The 6th Folklore Fellows Summer School at Lammi
by Anna-Leena Siikala, Academy Professor, Chair
of the FFSS 2002
(FFN 23, April 2002: 7-12)
The sixth FFSS course will be held at the biological
research station of Helsinki University at Lammi on 1524 July
2002. The title, Memory, Recollection and Creativity,
focuses on the memory processes and creative activity of folklore
and verbal tradition. The course will, however, also continue to discuss
the place of folklore in the modern globalising world. These themes
will be approached via five sub-themes giving structure to the course.
The role of folklore and oral tradition in dialogues
between local and global will be examined in the first section of
the course. The second section entitled The Ethics and Politics
of Heritage, will continue the discussions on ethics begun at
the FFSS in Turku in 1999 and on the heritage politics introduced
by the Scandinavian research network concentrating on the relationship
between heritage building and cultural diversity. Aspects of creativity
in epic singing and mythical epics are among the classical topics
of folkloristics and will be addressed in the third section. Defining
We in the contemporary world is a question that ties in
closely with the first two themes but has relevance in discussions
of collective memory, too. The last section Memory and Narrated
History will examine narrating and the reproduction of folklore
on the level of both individuals and their emotions and of societies
and cultures.
The daily programme for the course will consist of lectures
and group discussions on themes presented by participants. This time
the course will stress discussion rather more than, perhaps, in previous
years and all participants will have a chance to raise themes of their
own for general discussion.
Although the funding policy of Finnish, Scandinavian
and European research training is now confined to a narrower geographical
area than before, the 2002 Summer School will be widely international.
The teachers and participants represent different countries and continents;
there will be participants from such countries as Argentina, China,
Denmark, England, Estonia, Finland, India, Iceland, Kenya, Lithuania,
New Zealand, Sweden and the United States. The teachers are well known
in folkloristics and cultural anthropology circles and represent different
research traditions. Details of the teachers and participants are
given with the programme in this volume.
The Lammi research station proved to be a pleasant FFSS
venue in 1997. It is near a village, surrounded by typical Finnish
landscape with fields, forests and lakes and is furnished with all
the modern equipment needed for fieldwork and small seminars. There
are both indoor and lakeside saunas, boats for those wishing to spend
their free time on the lake, and plenty of forest paths to explore.
I warmly welcome all participants and teachers to Lammi!
I am sure that we can together create an unforgettable Summer School
rich in intellectual stimulus and new contacts with colleagues.
Folklore Fellows Summer School 2002
Programme
15.7. MON
Arrival and registration at the FFSS office. Accommodation and orientation
to the Lammi Research Station and to the course programme.
Get-together. All participants on the course will be
given an opportunity to briefly introduce themselves. Registration
continues after the get-together.
16.7. TUE
Dialogues between Local and Global
Morning
Opening: Anna-Leena Siikala: Ethnic/National Tradition in the Age
of Globalisation
Diarmuid Ó Giolláin: Universalism, Particularism
and the Identity of Folkloristics
Afternoon
Lauri Harvilahti: Indigenous and Traditional Knowledge in the Context
of a Global World
17.7. WED
Dialogues between Local and Global (cont.)
Chair: Lauri Harvilahti
Morning
Barbro Klein: History, Museum Politics, and Folklore Scholarship
Presentations by participants:
Suzanne MacAulay: Diaspora by Degree
Jarno Väisänen: Global Processes, Local Arguments
Xiaohui Hu: Protection of Folklore and the Desire for Development
Afternoon
Encounter with local culture. Visit to Lammi Linen Centre.
Excursion to Lammi. A master of traditional home-brewing will demonstrate
his skills.
18.7. THU
Ethics and Politics of Heritage
Chair: Margaret Mills
Morning
Barbro Klein: A World of Nations: Folklore, Heritage Politics,
and Ethnic Diversity in Four Countries
Stein Mathisen: From Narratives of Noble Savages to Discourses
on the Ecological Saami
Afternoon
Pertti Anttonen: How Do We Own History? Heritage Politics and the
Concept of Tradition in Perspective
Presentations by participants:
Fernardo Fischman: Narrative Discourse and Museum Displays: Intertextual
Relations in the Construction of a Jewish-Argentine Memory
Juratè Semetaitè: Lithuanian Folklore Groups
Johanna Jacobsen: Malerische Reisen, and Oriental Fantasies: An
Initial Forray into the Relationship between Folklore and Travel(logues)
19.7. FRI
Ethics and Politics of Heritage (cont.)
