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Folklore Archive and Historical Reality (Based on the Archive Materials of the Institute of Language, Literature and History, Karelian Research Centre RAS)
Author(s) -
Valentina P. Kuznetsova,
Elena V. Markovskaya
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
studia litterarum
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.1
H-Index - 3
eISSN - 2541-8564
pISSN - 2500-4247
DOI - 10.22455/2500-4247-2020-5-4-338-357
Subject(s) - folklore , period (music) , witness , history , ideology , epic , literature , classics , art , politics , law , aesthetics , archaeology , political science
The paper discusses the content of one of the largest folklore archives in Russiabelonging to the Institute of Language, Literature and History of the Karelian ScientificCenter of the Russian Academy of Sciences. Systematic work of collecting folklore,carried out for more than 100 years, contributed to the creation of archives reflectingthe historical events of an entire era. In the 1930s a new historical period began,giving life to the new forms of epic art — the so-called “novinas,” held in the Archive.During the Great World War, prisoners of the Finnish concentration camps createdthe so-called pieces of camp folklore, reviving the genre of lamentation. In the postwar period, researches were urged to deal with “Soviet” folklore, and not with the“frozen” forms of folk art. The archival materials collected among the representativesof deported people — Ingrian Finns — bear witness of the historical time. In the secondhalf of the 20th century ideological pressure in the folkloristic studies continued, assuperstitions and prejudices were sought to be eradicated, and the collection of folklorereflecting folk religious beliefs was not welcomed.

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