When the folklorists won the battle but lost the war: the cumbersome (re-)birth of SIEF in 1964.
Rogan, Bjarne
The Winner Writes the History
In September 2014, the Societe Internationale d'Ethnologie et
de Folklore (SIEF) celebrated its 50th anniversary. From one point of
view, the age is correct and the date correctly chosen. SIEF got its
name and its bylaws at a meeting in Athens on September 8-9, 1964. From
another point of view, it was a rebirth or a rejuvenation that took
place, rather than a birth. The adventure started in 1928, and the
society was 86 years old at the time of its demicentennial.
When CIAP (la Commission des Arts et Traditions Populaires) became
SIEF during two September days in 1964, the victorious parties were
careful to present the passage as a legal and democratic transition. On
the one hand, they claimed that a new organization was born, on the
other hand, they claimed the full heritage, material and immaterial, of
the old organization--archives, treasury, working-groups or commissions,
even its UNESCO affiliation; that is, everything except the name. Even
its rather somnolent scholarly life, which the new leaders had wanted to
escape from, continued more or less as before. Hence, the debated
question of the age of SIEF. The society's roots certainly go back
to a meeting in Prague in October 1928. But do a change of name and
amended bylaws make a new organization?
The transition was by no means a peaceful one. There are two
scholars who were especially central in the tug-of-war around CIAP in
the early 1960s, which ended with a putsch in Athens. One was Sigurd
Erixon (1888-1968), professor of ethnology in Stockholm and research
director of the Nordiska Museet. Sweden's most influential
ethnologist through more than a generation, Sigurd Erixon was the
founder of several international scholarly journals (Folk-Liv, Laos,
Ethnologia Europaea). He was very active on the European scene from the
early 1930s to the late 1960s, and to most European scholars his name
was synonymous with "European ethnology." For Erixon,
"European (regional) ethnology" comprised the fields of
material, social and spiritual culture; to him, folkloristics was a
branch of the discipline, and not a discipline in its own right--a
position that brought him much opposition from folklorists.
The other protagonist was the German Volkskundler Kurt Ranke
(19081985), professor of folklore first in Kiel and from 1960 in
Gottingen. Ranke had a dubious past from the war, but he rose quickly in
the post-war hierarchy of German Volkskunde and became one of the
leading folk narrative scholars of his time. He founded the journal
Fabula, an encyclopaedia on international narrative research--Die
Enzyklopadie des Marchens, as well as the world-embracing International
Society for Folk Narrative Research (ISFNR, 1962).
Erixon and Ranke each had their groups of adherents. Both parties
claimed democratic ideals--Erixon wanted formal representation and safe
election procedures (but accepted individual members in addition); the
other wanted an open society with membership for everyone. That was the
front issue. But a complex of other motives lurked underneath these
ideals.
I call the Athens event a putsch, because in fact it was not
members of CIAP who voted on the change. The majority of the voters were
members of Kurt Ranke's two-years old ISFNR, which hosted
CIAP's General Assembly in September 1964.
The Key, the Questions and the Sources
Looking at the past, it is the historian's privilege to
observe the results of an action or a train of events. The key to what
happened in Athens in 1964 is as follows:
The concrete results of the putsch were that
* The membership structure was changed, from a commission
constituted by elected national representatives to a society consisting
of individual members.
* A restricted number of official national representatives were
replaced by an unlimited number of individuals, with no control of
scholarly qualities or affiliation.
* The name was changed from one defining the scholarly field to one
saying something about disciplines.
The further consequences were that
* The independence of the separate disciplines of ethnology and
folklore was asserted, and the idea of a unified discipline was
effectively shot down.
* As the new structure was contrary to UNESCO's requirements,
the financial basis was strangled.
* The European scholarly world of ethnology and folklore was split,
with the Erixon/Ethnologia Europaea camp (ethnologists and some
folklorists) against a predominantly folkloristic SIEF.
* A new journal, independent of SIEF--Ethnologia Europaea--was
founded.
* SIEF entered some somnolent decades, and the working-groups began
their independent lives, some liberating themselves from SIEF.
The questions that remain to be discussed are the how's and
why's. CIAP had been Sigurd Erixon's long-time concern--and
headache. Why did Kurt Ranke want to take control of CIAP, an
organization that most German Volkskundler had neglected for decades?
