Showing 181 - 200 results of 277 for search '"folklore"', query time: 0.04s Refine Results
  1. 181

    JEJAK SEJARAH PERGESERAN IDENTITAS AGAMIS MENJADI PUB-KULTUR DI PATI by Fathimatuz Zahra

    Published 2018-06-01
    “…Based on the qualitative approach, wherein the data gathered through an interview to the selected local leaders and observation conducted through various archeological remains and documents, this study revealed that the shifting identity happened basically was not a new thing. Based on the folklore believed by local community, story of Mbah Cungkrung, the first famous Islamic carrier and preacher, Pati has well known as the religious city. …”
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  2. 182

    Sixty years of life with François Gros by Scherrer, Klaus

    Published 2023-12-01
    “…And I wish to revive here some of our relation at the grassroots, as well as the folklore in and around his laboratory. He was not only an excellent scientist but also a Statesman of Science and beyond. …”
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  3. 183

    Profesoři Hermenegild a Karel Škorpilové působící v Bulharsku 2. část by Ludvík Skružný

    Published 2010-07-01
    “…For almost five decades Karel Shkorpil has been traveling around Bulgaria and collecting materials not only about ancient history but also about its folklore, he is interested in architecture, not only Christian and local, but also Ottoman conquerors; saves endangered monuments from the time of the "yoke" and the emergence of the modern Bulgarian people. …”
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  4. 184

    The returning dead: unconventional inhumations in Medieval Lithuania by Gintautas Vėlius

    Published 2010-06-01
    “…According to Lithuanian folklore, such were untimely passed-away or greatly sinful persons. …”
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  5. 185
  6. 186

    Millets in India: exploring historical significance, cultural heritage and ethnic foods by Ankita, Upasna Seth

    Published 2025-01-01
    “…Studies showed a diversity of cultures in India and the importance of millets in religious ceremonies, festivals, literature, and folklore, showcasing their deep-rooted presence in Indian traditions. …”
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  7. 187

    Local knowledge and amateur participation. Shevchenko Scientific Society, 1892–1914 by Martin Rohde

    Published 2019-11-01
    “…In order to understand the specific relations of Hnatiuk to his network of folklore collectors, their projects, aims and possibilities, Hnatiuk’s research is contrasted with the statistical surveys initiated by Dnistrians’kyĭ. …”
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  8. 188
  9. 189

    Martha Graham, ‘An American, A kosmos’: Border-crossing in Martha Graham’s early works by Adeline CHEVRIER-BOSSEAU

    Published 2019-12-01
    “…Graham pioneered a new way for women to dance, to express their femininity and their power: her works, inspired by Native American traditions, Mexican folklore, Greek mythology and literature from both sides of the Atlantic, depict strong women who are not afraid of pushing boundaries.Creating an American choreographic tradition also meant exploring its literary legacy for Martha Graham: this paper therefore also delves into the way the Whitmanian intertext emerges in Graham’s choreographic writing, in her conception of Americanness, modernity, the body and gender.…”
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  10. 190

    Travelling to the described present: mago-space in the Strugatskys’ Monday starts on Saturday by Natalia Tuliakova, Natalia Nikitina

    Published 2021-10-01
    “…In the first part, it is the mental space of folklore and classical literature, in the second – that of mythology and science fiction, and in the final – philosophy and science. …”
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  11. 191

    Systematic literature review: Curriculum development principle by Amanda Azalia, Deswa Putri Lerian, Erwin Taufik, Sarah Nurul Izzah, Surya Nugraha, Ghaitsa Zahira Arya

    Published 2023-06-01
    “…Curriculum development sources include; empirical data, experimental data, folklore, and general community knowledge. The directions in curriculum development are divided into two things: (1) General Principles, which include; the principle of relevance, the principle of flexibility, the principle of continuity, the principle of practicality, and the principle of effectiveness, (2) Specific Principles include; principles of determining educational goals, selecting educational content, selecting teaching and learning processes, selecting media and teaching tools, and principles relating to assessment. …”
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  12. 192