Chair: Diarmuid Ó Giolláin
Morning
Lauri Honko: Comparing Ethical Codes in Anthropology and Folklore
Research
Margaret Mills: Constructing and Deconstructing the Discourse of
Cultural Loss
Afternoon
Presentations by participants:
Valdimar Hafstein: Theorising the Copy/Right: Cultures Proliferation
and Containment
Anastasja Buenok: Folklore and Ethnography of Finnish Ethnic Groups
in the Tihvinä Region
Victoria Vlasova: Holy Places in Komi Old-Believers
Tradition: Folklore, Symbolic Texts and the Text of the Researcher
20.7. SAT
Epics and Creativity
Chair: Anna-Leena Siikala
Morning
Lauri Honko: Aspects of Creativity in Epic Singing: Elias Lönnrot,
Anne Vabarna and Gopala Naika
Lauri Harvilahti: Creativity in South-Siberian Mythological Epics
Afternoon
Presentations by participants:
Martin Skrydstup: From Oral Epic to World Literature: A Generational
Perspective on the Orality-Literacy Transposition of the Mvet Epic
Niina Hämäläinen: Some Remarks on Textualisation:
Elias Lönnrots Kullervo Poem
Desmond Kharmawphlang: The Egg Divination Ceremony of the Khasis
Jouni Hyvönen: Idiosyncratic Variation in Narrative Strategies
21.7. SUN
Defining We in the Modern World
Chair: Barbro Klein
Morning
Diarmuid Ó Giolláin: Culture for the People and Culture
of the People
Stein Mathisen: The Politics of Collecting and Exhibiting Saami
Folklore and Culture
Afternoon
Presentations by participants:
Ezekiel Alembi: The Construction of the Abanyole World View on
Death through Okhukoma Poetry
Kaarina Koski: The Power of Death in Finnish Folk Belief Tradition
Eeva-Liisa Kinnunen: Narrating Identity through Humour
Merili Metsvahi: Legends and Saint Legends: How they Make Sense
of Living
22.7. MON
Memory and Narrated History
Chair: Annikki Kaivola-Bregenhøj
Morning
Margaret Mills: Family and Personal: Discursive Analysis of Two
Life Histories
Jukka Siikala: Marking the Past. Monuments and How They Are Talked
about
Afternoon
Presentations by participants:
Pauliina Latvala: Narratives and Cultural Meanings: the Family
History in Finland
Taisto Raudalainen: Title to be announced later
Pasi Enges: Experience, Narrative, and Interpretation. Supernatural
Experiences in River Saami Folklore
Elena Dubrovskaja: Title to be announced later
Hypermedia presentation (Jukka Saarinen) and discussion
on cultural representation
23.7. TUE
Memory and Narrated History (cont.)
Chair: Jukka Siikala
Morning
Annikki Kaivola-Bregenhøj: Memory, Narratives and Emotions
Anna-Leena Siikala: History in the Landscape
Afternoon
Presentations by participants:
Merrill Kaplan: Nornagestr and the Burden of Memory
Jonathan Roper: Investigating English Verbal Charms
Annamari Iranto: Folk Ideas on Law and Justice Research
Based on Folklore Texts
Blanka Henrikson: Collecting Memories. Swedish and Finland-Swedish
Friendship Verse and Memory Albums from Two Centuries Form,
Function and Change
24.7. WED
Morning
General Discussion of the FF Summer School 2002. Conclusion.
Chair: Anna-Leena Siikala
Afternoon
Departure
Participants
Ezekiel Alembi is Lecturer in the Literature
Department, Kenyatta University, Kenya. His research interests include
Abanyole funeral poetry, discourses on African art, childrens
oral poetry and the reconstruction of African history using oral sources.
Anastasja Buenok is Researcher in the Department
of Ethnology, the European University in St. Petersburg, Russia. Her
main interests include childrens calendar rites and folklore
of the Vepsian and Karelian people in Tihvinä.
Elena Dubrovskaja is Senior Researcher interested
in the history of Karelia, especially of Petrozavodsk from 1917 to
the 1920s.
Pasi Enges is Researcher in the Department of
Folklore at the University of Turku. He is currently writing his dissertation
on Saami narratives.
Fernando Fischman is Assistant Professor at the
University of Buenos Aires. His present research interests include
Jewish immigration to Argentina, folk art and folk artists in museums
and public culture.