Why was CIAP so important for a Volkskundler who had a firm grasp of
another international organization (ISFNR)? And how was it possible for
this folklorist to win a resounding victory over the internationally
experienced ethnologist Sigurd Erixon? History is formed by individual
actors as well as by structures. This discussion includes some
reflections on elements of a more structural kind--like the amateur
movement and membership organization.
Before we approach these questions, a presentation of the history
of CIAP is in order. Without CIAP's troubled past as a backdrop,
the events in the 1960s are difficult to digest. The main source
material is correspondence, notes and memorandums, minutes from
meetings, etc. The archives of CIAP and SIEF are spread between many
institutions, as the presidency and the secretariat of CIAP have moved
around. I have had access to important collections of material in
Stockholm (Nordiska museet), Paris (Le Musee des Arts et Traditions
Populaires/MNATP, UNESCO), Amsterdam (Meertens Instituut), Arnhem
(Nederlands Openluchtmuseum), and Lisbon (Museum National de
Ethnologia), in addition to smaller public and private archives in Oslo,
Uppsala, Dublin, Vienna, and Gottingen. Some of these archives are now
being brought together at the Meertens Instituut in Amsterdam, which is
presently in charge of SIEF's secretariat (including the MNATP
archives from Georges Henri Riviere, the Rotterdam archives from Karel
Constant Peeters, copies of parts of the epistolary collections from
Sigurd Erixon and Jorge Dias).
CIAP Until the 1960s--The Short Version of a Troubled History
The roots of CIAP--la Commission des Arts et Traditions
Populaires--go back to October 1928, when the League of Nations after
much hesitation gave the green light for a congress on folk art, to be
arranged in Prague by its sub-organization for cultural
affairs--I'Institut International de Cooperation Intellectuelle
(IICI). CIAP was the earliest general organization of ethnology and
folklore in Europe. The late 1920s and the 1930s were a difficult period
in European politics, with nationalist movements, unemployment, and the
rising of Nazi, fascist and communist regimes. The League of Nations was
ambivalent; it wanted to use culture--and the 1928 congress--in the
service of peace, coexistence and mutual understanding. But at the same
time it feared what a discipline like folklore might offer of ammunition
to belligerent parties on the European interwar scene (Rogan 2007,
2008a, 2014). This fear emerges clearly from personal notes, memos and
correspondence between the IICI officials and some participants. The
Belgian participant, Albert Marinus, gives a fuller explanation (Actes
[...] 1956, 18):
You have perhaps observed that the word "folklore" was used neither
for the congress nor for the commission [CIAP] that came out of it.
The simple reason is that to the former League of Nations, the word
"folklore" was banished, just as was the word "ethnography".
Actually, they believed that the word "folklore" would give stuff
to political claims, and that the populations would not resist from
claims, with reference to similarities in costume, songs, etc. Such
attitudes were to be feared especially for disputed regions between
neighbouring countries.
The event was attended by 200-300 participants, and a battle was
fought both during and after the congress on how to follow up. There was
a deep cleavage between the scholars who wanted to establish a scholarly
organization, and those (mostly bureaucrats and official national
representatives) who wanted an organization with more practical cultural
aims. The delegates of the League of Nations preferred no organization
at all, but they found an organization controlled by IICI to be the
lesser evil.
Through the 1930s CIAP was under the strict control of the
League's suborganization for cultural cooperation, for its
administrative as well as its scholarly activities. (1) In addition, the
declining prestige and influence of the League itself in the interwar
years were detrimental to its sub-organizations, CIAP included.
CIAP's first president was German (1928-1933, Otto Lehmann) and the
second, Italian (1933-1938, Emilio Bodrero). Otto Lehmann (1865-1951)
was an educationalist and museologist and director of the Altonaer
Museum near Hamburg. Emilio Bodrero (1874-1949) was a central politician
and specialist in Greek philosophy and political history. From 1940 he
got a chair in Rome in the "storia e dottrina del
fascismo"--that is, the history and the doctrines of Fascism.
Neither of them made noteworthy contributions to CIAP, and both were
forced to retreat--first Lehmann when Germany withdrew from the League
(1933) and then Bodrero when Italy withdrew (1937). If CIAP had been a
lame duck under the League in the early 1930s, it became paralyzed by
the political situation in the late 1930s.
