Traditional Storytelling Today

Traditional Storytelling Today
Author: Margaret Read MacDonald
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 1042
Release: 2013-12-16
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 1135917213

Traditional Storytelling Today explores the diversity of contemporary storytelling traditions and provides a forum for in-depth discussion of interesting facets of comtemporary storytelling. Never before has such a wealth of information about storytelling traditions been gathered together. Storytelling is alive and well throughout the world as the approximately 100 articles by more than 90 authors make clear. Most of the essays average 2,000 words and discuss a typical storytelling event, give a brief sample text, and provide theory from the folklorist. A comprehensive index is provided. Bibliographies afford the reader easy access to additional resources.

Invoking the Akelarre

Invoking the Akelarre
Author: Emma Wilby
Publisher: Liverpool University Press
Total Pages: 667
Release: 2019-08-02
Genre: History
ISBN: 1782846220

With their dramatic descriptions of black masses and cannibalistic feasts, the records generated by the Basque witch-craze of 160914 provide us with arguably the most demonologically-stereotypical accounts of the witches sabbath or akelarre to have emerged from early modern Europe. While the trials have attracted scholarly attention, the most substantial monograph on the subject was written nearly forty years ago and most works have focused on the ways in which interrogators shaped the pattern of prosecutions and the testimonies of defendants. Invoking the Akelarre diverts from this norm by employing more recent historiographical paradigms to analyze the contributions of the accused. Through interdisciplinary analyses of both French- and Spanish-Basque records, it argues that suspects were not passive recipients of elite demonological stereotypes but animated these received templates with their own belief and experience, from the dark exoticism of magical conjuration, liturgical cursing and theatrical misrule to the sharp pragmatism of domestic medical practice and everyday religious observance. In highlighting the range of raw materials available to the suspects, the book helps us to understand how the fiction of the witches sabbath emerged to such prominence in contemporary mentalities, whilst also restoring some agency to the defendants and nuancing the historical thesis that stereotypical content points to interrogatorial opinion and folkloric content to the voices of the accused. In its local context, this study provides an intimate portrait of peasant communities as they flourished in the Basque region in this period and leaves us with the irony that Europes most sensationally-demonological accounts of the witches sabbath may have evolved out of a particularly ardent commitment, on the part of ordinary Basques, to the social and devotional structures of popular Catholicism.

Bridgnorth From Old Photographs

Bridgnorth From Old Photographs
Author: Clive Gwilt
Publisher: Amberley Publishing Limited
Total Pages: 231
Release: 2012-10-15
Genre: Photography
ISBN: 1445629798

This fascinating selection of photographs traces some of the many ways in which Bridgnorth has changed and developed over the last century.

Theatre in Dublin, 1745-1820

Theatre in Dublin, 1745-1820
Author: John C. Greene
Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield
Total Pages: 802
Release: 2011
Genre: Art
ISBN: 1611461103

This is the first comprehensive, daily compendium of more than 18,000 performances that took place in Dublin's theatres, music halls, pleasure gardens, and circus amphitheatres between Thomas Sheridan's becoming the manager at Smock Alley Theatre in 1745 and the dissolution of the Crow Street Theatre in 1820.