Valdimar Hafstein is a graduate student/teacher
at the Reykjavik Academy. His research interests focus on contemporary
Icelandic folklore, the cultural and conceptual ramifications of human
reproduction in the age of assisted reproductive technologies, Greenlandic
legends of early encounters with Norsemen, and an Icelandic folklore
encyclopaedia for children.
Niina Hämäläinen is Research Assistant
at the Kalevala Institute, Turku, Finland. She is currently preparing
her dissertation on the textualisation of the different versions of
Elias Lönnrots Kullervo poetry.
Kirsi Hänninen is a graduate student in
the Department of Folklore at the University of Turku.
Blanka Henriksson is Researcher at Åbo
Akademi University, Turku, Finland. Her research interests are in
the field of childrens autobiographical books.
Xiaohui Hu is Associate Research Fellow in the
Department of Folk Literature, Institute of Literature, Chinese Academy
of Social Sciences in Peking. Her work explores the intercultural
dialogue of folkloristic theory and method.
Jouni Hyvönen is a researcher on the project
Ethnopoetics, Processes of Textualisation, and Cultural Dynamics
at the University of Helsinki. He is writing his dissertation on the
process of textualising the Kalevala.
Annamari Iranto is a postgraduate student in
the Department of Folklore at the University of Joensuu. She is investigating
folk ideas on law and justice.
Johanna Jacobsen is a post-graduate student in
folklore at the University of Pennsylvania. She is interested in the
portrayal of immigrants and ethnic groups in ethnographic and folkloristic
literature, and in folklores methodology in striking a balance
between academic interpretation and what used to be called emic
interpretation.
Merrill Kaplan is Researcher at the University
of California, Berkeley. Her primary interests include traditional
ideas about runic writing and runic monuments; theoretical connections
between the publishing of folklore and the introduction of dramatic
realism in 19th century Norway; Old Norse myth; Norwegian and Icelandic
legend and folk belief.
Desmond Kharmawphlang is Senior Lecturer, Centre
for Cultural & Creative Studies, NEHU, Shillong, India. His research
interests are in the weretiger tradition of the Khasis.
Eeva-Liisa Kinnunen is Researcher at the Institute
for Cultural Research in the Department of Folklore at the University
of Helsinki, Finland. She is writing her dissertation on gender and
humour.
Kaarina Koski is a doctoral student at the Institute
for Cultural Research in the Department of Folklore Studies at the
University of Helsinki. Her main interests are folk belief and narratives,
death, magic, worldviews, and the adoption, representation and various
uses of traditional concepts.
Pauliina Latvala is Researcher at the Institute
for Cultural Research in the Department of Folklore at the University
of Helsinki, Finland. She is participating in the project Myth,
history, society: Ethnic/national traditions in the age of globalisation
led by Academy Professor Anna-Leena Siikala. Her doctoral dissertation
is focusing on written life histories/family histories and their linguistic
strategies.
Suzanne MacAulay is Visiting Fellow at the Stout
Research Centre for New Zealand Studies, Victoria University of Wellington.
She is also a Director of Quay School of Art, and a Professor of art
history. Her current research interests focus on national identity
and the urban revitalisation of the Cook Islands traditions of Tivaevae
making: themes of memory, immigration, diaspora, and cultural politics
among exiles living in New Zealand.
Merili Metsvahi is a Ph.D. student at the University
of Tartu. Her doctoral research concerns the Estonian werewolf tradition.
Taisto Raudalainen is an Estonian researcher
and a post-graduate student at the University of Helsinki, Institute
for Cultural Research, Department of Folklore Studies. He is currently
writing his dissertation on Ingrian life stories.
Jonathan Roper is Researcher at the National
Centre for English Cultural Tradition at the University of Sheffield.
He is at present concerned with Anglophone verbal charms in England
and Newfoundland.
Juratè Semetaitè is a researcher
at the Lithuanian Folk Culture Centre. Her research subjects include
Lithuanian childrens songs and present-day folklore groups.
Martin Skydstrup is a Ph.D. student in anthropology
at Columbia University, New York. He has done fieldwork in Gabon,
Equatorial Guinea and Cameroon. His research investigates the historical
trajectories of the Fang oral epic Mvet, the politics and ethics of
material culture.
Victoria Vlasova is Researcher at the Institute
of Language, Literature and History of the Komi Scientific Centre
of the Ural Division of the Russian Academy of Sciences. Her main
areas of interest are folk belief and mythology.
Jarno Väisänen is a post-graduate student
in the Department of Finnish and Cultural Studies, Folklore Studies,
University of Joensuu. His research concerns the problems of globalisation
in the local culture.