Post-war life in CIAP started in an optimistic pitch. After a
preliminary meeting in Geneva in 1945 and a General Assembly in Paris in
1947, CIAP was given a new start--with new bylaws and a new structure.
At the 1947 conference in Paris, the around 60 delegates boiled over
with enthusiasm. There was a unanimous will to be "a strictly
scientific organization," "without the intervention of
governmental authorities" and to escape all the traps that the old
CIAP had fallen into. At the same time there was an unrealistic optimism
about activities to be started, the creation and recreation of
ethnological institutions after the war, the use of the discipline to
reconstruct the rural zones of Europe, etc. (2) The president elected in
1947, Salvador de Madriaga (1886-1988)--Spanish diplomat, politician and
professor of Spanish literature--was a fervent pacifist and anti-fascist
who had fled the Franco regime. With no knowledge whatsoever of
ethnology or folklore, he functioned only as a symbolic head of CIAP
(Rogan 2013, 98-100, 105).
In 1947 CIAP had started out on its own, with an independent status
in relation to the United Nations and UNESCO, the successor to the
League of Nations. But with no funding there were no activities. Two
years passed when nothing happened, so a change of policy was necessary.
In 1949 CIAP joined a group of international scholarly organizations to
found the UNESCO organ CIPSH--le Conseil International de Philosophie et
des Sciences Humaines. As a member of CIPSH, CIAP could find some
funding for its scholarly projects.
The driving force in the scholarly activities of CIAP in the 1950s
was Sigurd Erixon. At the outset Erixon was sceptical of CIAP, but he
saw the UNESCO affiliation as a golden opportunity to gain economic
support for research projects and in 1949 he made Sweden join CIAP. He
never wanted to preside over CIAP himself, but he held a predominant
position through the presidency of several of its commissions and
through his repeated initiatives to make CIAP function better--not least
as a tool for building bridges between all the heterogeneous national
varieties of ethnology, ethnography and folklore.
Erixon was in charge of CIAP's dictionary, a work that took
more than 15 years to complete (Rogan 2013, 131-34). The dictionary had
originally been proposed by Arnold van Gennep (Paris) and was published
in two volumes; one by Ake Hultkrantz (Uppsala) on ethnological terms
(1961) and one by Laurits Bodker (Copenhagen) on folkloristic concepts
(1965).
The most tangible result in other fields was the Internationale
Volkskundliche Bibliographie (IVB). The bibliography had been a
Swiss-German project since 1917, with Swiss editors and German or Swiss
publishers. In 1949 CIAP took over responsibility through its
bibliography commission, with the Swiss Volkskundler Paul Geiger and
later Robert Wildhaber as editors (Rogan 2013, 119-21).
It should be noted, however, that the scholarly commissions of CIAP
were small and they differed from the later SIEF commissions. They
consisted of three to ten specialists, appointed by the Board. Two of
the commissions--the ones for the dictionary and the
bibliography--received support from UNESCO and worked for a concrete
output--the annual or biannual (and always strongly delayed)
bibliographies, and the (likewise delayed) dictionaries.
Erixon also presided over CIAP's most active commission, the
one on cartography. The cartography commission worked for the
coordination of national atlas projects and practices, through
homogenization of techniques and methods, common questionnaires and
topics, and with a European atlas of popular culture as a distant goal
(Rogan 2013, 121-131). (3) Other commissions of CIAP tended to lead
their own lives, more or less independent of the organization, and their
activities are difficult to trace, as they neither received support nor
reported back.
It was also Erixon who edited CIAP's journal Laos, until
UNESCO stopped supporting it in 1955 (Rogan 2013, 115-18). In vol. I
(1951) he presented his visions for the discipline. He saw regional
ethnology as "a branch of general ethnology, applied to civilized
peoples, their social grouping and their complex cultural
conditions." Having abandoned his pre-war behaviourist and
functionalist ideas, Erixon now found his inspiration in American
cultural anthropology or "culturology," with its concepts of
culture areas, folk culture versus mobile culture, culture centres and
ways of diffusion, acculturation and assimilation. His references are
first and foremost American cultural anthropologists. He proposes a
historical and comparative study of a field that embraces urban and
industrial societies, societies in transformation as well as traditional
societies. He advocates a study of culture in its three
dimensions--space, time and social strata. The theoretical apparatus is
that of diffusionism, and cartography is the tool par excellence. Such
was the scientific programme that he recommended for Laos, for CIAP and
for European (regional) ethnology--and which he also advocated through
his cartography commission. (4)
On the organizational side, however, CIAP was struggling. The
strict IICI administrative regime before the war had been replaced in
1947 by lax management. Between 1947 and 1953, the Board and the General
Assembly convened only once--when Erixon hosted a congress in Stockholm
in 1951: The International Congress of European and Western Ethnology.
