
CCCLXV
301
CCCLXVI
302
CCCLXVIII
303
CCCLXX
304
CCCLXXII
305
CCCLXXIII
306
CCCLXXV
307
CCCLXXVI
308
CCCLXXVII
310
CCCLXXIX
311
CCCLXXXI
312
CCCLXXXIII
313
CCCLXXXIV
319
CCCLXXXVI
320
CCCLXXXVII
321
CCCLXXXIX
322
CCCXCI
323
CCCXCII
324
CCCXCIV
325
CCCXCV
331
CCCXCVII
332
CCCXCIX
333
CD
334
CDII
335
CDIV
336
CDV
337
CDVII
338
CDIX
339
CDXI
340
CDXIII
341
CDXIV
342
CDXVI
344
CDXVIII
345
CDXX
346
CDXXII
347
CDXXIII
348
CDXXV
349
CDXXVII
350
CDXXIX
351
CDXXXII
352
CDXXXIV
353
CDXXXVI
354
CDXXXVII
355
CDXL
356
CDXLII
357
CDXLIV
358
CDXLV
359
CDXLVII
360
CDXLIX
361
CDLI
362
CDLIII
363
CDLV
364
CDLVII
365
CDLVIII
366
CDLX
367
CDLXII
368
CDLXIII
369
CDLXV
370
CDLXVIII
372
CDLXX
373
CDLXXII
374
CDLXXIII
379
CDLXXV
380
CDLXXVII
381
CDLXXIX
382
CDLXXXI
383
CDLXXXIII
384
CDLXXXIV
385
CDLXXXV
386
CDLXXXVII
387
CDLXXXIX
388
CDXCI
389
CDXCIV
390
CDXCV
391
CDXCVII
395
CDXCVIII
419
Copyright

Andre udgaver - Se alle

Almindelige termer og sætninger

Populære passager

Side 18 - Fairy-tale (marchen) is with good reason distinguished from the Legend, though by turns they play into one another. Looser, less fettered than legend, the Fairy-tale lacks that local habitation, which hampers legend, but makes it the more homelike.
Side 18 - ... point out: Legends and folk beliefs were shared by everyone and were told and talked about under many different circumstances as an integral part of everyday life. This meant that stories were usually referred to or told only in an abbreviated form — everybody knew what they were all about. ... It is often said that the legend has a firm, stereotyped form, but in fact the complete form is transmitted only in certain situations, for example, when the legend is told to someone who is not familiar...
Side 54 - Old Hag': The Nightmare Tradition Reexamined.
Side 52 - ... Lapland illustrates the same response, although in this instance what is coveted by the visitor is not food or shelter, but a newborn calf (Campbell 1933:140): Old Stina was a dangerous woman. She came to my grandmother's cow barn to help her with one of the cows that was having a calf. Stina really wanted that calf; but she did not get it. A few weeks later the calf died, and the cow died soon after. My grandmother was sure that Stina had killed them both with her envy. Both of these memorats...
Side 14 - ... four, or more. Since the narratives are retold by internal folk narrators, fragments also appear occasionally, much as in real storytelling situations, in which members of an audience may already be familiar with a story and only require hearing certain parts. As Kvideland and Sehmsdorf point out: Legends and folk beliefs were shared by everyone and were told and talked about under many different circumstances as an integral part of everyday life. This meant that stories were usually referred...
Side 52 - ... she fixed things for us! The very same day we lost a goat. It fell over in the field and was dead instantly. A memorat collected in Swedish Lapland illustrates the same response, although in this instance what is coveted by the visitor is not food or shelter, but a newborn calf (Campbell 1933:140): Old Stina was a dangerous woman. She came to my grandmother's cow barn to help her with one of the cows that was having a calf. Stina really wanted that calf; but she did not get it. A few weeks later...
Side 23 - One of the consequences of the ciftlik regime, slowly established in one area after another between the end of the sixteenth and the beginning of the nineteenth century...

Bibliografiske oplysninger