Teachers
Pertti J. Anttonen, Ph.D., Docent, Academy Research
Fellow, earned his Ph.D. degree in folklore and folklife at the University
of Pennsylvania in the USA in 1993. His current research concerns
the concepts of modernity and tradition, as well as the relationship
between the conceptualisation of folklore and the construction of
modernity, history and heritage in the nation-state of Finland. Other
research interests include the study of rituals, ethnopoetics, rhetorical
analysis, and research methodology and history. He is currently an
Academy Research Fellow at the Academy of Finland. He has edited three
anthologies within international folkloristic research: Folklore,
Heritage Politics, and Ethnic Diversity (2000)Making Europe in Nordic
Contexts (1996); and Nordic Frontiers (1993).
Diarmuid Ó Giolláin is Senior Lecturer
at the University College, Cork. His main interests include history
of folkloristics and ethnology, populism and nationalism, national
identity, popular religion, and oral and popular history. His publications
include: Locating Irish Folklore. Tradition, Modernity, Identity
(2000); Folklore and ethnology in Cornelius G. Buttimer
et al. (eds), The Heritage of Ireland: Natural, Man-made and Cultural
Heritage: Conservation and Interpretation; Business and Administration
(2000); The Pattern in J. S. Donnelly and Kerby A. Miller
(eds), Irish Popular Religion 16501850 (1998); Heroic
Biographies in Folklore and Popular Culture in Gabriel Doherty
and Dermot Keogh (eds), Michael Collins and the Making of the Irish
State (1998); The Stagnant Pool and the Stream. New and
old symbols of Irish identity in Ethel Crowley and Jim MacLaughlin
(eds), Under the Belly of the Tiger. Class, Race, Identity and
Culture in the Global Ireland (1997); The Boundaries of
the People in Laurier Turgeonet et al. (eds), Transferts
culturels et métissages Amérique/Europe XVIeXxe
siécle / Cultural Transfer, America and Europe: 500 Years of
Interculturation (1996).
Lauri Harvilahti is Director of the Institute
for Cultural Research, and Professor in the Department of Folklore
Studies at the University of Helsinki. He is also leading a project
financed by the Academy of Finland: Ethnopoetics, Processes
of Textualisation, and Cultural Dynamics. Professor Harvilahti
has carried out fieldwork over the past twenty years 19822002
in the Altai mountains, Mongolia, China, India, Bangladesh, Kenya
and Ingria. His theoretical interest lies with the ethnopoetics processes
of various peoples, computer folkloristics and questions of globalization
and ethnic identity. His publications include scientific monographs,
articles and conference papers. Among the latest in English: Substrates
and Strategies: Trends in Ethnocultural Research in Annikki
Kaivola-Bregenhøj and Ulrika Wolf-Knuts (eds), Pathways.
Approaches to the Study and Teaching of Folklore (2001); Altai
Oral Epic in Oral Tradition 15 (2), (2000); Variation
and Memory in Lauri Honko (ed.), Thick Corpus, Organic Variation
and Textuality in Oral Tradition (2000).
Professor emeritus, Director Lauri Honko founded
the Kalevala Institute for comparative research on epics at the University
of Turku, Finland in 1998. He was Professor of Folkloristics and Comparative
Religion at the University of Turku 196396, Director of the
Nordic Institute of Folklore, Turku (197290) and Academy Professor
at the Academy of Finland (197578, 199196). He has done
fieldwork on Tulu oral epics (Karnataka, India 1985, 19892002),
on Karelian laments in Tver Karelia (Russia, 1958, 197678) and
on Saami folk beliefs (Finland, Norway, 196775, 198690).
He has authored or edited the following books: (ed.) Thick Corpus,
Organic Variation and Textuality in Oral Tradition (2000); (ed.)
Textualisation of Oral Epics (2000); (ed. with others) The
Epic: Oral and Written (1998); Textualising the Siri Epic
(1998); (with others) The Siri Epic as performed by Gopala Naika
III (1998); (ed.) Epics along the Silk Roads (1996);
(with others) The Great Bear (1993); (ed.) The Kalevala
and the Worlds Epics (1990); (ed. with P. Laaksonen) Trends
in Nordic Tradition Research (1983); (ed. with V. Voigt) Genre,
Structure and Reproduction in Oral Literature (1980); Geisterglaube
in Ingermanland (1962); Krankheitsprojektile (1959).
Annikki Kaivola-Bregenhøj is Professor
of Folkloristics in the Department of Cultural Studies, Turku, Finland.