(5) Erixon encouraged the congress to discuss more efficient
international cooperation, but the debate was inconclusive. When
Salavador de Madriaga resigned from the presidency shortly afterwards,
CIAP was thrown into a new crisis.
Several factors contributed to the crisis: a legitimacy dispute in
the presidency, criticism from UNESCO of bad administrative management,
missing archives, and delays in the publication programs. Disorder in
the accountancy (project subventions) (6) was discovered and CIAP was
threatened with examination by the UNESCO audit experts. (7) The general
secretary was forced to resign for not following up the decisions of the
Board, (8) for disorder in the finances and on suspicion of
embezzlement. (9)
Behind the crisis another set of interrelated problems may be
discerned: the economic situation and the membership structure.
Membership in post-war CIAP was first based on individual membership
(1947-1953) and then on national committees (1954-1964). More will be
said about this below, but in both cases it turned out to be impossible
to collect the yearly fees. CIAP had no other resources than the limited
and earmarked project subventions from UNESCO.
Two persons who managed to keep above the quarrels in the
secretariat were Sigurd Erixon and Georges Henri Riviere, the leader of
le Musee National des Arts et Traditions Populaires in Paris. During two
conferences, in Namur in 1953 and Paris in 1954, they managed to restore
order and to gain support for reorganization (Rogan 2013).
Erixon was urged to stand for the presidency in 1954, but be
preferred the rank of ordinary member of the Executive Board. Instead he
launched another candidate, the folklore professor Reidar Th.
Christiansen from Oslo, who was elected--and who would remain
CIAP's president for the next ten years. Jorge Dias, professor of
ethnology in Lisbon, was elected to the office of general secretary, and
as treasurer, Ernst Baumann, a folklorist from Basel. Jorge Dias
(1907-1973), who held the same view as Erixon on European ethnology, was
an efficient administrator as well as an excellent scholar. When Erixon
proposed Christiansen for the presidency, it was probably because
Christiansen was a folklorist who regarded folklore and ethnology as two
faces of the same coin (Rogan 2012a). Erixon knew only too well that the
great majority of European folklorists opposed his vision for a common
discipline. With Christiansen to front CIAP, Erixon would have better
chances to reach his goal.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
At the Arnhem congress in September 1955 and the follow-up
symposium in Amsterdam, optimism still reigned after the remoulding of
CIAP in 1954 (Rogan 2011). The congress was hosted by Winand Roukens but
organized by Dias. The scholarly focus was on cartography and a European
atlas of popular culture, and there was an important debate on the
profile and scope of European ethnology and the naming of the
discipline, especially whether the term "folklore" should be
used. The follow-up symposium in Amsterdam just after the congress
stated in a recommendation (10) that the term "folklore"
should be used on a national level, in countries where there was a
tradition for this designation, whereas the name on the international
level should be "ethnology," for a field embracing spiritual,
material and social culture. If desired, the qualifying epithet
"regional" or "national" might be used, to
distinguish it from (social) anthropology or the study of primitive or
non-literate cultures. This consensus would not last long, however. The
resistance was especially hard in German-speaking Europe, where the
scholars wanted to stick to the traditional concepts (and dichotomy) of
Volkskunde and Volkerkunde.
Furthermore, problems on the administrative side would soon pile up
again. The general secretary Jorge Dias (1907-1973) found the office
strenuous, the membership system difficult to administer and the fees
hard to collect. (11) When the treasurer Baumann died in December 1955,
no one was willing to take over the treasury. The economy of CIAP was a
permanent headache. Dias, who had more than enough to do in Portugal as
well as in the Portuguese colonies, threw in the towel after three
years.
