The Department of Estonian and Comparative Folklore holds a lecture named for its first professor, Walter Anderson, each autumn. This year this lecture will be held by Hans-Jörg Uther.
The lecture will take place on November 20, at 4.15 P.M, Ülikooli 18-228.
Abstract:
Hans- Jörg Uther will present the Worldviews about Disabled Persons in Folktales. The depiction of disabled people clearly shows the dual value of folktales. On the one hand, blind people are portrayed as role models in folktales, but on the other hand, they are exposed to biting ridicule like other social groups. How the person telling the story evaluates the role of disabled people and what religious and ideological ideas are associated with it is shown using examples from European folk traditions.
Here is a little about him:
The sixth Anderson Lecture will be given by the distinguished Göttingen-based folklorist and literary scholar, Hans-Jörg Uther. He is best known for his work on the internationally-used Aarne-Thompson-Uther index of folktales and the authorship of the Handbuch zu den „Kinder- und Hausmärchen“ der Brüder Grimm. Entstehung – Wirkung – Interpretation. He has also edited the series Die Märchen der Weltliteratur and the journal Fabula, and has been a major contributor to the Enzyklopädie des Märchens. His lecture in Tartu links folk narrative studies with disability studies.
Walter Anderson (1885-1962) was the founding professor of the Department. In 2019, its centenary year, the Department resolved to honour the memory of this distinguished scholar of folk narrative by instituting an Annual Lecture to be held each autumn. The lecture is followed by a reception.
You can find more information about Walter Anderson in Wikipedia.
The Department of Estonian and Comparative Folklore holds a lecture named for its first professor, Walter Anderson, each autumn. This year this lecture will be held by Hans- Jörg Uther.
The lecture will take place on November 20, at 4.15 P.M, Ülikooli 18-228.
Abstract:
Hans- Jörg Uther will present the Worldviews about Disabled Persons in Folktales. The depiction of disabled people clearly shows the dual value of folktales. On the one hand, blind people are portrayed as role models in folktales, but on the other hand, they are exposed to biting ridicule like other social groups. How the person telling the story evaluates the role of disabled people and what religious and ideological ideas are associated with it is shown using examples from European folk traditions.
Here is a little about him:
The sixth Anderson Lecture will be given by the distinguished Göttingen-based folklorist and literary scholar, Hans-Jörg Uther. He is best known for his work on the internationally-used Aarne-Thompson-Uther index of folktales and the authorship of the Handbuch zu den „Kinder- und Hausmärchen“ der Brüder Grimm. Entstehung – Wirkung – Interpretation. He has also edited the series Die Märchen der Weltliteratur and the journal Fabula, and has been a major contributor to the Enzyklopädie des Märchens. His lecture in Tartu links folk narrative studies with disability studies.
05.10.2023 by Bengt af Klintberg (Sweden): The Baby on the Track: A Newspaper Legend with Roots in the 19th Century
06.09.2019 by Timothy Tangherlini (UCLA) 'Kaiser und Data: Folkloristics in an Algorithmic Age'. See introduction and video recording.
30.10.2020 by Terry Gunnell (University of Iceland) 'Grimm Ripples: The Grimms’ Deutsche Sagen and the Collection and Creation of National Folk Narratives in Northern Europe'. See introduction and video recording.
15.12.2021 by Guntis Šmidchens (University of Washington) ‘Variants, American and Estonian Folkloristics’. See video recording: https://www.uttv.ee/naita?id=32300
22.09.2022 Anderson Lecture, If the One I know Came – The Poem, Laws of Folklore and Imagination, will be delivered by Professor Lotte Tarkka of the University of Helsinki. Ülikooli 16- 212, Tartu.