In addition to oral narratives her studies have covered enigmatology,
popular dream interpreting and old wedding customs. She has done fieldwork
in Finland, among Finns living in Sweden and the old Finnish population
around St. Petersburg in Russia. Her publications in English include
Riddles. Perspectives on the use, function and change in
a folklore genre (2001); Narrative and narrating: variation
in Juho Oksanens storytelling (1996); Models of expression
in the Finnish riddle genre: syntactic, stylistic, semantic and structural
investigations (1978).
Barbro Klein is Professor of Ethnology at Stockholm
University and one of three directors of the Swedish Collegium for
Advanced Study in the Social Sciences (SCASSS) in Uppsala. She has
written extensively on narratives, ritual, material culture, and ethnic
diversity in the United States and northern Europe and has also worked
on methodological issues in ethnology and folkloristics. Her publications
in English include Folklore in Paul Baltes and Neil Smeser
(eds), The International Encyclopedia of the Social and Behavioral
Sciences (2001); More Swedish than in Sweden, More Iranian
than in Iran? Folk Culture and World Migrations in Bosse Sundin
(ed.), Upholders of Culture Past and Present (2001); Anna
Birgitta Rooth and Folkloristics in Sweden in Folklore Fellows
Network No. 22 (2001); A World of Nations: Notes on Internationalism,
Ethnic Diversity and Folklore Scholarship in Four Countries
in Ethnologies 23 (2), (2000); The Moral Content of Tradition:
Homecraft, Ethnology, and Swedish Life in the Twentieth Century
in Western Folklore 59 (2000); author of several chapters in
Swedish Folk Art, ed. with Mats Widbom (1994); (ed. and intro.
with Regina Bendix) Foreigners in Europe: Expressive Culture in Transnational
Encounters. Special issue, Journal of Folklore Research 30
(1993); (ed. with Åke Daun and Billy Ehn) To Make the World
Safe for Diversity. Towards an Understanding of Multi-Cultural Societies
(1992); Legends and Folk Beliefs in a Swedish-American Community:
A Study in Folklore and Acculturation (1980).
Stein R. Mathisen is Associate Professor in Culture
Studies, Finnmark College. He is currently working on a book on the
shifting presentations of Saami ethnicity through different times.
His major research interests include folk medicine and folk belief,
the role of folk narratives in the constitution of identity and ethnicity,
questions of heritage politics and ethnopolitics. He has recently
published the following articles in English: Travels and Narratives:
Itinerant Constructions of a Homogeneous Sami Heritage in Pertti
Anttonen et al. (eds), Folklore, Heritage Politics and Ethnic Diversity.
A Festschrift for Barbro Klein (2000); Changing Narratives
about Sami Folklore A Review of Research on Sami Folklore in
the Norwegian Area in Juha Pentikäinen et al. (eds), Sami
Folkloristics (2000).
Margaret Mills is Professor and Chair of the
Department of Near Eastern Languages and Cultures at Ohio State University,
Columbus, Ohio, USA. Her textual work has concerned oral narrative
performances of various kinds recorded in pre-war and wartime Afghanistan,
in Persian language (Dari). Her major themes have included politics
and performance, the inter-relations of literary and oral traditions,
and gender studies. She has also done fieldwork on material culture
topics (food, handicrafts), literacy and education development in
Pakistan. She has proposed a project to support the enhancement of
Afghan womens leadership roles and capacities in the reconstruction
of Afghan society. Publications include: (co-ed. with Peter Claus
and Sarah Diamond) South Asian Folklore: An Encyclopedia (in preparation);
Tale, Voice and Life (working title; in preparation); Repertoire and
life-history study of an Afghan woman storyteller before, during and
after the Afghan-Soviet war (in press); The Gender of the Trick
in Asian Folklore Studies 60 (Spring 2002); One Size
Doesnt Fit All: Short and Medium-Term Prospects for Women in
Afghanistan in SSRC Website publication: www.ssrc.org (2001);
Seven Steps Ahead of the Devil: A Misogynist Proverb in Context
in Maria Vasenkari et al. (eds), Telling, Remembering, Interpreting,
Guessing: A Festschrift for Prof. Annikki Kaivola-Bregenhøj
on her 60th Birthday (2001); Womens Tricks: Subordination
and Subversion in Afghan Folktales in Lauri Honko (ed.), Thick
Corpus, Organic Variation and Textuality in Oral Tradition (2000);
Rhetorics and Politics in Afghan Traditional Storytelling (1991);
(co-ed. with A. Appadurai and F. Korom) Gender, Genre and Power
in South Asian Expressive Traditions (1991).