President Reidar Th. Christiansen (1886-1971) was an acknowledged
folklore scholar with long experience of international relations. But he
was a prudent person who shunned conflicts (12)--and conflicts were
precisely what he encountered in CIAP. He had long absences, when his
research and periods as visiting professor led him to England, to
Ireland and to the United States (Rogan 2012a). During the first part of
his presidency he spent two years abroad (1956-58), when he probably
paid little attention to CIAP. Furthermore, he turned 70 in 1958, his
health was not strong, and as a retired professor he had no
infrastructure to lean upon. The physical distance from Oslo to Paris,
the seat of CIAP's only benefactor UNESCO, was also a complicating
factor. When Jorge Dias decided to resign in spring 1957, Christiansen
lost almost all administrative support and was stuck in a trap he never
got out of. As he wrote to Sigurd Erixon in 1959, when the problems
piled up: "I regret sincerely that I did not resign, I too, when
the secretary left. But I thought for honour's sake that I had to
try and keep things going." (13)
In July 1957, Winand Roukens, director of Het Nederlands
Openluchtmuseum in Arnhem, accepted the double function of general
secretary and treasurer. But the inherent problems of the national
committees and his lack of success in collecting overdue fees, made him
resign after only five months. (14)
The bylaws of CIAP prescribed a Board meeting once a year, but
between 1955 and 1964 there were only two regular Board meetings: in
Paris 1957 and in Kiel 1959. Due to lack of money to cover travel costs,
Board members met only occasionally at other folklore congresses. No
General Assembly was arranged after 1955 and there were no regular
elections between 1954 and 1964. As UNESCO required that its member
organizations hold regular elections and assemblies, the danger of
exclusion from CISPH was imminent.
These problems should by no means be attributed to the president
only. With the exception of Sigurd Erixon, and to some extent the
Belgian Vice President Albert Marinus, CIAP Board members were passive.
In a series of letters to Erixon, Christiansen repeatedly mentions the
difficulties of getting response and support from the others for
arranging meetings. And the more or less non-existent national
committees seldom answered summons or invoices. (15)
CIAP's difficult relations to CIPSH and UNESCO would become a
recurrent theme in the following years. A certain percentage of the
membership fees should be returned to CIPSH, in return for more
substantial allocations back to CIAP for scholarly projects. From 1957
onwards, UNESCO repeatedly complained about lacking return payments.
UNESCO threatened to reduce or withhold its subventions for the
bibliography and the dictionary, as their publication was seriously
delayed. In 1957, UNESCO had signalled that a fusion with another member
organization, IUAES (The International Union of Anthropological and
Ethnological Sciences), was desirable, and in 1959 CIAP had to accept a
de facto joint representation with IUAES in CIPSH. If the ethnologists
saw this as a minor evil--they only feared a harder competition for the
allocations--many folklorists feared an anthropologization of their
discipline.
By the end of the 1950s, CIAP was by most standards bankrupt and
paralyzed. President Christiansen constantly sought advice from Erixon,
his only confidant, but he seemed incapable of taking any initiatives,
as well as of resigning, only hoping for more generous credits or asking
for deferments from an unwilling and critical UNESCO administration. In
this situation, Sigurd Erixon, an ordinary Board member for all
practical purposes, with the consent of Christiansen, took over the
leadership in CIAP, while Christiansen nominally remained president.
(16) However, this "Nordic alliance" would soon be challenged
by a much younger colleague, Kurt Ranke, professor of Volkskunde in
Gottingen.
Some Glimpses of the Way to Athens
In August 1959, Kurt Ranke organised a congress on folk narrative
research in Kiel, where he offered a venue for a CIAP meeting. The
German CIAP member Helmut Dolker (Stuttgart) was present, but it was the
non-member Ranke who offered to help CIAP economically and to support
CIAP's Internationale Volkskundliche Bibliographie--on the
condition that the administration of the bibliography be transferred
from Switzerland to Germany and a German publishing house take over the
publishing. Certainly, the issue had been agreed on beforehand with the
editor Robert Wildhaber.
