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Original scientific paper

WOLVES AND DEATH: THE THANATOLOGICAL MEANING OF THE WOLF IN WESTERN SOUTH SLAVIC TRADITIONAL CULTURE

Pieter Plas ; Gent


Full text: croatian pdf 247 Kb

page 77-95

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Full text: english pdf 103 Kb

page 95-95

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Abstract

Associations of wolves with death and the world of the dead have been of common and frequent across European and Indo-European cultures throughout history. In arguing for similar thanatological symbolism of the wolf in the western part of the South Slavic linguistic and cultural region, mythologists and philologists of the 19th and 20th centuries have cited contemporary ethnographic and folkloristic data among their supporting evidence. However, in the folk beliefs, narrations and customs that were recorded systematically from the end of the 19th century for this region, indications of a direct connection between wolves and thanatological conceptions are exceedingly scarce. The article presents a synthesis of those ethnographic and folkloric elements that unequivocally link wolves with folk conceptions of death and the cult of the dead, and offers a sober assessment of their significance in the relative synchrony of 19th- and 20th-century traditional (rural) meanings and practices. Within the referential framework of folk thanatology, it also critically evaluates existing hypotheses on the connection between wolves and vampires.

Keywords

wolf; death; cult of the dead; vampire; thanatological symbolism; mythology; traditional culture; western South Slavic region

Hrčak ID:

61984

URI

https://hrcak.srce.hr/61984

Publication date:

8.12.2010.

Article data in other languages: croatian

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