Academy Professor Anna-Leena Siikala from the
University of Helsinki, Finland is the Chair of the FFSS Organising
Committee. Her research interests are poetry in the Kalevala meter,
folk beliefs, mythology, shamanism, oral discourse and tradition processes.
She has led several international research projects, and conducted
fieldwork among Finno-Ugric peoples in Europe and in Siberia, as well
as in Polynesia. She is editor-in-chief of The Encyclopedia of the
Uralic Mythologies and Studia Fennica. Her publications in English
include: Mythic Images and Shamanism. A perspective on Kalevala Poetry
(forthcoming); (ed.) Myth and Mentality: Studies in Folklore and Popular
Thought (in print); (ed. with Sinikka Vakimo) Songs Beyond the
Kalevala: Transformations of Oral Poetry (1994); (with M. Hoppál)
Studies on Shamanism (1992); Interpreting Oral Narrative
(1990); The Rite Technique of the Siberian Shaman (1978 [1989]).
Jukka Siikala is Professor of Social Anthropology
at the University of Helsinki. He has done extensive research on Pacific
cultures and his research interests range from history of colonialism
to modern diasporic cultures. He has analysed Polynesian oral traditions
and used mythology, historical narratives and rituals to study collective
memory, social collectives and religious movements in Polynesia. His
publications include: (ed.) Departures. How societies distribute
their people (2001); Chief and impossible states in
Communal/Plural: Journal of transnational & crosscultural studies
9 (1) (2001); This is my beautiful line of chiefs: Social life
and how it is talked about in Suomen Antropologi 25 (1)
(2000); Writings between cultures in Postcolonialism
and cultural resistance (1999); The Elder and the Younger
Foreign and Autochtonous. Origin and Hierarchy in the Cook
Islands in J. J. Fox and C. Sather (eds), Origin, Ancestry
and Alliance (1995); Akatokamanava. Myth, History and Society
in the Southern Cook Islands (1991); (ed.) Culture and History
in the Pacific (1990); Cult and Conflict in Tropical Polynesia.
A Study of Traditional Religion, Christianity and Nativistic Movements
(1982); (ed.) Oceanic Studies. Essays in Honour of Aarne A. Koskinen
(1982).
Organising Committee of the FFSS
Anna-Leena Siikala, University of Helsinki (Chair)
Lauri Honko, University of Turku (Vice Chair)
Lauri Harvilahti, University of Helsinki (Secretary General)
Pauliina Latvala, University of Helsinki (Course Secretary)
Satu Apo, University of Helsinki
Annikki Kaivola-Bregenhøj, University of Turku
Pekka Laaksonen, Finnish Literature Society
Timo Leisiö, University of Tampere
Ulrika Wolf-Knuts, Åbo Akademi University
Organising institutions of the FFSS
Department of Folklore Studies, University of Helsinki
Department of Cultural Studies, University of Turku
Department of Folklore Studies, University of Joensuu
Department of Folklore, Åbo Akademi University
Folklore Fellows of the Finnish Academy of Science and Letters
Kalevala Institute, University of Turku
Finnish Literature Society, Helsinki
Staff
Pauliina Latvala, Course Secretary, Researcher, University
of Helsinki
Maria Vasenkari, Editorial Secretary, Kalevala Institute
Saara Paatero, B.A., University of Helsinki
Marja-Leea Hattuniemi, Translator, University of Helsinki
Pirkko Hämäläinen, Project Assistant, University of
Helsinki
Sponsors
University of Helsinki, Faculty of Arts
University of Helsinki, Institute for Cultural Research, Department
of Folklore Studies
Project Myth, History, Society: Ethnic/National Traditions in
the Age of Globalisation financed by the Academy of Finland,
Project leader: Anna-Leena Siikala
Project Ethnopoetics, Processes of Textualisation, and Cultural
Dynamics financed by the Academy of Finland, Project leader:
Lauri Harvilahti
Academy of Finland
Kalevala Institute, University of Turku
Centre for International Mobility (CIMO)
Finnish Literature Society
The venue
Biological Research Station at Lammi, University of
Helsinki
See: http://www.helsinki.fi/ml/lammi/indexengl.
html
Information about the earlier summer schools
(1991, 1993, 1995, 1997, 1999)
see http://www.folklorefellows.fi/netw/ffss_arc.html