Those present at the meeting in Kiel decided to convene in Oslo to
discuss a reorganization of CIAP. Christiansen obtained a small
allowance from UNESCO for an "expert meeting" in Oslo in
September 1961. But in addition to Christiansen, only two CIAP members
met there: Erixon and Roukens. Non-member Ranke, however, came up from
Gottingen. Ranke was by far the most active in the discussions, and he
proposed a close cooperation between CIAP and the German Zentralarchiv
der Volkserzahlung in Marburg. A working group was established to
propose new by-laws for CIAP, with Ranke as leader and Erixon, Roukens
and Ake Hultkrantz as members. It is clear from his correspondence with
Erixon that Christiansen disliked Ranke's involvement and his
proposal for a "German-dominated Verein," (17) and he
disapproved of the idea of a working group.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
The working group never convened, in spite of several reminders
from Erixon. In April 1962 Ranke unexpectedly came up with a Memorandum
der Kommission zur Reorganisation der CIAP. Instead of a proposal for
amended bylaws--the task given to the working group in Oslo--it
contained a full program for a new society. The text argues for a
Regionalethnologie covering all fields of ethnology and folklore. It is
surprising that Ranke argued so forcefully for what he called a Verein
fur moderne kritisch-empirischer Social- und Kulturwissenschaft. The
text proposed an expansive and ambitious program. Erixon was content
with the scholarly profile of the Verein in Ranke's Memorandum, but
more uncertain about the proposed new membership structure.
During spring and summer of 1962, Erixon was squeezed between the
entrepreneurial Ranke and the passive Christiansen. Erixon tried to
organize a dialogue within the working group to revise the text, but
Ranke made himself inaccessible. He neither answered letters nor gave
the group a chance to discuss the text. On Ranke's proposal--or
rather order--CIAP's Board was summoned to meet in September 1962,
at the founding congress of his International Society for Folk Narrative
Research (ISFNR). The congress was hosted by Karel Peeters, professor of
folklore in Antwerp, and it was combined with the 25 years jubilee for
the Royal Belgian Folklore Commission (in Brussels).
Only four CIAP members met in Brussels, Christiansen being absent.
According to Erixon it was a farce and a first putsch. (18) Ranke and
the Belgian hosts had not provided the necessary secretarial assistance
to the CIAP assembly; the venue and the day of the meeting were suddenly
changed, a new agenda was presented and distributed together with
Ranke's Memorandum. The folklorists at the ISFNR congress were
invited to join the CIAP meeting and to vote! The most active
persons--according to Erixon--were an arrogant Ranke and a very
aggressive Robert Wildhaber: (19)
[... During the deliberations, Stith] Thompson demanded that a new
committee be appointed, to formulate new paragraphs, and he offered
to go to Paris himself and talk with [Jean] d'Ormesson [UNESCO] and
later to present the case for you [Christiansen]. [Robert]
Wildhaber reacted with frenzy to this proposal. He was suddenly lit
by a flame to new deeds. So energetic and excited as he was in
Brussels have I never seen him before. The Belgians supported him.
Lecotte [see below] mentioned that he, as a Parisian, knew what
UNESCO would think and that he had so strong an influence himself
that there was no need for the services of Thompson.
Erixon, who was the only ethnologist among approximately thirty
folklorists, tried to argue for more formal procedures, but as he
reported in his letter afterwards to Christiansen: (20)
But to no avail. It was decided, by members and non-members alike,
that Ranke's proposal be adopted and that a committee should be
appointed and given the mission to formulate new bylaws. On Ranke's
instructions, the following members were elected: ... [Robert
Wildhaber (Basel), Karel Peters (Antwerp/Leuwen), Roger Lecotte
(Paris), Roger Pinon (Liege) and Ranke himself].... Now the masters
in Belgium and France have taken the lead, in connivance with
Wildhaber and Ranke.
And he adds, not without irony: "Let us hope this will lead to
a new vitality for CIAP." The new CIAP committee thus consisted of
five folklorists, none of whom were even members of CIAP. Soon after,
Ranke must have decided to withdraw to a more inconspicuous position. Of
the remaining four, Wildhaber and Peters were professional folklorists
with national positions (museum director and university professor),
whereas the two latter, who worked in a library and a school, were
closer to the amateur folklorist movement. Some time later Pinon
reconstructed "Minutes" from the meeting, which according to
Erixon were full of errors and omissions and never sent out for
approval. (21) This private document however became the official
platform for the new committee.