    Parudi's analysis in "Kharestan" by AdibGhasemiKermani by Mohammadreza Heydari, MARYAM KHALILI JAHANTIGH, Mohammad Barani

    Published 2020-05-01
    “…In this research, the most important tool of "Kharestan"; AdibGhasemiKermani's satirical parody (1308-1238 Hijri / 1849-1929 AD) has been studied in two levels of surface structure and deep structure by comparative analysis using library tools, that is, word, form, and meaning.AdibKermani is one of the authors and poets in the field of critical and folklore literature. And his book "Kharestan" is written with the following of GolestanSaadi and he has used special words and phrases and non-natural and mostly comparative and critical words in response to the stable, original and literary words and serious issues raised in Golestan. …”
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  13. 193

    Images of the Pleiades of the Turkic and Mongolic Peoples by Marina M. Sodnompilova, Bair Z. Nanzatov

    Published 2024-12-01
    “…The sources of the study were historical and ethnographic data published in the works of researchers — ethnographers, historians, linguists, folklore materials, as well as materials of the author’s field research. …”
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  14. 194

    Means of expressing comparative relations in vernacular riddles (based on Russian, English, and Tatar riddles) by N.I. Fayzullina

    Published 2019-12-01
    “…The results of the study are important for further linguo-cognitive analysis of folklore texts.…”
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  15. 195

    La mujer y el mar en Cataluña by Eliseu Carbonell

    Published 2018-06-01
    “…In the collective imagination only remains the representation of the role of women in traditional coastal society through literature, art and folklore. These representations convey the image of a woman who faces her fate, often tragically, passively; A woman who waits with an attentive and anguished look towards the sea, where his man should return. …”
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  16. 196

    Literatura populară în lumina tiparului. Bibliofilie românească în colecţiile Bibliotecii Naţionale a României by Andreea Răsboiu

    Published 2013-12-01
    “…Representing successive vernacular translations and abridgments in many cases of intermediary slavic versions and not very often of the Byzantine, Italian or German original, these writings have blended in with the cultural mentality, folklore and local spirit, achieving authenticity and resemblance to the Romanian real life from that time. …”
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  17. 197

    Witchery as Tribal Primary Ethos: Negotiations and Resistance in Select Literary Representations by Saru Sachdeva, Rekha Rani

    Published 2024-12-01
    “…Deeply embedded in religious practices, traditions, folklore, and myths, the concept of witchcraft serves to reinforce gendered power dynamics within tribal societies. …”
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  18. 198

    A Critical Review of A Buenos Aires Collection (Rugs and Art Tribal Bird Rugs and Others) by Azadeh Pashootanizadeh

    Published 2020-08-01
    “…In different literary and folklore texts of Iran, Fars province is called the land of Prophet Solomon. …”
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  19. 199

    Dragons, witches, and sorcerers in the advocacy space of national mythology [Review: Breeva Т.N., Khabibullina L.F. 'Russian Myth' in Slavic Fantasy. Moscow, Flinta, 2016] by O.E. Osovskiy

    Published 2017-06-01
    “…The authors have traced the genetic connection of contemporary Russian fantasy with Old Slavic folklore, European medieval literature, and Western mass culture. …”
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  20. 200

    Kosovo and Metohija or the European Union ‒ a rhetorical dilemma in the Serbian political discourse by Ksenija Marković, Marko Jovanović, Branka Matijević

    Published 2020-02-01
    “…It is an undisputable fact that Kosovo and Metohija and the Kosovo myth are a part of culture, history, religion, and folklore of Serbian people, and it is without doubt difficult to renounce all that, even if personal and collective prosperity is offered in lieu of it, which is deemed by a certain portion of the Serbian public to come as a result of the accession to the EU. …”
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