Results 101 to 110 of about 1,882 (204)

EHA2024 Hybrid Congress

open access: yes
HemaSphere, Volume 8, Issue S1, June 2024.
wiley   +1 more source

Polish fans of the Lithuanian language and folklore

open access: yes, 2003
Aktualu tirti lenkų mokslininkų, rašytojų ir žurnalistų indėlį į lietuvių kalbos ir folkloro tyrimus XIX–XX amžiais. Straipsnyje pasirinkti tie lenkų vyrai ir moterys, kurie domėjosi lietuvių etnografija, folkloru ir kalba. Tyrimo dėmesys koncentruojamas
Sawaniewska-Mochowa, Zofia
core  

Modality Against Stigmas: Avoidance of Totalization in the Self Narratives

open access: yesEidos. A Journal for Philosophy of Culture
The article analyzes three cases through which the avoidance of stigmatization is revealed in very different modes of auto-narration. Each case suggests that the narrators intuitively use a strategy of modal shift: they find ways to resist the ...
Jurga Jonutytė
doaj   +1 more source

Gypsies in Lithuanian folklore.

open access: yes, 1998
Gypsies are the second transnational minority after Jews which is spread all over the world except Japan. In Europe they appeared in the 14th century. To Lithuania gypsies came from Poland by the end of the 15th century. Their life was not easy anywhere. Superstitions which reigned in Europe in the Middle Ages left the sign in the fate of gypsies. They
openaire   +1 more source

Proper names for the devil in Lithuanian dialects and folklore

open access: yesBaltistica
In the Lithuanian dialects and folklore, 22 different proper names for the devil have been recorded. Together with their vernacular variants found in various regions of Lithuania, the number would be close to 50. Usually they are names used in the Christian tradition, names for the devil used outside the Christian tradition occur rather seldom.
openaire   +1 more source

Aukusti Robert Niemi and Lithuanian folklore studies: the reception of his contribution to the development of the discipline

open access: yes, 2020
Formulated during the Soviet period but not further expanded, the claim that the Finnish folklorist Aukusti Robert Niemi (1869–1931) contributed to the formation of Lithuanian folklore studies as an independent academic discipline, has been reiterated ...
Daugirdaitė, Vilma
core  

Are Roma People Descended from the Punjab Region of Pakistan: A Y-Chromosomal Perspective. [PDF]

open access: yesGenes (Basel), 2022
Adnan A   +7 more
europepmc   +1 more source

The Image of the Black Book Sorcerer in Lithuanian Folklore

open access: yesActa Baltico-Slavica
This article examines the image of the black book sorcerer in Lithuanian folklore. In Lithuanian folk legends, the black book sorcerer is a male magician who possesses magical abilities and derives his power from a magic book. This folkloric character is prevalent in numerous European countries, with analogous folk legends observed in Slavic, Baltic ...
openaire   +1 more source

Home - About - Disclaimer - Privacy