The "Gang of Four," as they nicknamed themselves, worked
for two years. Three thick reports were distributed to four hundred
scholars worldwide, and one thousand pre-printed formulas of adherence
to the new organization were distributed--long before it existed! They
launched a series of attacks against Christiansen and Erixon--or the
"technologist," as this "Gang" used to call
ethnologists (because they studied material culture). The documents and
incidents are enough to fill a whole book. The Gang soon declared
themselves the legal Board of CIAP and started deliberations with
UNESCO. They dreamed of a world-embracing organization with splendid
headquarters in Brussels--in the fashionable Palais de Congres or the no
less famous Parc du Cinquantenaire. They even appointed close colleagues
to the main offices--which did not exist yet! Reading these documents is
like entering a novel--in the genre of magic realism. Gabriel Marcia
Marquez or Jorge Luis Borges could not have done better!
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
The three reports produced and distributed by the Gang created
turmoil. With the tacit consent of Ranke, the Gang soon dismissed the
idea of the broad anthropological scope, which Ranke had originally
proposed in his Memorandum, an idea that was dear to Erixon and his
camp. Concerning the concept of "folklore," the reports
triggered two parallel debates, one on the future designation of the
organization, another on the contents of the discipline.
With their Germanic background, Wildhaber and Peters were relaxed
about a broad conception of folklore, in the sense of Volkskunde
(including material and social culture). However, the French-speaking
Lecotte and Pinon, who seem to have been the main authors of the
reports, argued for the "true" or "pure" folklore as
a distinct scholarly discipline with material and social culture left
out. The latter two wanted only "folklore" in the name of the
organization, and they produced strange strategies for replacing
"arts et traditions populaires" in the name of CIAP with
"folklore."
This position was untenable for the scholarly community at large,
for whom the field and the organization should cover both material and
spiritual culture, regardless of whether they conceived of it as one
common discipline (as did Erixon, Riviere, Dias, de Rohan-Csermak,
Bratanic, Steinitz, Meertens and their supporters) or two independent
disciplines. Where Erixon wanted only "European ethnology" in
the name, a majority found a compromise in keeping the old name for the
future organization--of "arts et traditions populaires." This
was actually the conclusion of the voting at a meeting in Bonn in April
1964, presided over by Roukens, which Ranke organized in preparation for
the CIAP general Assembly in Athens in September. As stated in the
minutes from the meeting, this was "a compromise to end all the
quarrels on the name of the discipline." (22) In Athens however,
Ranke found no problem in circumventing this decision.
Peters reported regularly and in detail to Ranke about the work in
the committee and sent him copies of the most important letters. In
turn, Ranke kept him informed about important developments and offered
advice on matters of policy. On occasion, the commander in Gottingen
reproached his foot soldiers in Belgium and France when they committed
blunders or went too far.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
To prepare for the final attack, Ranke organized the abovementioned
meeting in Bonn in April 1964, with forty handpicked scholars. The
situation before Athens was that two groups claimed the right to convene
CIAP and to set the agenda. The reason Ranke chose to convene in Athens
was that he would arrange his ISFNR congress there in September. The
presence of so many folklorists would give him a safe majority.
What happened then in Athens on September 8 and 9, 1964? There are
two sorts of sources, the official minutes and the eyewitness reports.
The first give the winners' version, with short, formal notices of
the results obtained. The second are the losers' versions,
revealing strategic election procedures, violation of procedural rules,
and blunt attacks in the closed sessions. The official minutes exclude
all that happened behind the scenes, but the eyewitness reports render
in detail what they experienced as an unfair battle and a putsch.
Only three CIAP Board members were present. Non-members Ranke and
Wildhaber were most active in the debate, and once again all the ISFNR
folklorists were allowed to vote. The result was that folklorists took
all the seats of the new Board: Karel Peters as president; Mihai Pop,
Carl-Herman Tillhagen and Richard Dorson as vice presidents; Roger Pinon
as general secretary and Roger Lecotte as treasurer. And Ranke, Roukens
and Wildhaber were among the members of the new Administrative Council.
The commission was reconstituted as a society and its name was changed
from CIAP to SIEF. Thus, the Gang of Four finally managed to secure all
the important positions, Ranke obtained his society, and Pinon and
Lecotte got folklore into the name. (23) The winner takes all!
