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022_000056/0000

Competing Eyes. Visual Encounters with Alterity in Central and Eastern Europe

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Antropológia, néprajz / Anthropology, ethnology (12857), Kultúrakutatás, kulturális sokféleség / Cultural studies, cultural diversity (12950), Társadalomszerkezet, egyenlőtlenségek, társadalmi mobilitás, etnikumközi kapcsolatok / Social structure, inequalities, social mobility, interethnic relations (12525), Vizuális művészetek, előadóművészetek, dizájn / Visual arts, performing arts, design (13046)
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518 Katarina Srimpf certain targets such as “stupid” or “canny” persons, blondes, lawyers, and sex. In Davies’s opinion, stupidity jokes were “always told about those on the edge of a country or a linguistic area, with the tellers being at the center” (Davies 2011: 254). This description applies also to Lemberg, which is geographically located at the edge of the Slovenian territory, not far from the border with Croatia and at the edge of Slovenian-speaking territory. Lemberg is situated also at the “economic edge, well away from the important and dynamic economic and administrative centers” (Davies 2011: 256). Ethnic jokes and humorous stories about stupidity mock groups who are “peripheral to the central or dominant group or who are seen by them as ambiguous” (Davies 1982: 384). It seems that the jokes about stupidity are a part of identity building. Identities are established through relations me/we-others. Observing others and their “otherness” and “our” position with respect to “theirs” gives rise to an understanding of one’s own identity. This results in the fact that we interpret ourselves in relation to an Other (Gingrich 2004). In the case of joke-telling, “us” is the society from which derives the teller, and the Other is the group that is mocked. Others are always marked as different, their moral boundaries differ from those held by the insidergroup, characterized as “us.” The group from which joke narration derives ascribes to the mocking group “traits, which the group telling the jokes does not wish to recognize among its own members” (Davies 1982: 384). There is no doubt that the Lembergs are perceived as different in the eyes of their neighbors. This fact is corroborated by the humorous tales mentioned here, which are being told to this day, if for no other purpose but to annoy the inhabitants of the market town, who are reluctant to listen to them let alone tell them. Their difference and refusal to accept set norms is expressed through every humorous tale connected with the Lemberg settlement. We only have to look at the tale relating a story about the mayor of Lemberg, who is elected by a louse choosing his beard to live in (ATU? 1268), to understand that nothing in Lemberg functions along set norms. Stories of the Lembergs The most notorious and widely known tale of the Lembergs’ adventures relates a story of a bull being dragged inside a bell tower (ATU 1210). "It so happened that one day the Lembergs noticed grass growing in the gutter under the roof of the bell tower. They were very displeased. But how could they reach the grass and put it away? Cutting it down would be impossible, just leaving 3 The folktale tale index was first developed by Finnish folklorist Antti Aarne in 1910. His work was then upgraded by American folklorist Stith Thompson. In 2004, Hans-Jérg Uther, published the work entitled The Types of International Folktales: A Classification and Bibliography that is now called Aarne-Thompson-Uther index, short ATU (Uther, 2004). This tale-type index organizes folktales into categories like animal tales, fairy tales, religious tales, and also humorous tales. Each folktale type is then further subdivided by motif patterns until individual types, under different numbers, are listed.

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