Department of Folklore Explores Ritual and Gender
20.10.2011
In 2008 Roinn an Bhéaloidis: the Department of Folklore and Ethnology hosted the conference of The Societé Internationale d’Ethnologie et de Folklore (SEIF).
20.10.2011
In 2008 Roinn an Bhéaloidis: the Department of Folklore and Ethnology hosted the conference of The Societé Internationale d’Ethnologie et de Folklore (SEIF).
Under the
headship of Dr Stiofán Ó Cadhla this was organised jointly by Jennifer Butler,
a doctoral student, with Ritual Year Working Group. The conference was entitled
“The Ritual Year and Gender” and featured keynote lectures from Emily Lyle,
Professor Peggy Reeves Sanday as well as Associate Professor Gearóid Ó
Crualaoich. Jenny Butler subsequently edited the proceedings in the key journal
Cosmos: The Journal of the Traditional
Cosmology Society. This is a biannual journal concerned with myth, religion
and cosmology across cultural and disciplinary boundaries and with worldviews
in the past and present; it appears in June and December. The artilces were
selected from the papers presented at the conference held in Cork between 22nd and 26th of June
2008 with the assistance of the department and the Arts Faculty Conference Fund
and the Fáilte Ireland Conference Ambassador Support Programme. It brought
together folklorists and ethnologists as well as scholars from other
disciplines to present papers and discuss
future directions for the study of calendar customs and related topics. There
were 45 papers presented in total, with delegates from Ireland, Estonia,
Norway, Sweden, Iceland, Greece, France, Lithuania, Hungary, Austria, Czech
Republic, the United States of America, the United Kingdom and Russia. The
intention of the conference was to examine
aspects of the ritual year that relate to gender in either a social or
symbolic sense and thus resulted in both empirical and theoretical
contributions to the scholarly understanding of the interplay between calendar
events and gender. This edition of the well-respected scholarly Cosmos collects together the varied and
novel perspectives of leading scholars in the discipline and represents a
significant contribution to our knowledge of people and their culture.
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