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dc.contributor.authorIrvine, Richard D. G.de
dc.date.accessioned2019-02-26T06:54:54Z
dc.date.available2019-02-26T06:54:54Z
dc.date.issued2018de
dc.identifier.issn2199-7942de
dc.identifier.urihttps://www.ssoar.info/ssoar/handle/document/61524
dc.description.abstractIn Whittlesey and Ramsey, two market towns in the East Anglian fenlands, farm labourers led a "Straw Bear" through the streets; one of an array of Plough Monday customs marking the start of the agricultural year. The practice seems to have come to an end in the early 20th century, when it was forbidden by a police inspector as a form of begging. Yet what was had come to be seen as an unruly and unsavoury practice was renovated as a valued form of cultural heritage in 1980, in the wake of the wider folk "revival" in the United Kingdom. The performance of Straw Bear festivities gives us a vantage point on the cultivation of rural identity in contemporary Britain, allowing us to ask what it means to live in, belong to, and act within a landscape completely transformed by mechanised arable farming. I follow Abner Cohen in attending to the relationship between symbolic potential and political power within the carnivalesque, tracing in particular the way that revived traditions become deployed and read in the context of contemporary "culture wars". At the same time, I draw on Turner in his emphasis on the socially generative potential of misrule. In the revived Straw Bear celebrations, we see a striking invention of tradition in the context of changing social and economic norms in rural England. Yet alongside the apparent gentility of revived folk customs, as evening falls, folk musicians and their activities give way to the convergence of young people from the surrounding region for a night of drunken revelry around the town. This paper explores the different facets of this modern midwinter custom: as heritage and as night of joy in the cold of winter; as cultural spectacle and as people throwing up in the streets; as continuation and as invention.de
dc.languageende
dc.subject.ddcSozialwissenschaften, Soziologiede
dc.subject.ddcSocial sciences, sociology, anthropologyen
dc.subject.othercalendrical ritual; rural identity; contestation; liminality; dancede
dc.titleFollowing the bear: the revival of Plough Monday traditions and the performance of rural identity in the East Anglian fenlandsde
dc.description.reviewbegutachtet (peer reviewed)de
dc.description.reviewpeer revieweden
dc.source.journalEthnoScripts: Zeitschrift für aktuelle ethnologische Studien
dc.source.volume20de
dc.publisher.countryDEU
dc.source.issue1de
dc.subject.classozEthnologie, Kulturanthropologie, Ethnosoziologiede
dc.subject.classozEthnology, Cultural Anthropology, Ethnosociologyen
dc.identifier.urnurn:nbn:de:gbv:18-8-12376de
dc.rights.licenceCreative Commons - Namensnennung, Weitergabe unter gleichen Bedingungen 4.0de
dc.rights.licenceCreative Commons - Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0en
internal.statusformal und inhaltlich fertig erschlossende
dc.type.stockarticlede
dc.type.documentjournal articleen
dc.type.documentZeitschriftenartikelde
dc.source.pageinfo16-34de
internal.identifier.classoz10400
internal.identifier.journal1438
internal.identifier.document32
internal.identifier.ddc300
dc.source.issuetopicTradition, performance and identity politics in European festivalsen
dc.description.pubstatusPublished Versionen
dc.description.pubstatusVeröffentlichungsversionde
internal.identifier.licence24
internal.identifier.pubstatus1
internal.identifier.review1
internal.pdf.wellformedtrue
internal.pdf.encryptedfalse


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    Ethnology, Cultural Anthropology, Ethnosociology

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