All were not happy, though. A dissident German voice, Matthias
Zender, disliked both the procedure and the result. Having been elected
to the new SIEF Council, he offered to step down to give his seat to one
of the opponents--Branimir Bratanic. (24) Geza Csermak-Rohan,
CIAP's interim secretary appointed by Christiansen, wrote furiously
about electoral campaigns and the ambush by these
"Sturmabteilungsmanner." (25) I wonder if the expression was
used deliberately. Bratanic wrote about "the voting machine,"
"the usurpation of power," "die Alleinherrschaft" of
"the folklorists in a narrow sense." (26)
Personally, I feel uncomfortable with the 1964 event. (27) But it
is important to discuss how it could happen. The membership question is
an issue that needs further discussion. Also, there are some aspects of
the study of folklore that may contribute to a better understanding. One
is the low degree of professional institutionalization combined with a
broad and established amateur movement.
Membership: a Structural Problem
Pre-war CIAP had been based on national committees, as required by
the League of Nations. The CIAP of 1947 was re-established on an
independent basis, with individual membership. But without economic
support for CIAP nothing could be done. Consequently, in 1949 CIAP
became a founding member of the UNESCO sub-organization CIPSH--le
Conseil International de Philosophie et des Sciences Humaines. From then
onwards CIPSH gave regular, earmarked support to the journal Laos, the
dictionary and the bibliography, and occasionally allowances for
meetings. It looks, however, as if UNESCO did not enforce any membership
rules the first years. (28)
But these allocations were not sufficient and the collecting of
fees did not function. UNESCO expressed its discontent with the
administration of CIAP, first in 1953, when the general secretary E.
Foundoukidis was forced to resign, and then recurrently through the
latter half of the 1950s for the missing return payments to UNESCO. When
remoulding CIAP a second time after the war (1953/54), Erixon and
Riviere reintroduced the system with a membership based on national
committees, as required by UNESCO. Both Erixon and Riviere had
experience as delegates to UNESCO commissions, and they had better
knowledge of the international bureaucracy than most of their
colleagues. From 1954 CIAP was again based on national committees, which
should each appoint up to three members to its General Assembly, which
in turn elected the Executive Council.
However, there were not only economic arguments for this structure.
To carry through ambitious projects like the European
atlas--Erixon's cherished idea--would require international
coordination of research teams on the national level, that is teams (or
national committees) invested with the necessary authority and national
funding--and not individual researchers.
To this must be added Erixon's strong conviction that European
ethnology, his lifelong vision--as presented and developed in article
after article from the 1930s to the 1960s--would be much more difficult
to develop as a theoretically based, comparative discipline, without an
international forum which transcended the various sub-disciplines. And
in Erixon's eyes a firmly controlled organization, with an elected
and selected membership, would be a safer alternative for reaching that
goal, than a loosely organised society (like CIAP in the late 1940s and
early 1950s) where scholars and amateurs alike could become members, and
where--in his own words--"the dilettantes" reigned. (29)
But the system of national committees did not function. In many
countries the level of institutionalization of folklore and
ethnology--in the form of universities, centres and archives--was low;
members disappeared and the committees vanished, if they had been
appointed at all. As general secretary Dias did not manage to collect
the fees and UNESCO therefore did not receive its symbolic contribution,
UNESCO threatened to withdraw all support from CIAP, or else to fuse
CIAP with its anthropological commission (IUAES). The system of national
committees and fees seemed to function for other UNESCO commissions,
like for instance the OIM (later ICOM), but not with ethnologists and
folklorists.
After three years and more than three hundred letters and
reminders, Dias had had enough of non-existing or vanishing national
committees. In June 1957 he resigned from his office in CIAP. Winand
Roukens took over--only to discover that no more than 10 out of 60
(nominal) national committees had paid. (30) After he too threw in the
sponge, CIAP was mostly without a secretariat from 1958 and 1961. (31)
On the other hand, Ranke and the Gang of Four wanted a society
based on individual membership. The argument presented in their widely
distributed reports seems to have been simply that it was more
"democratic." Opposition to leaving the system of national
committees came not only from Erixon and Christiansen, but also from
central scholars like Riviere and Bratanic. Ingeborg Weber-Kellerman and
Gerhard Heilfurth (Marburg), the latter the president of one of the few
functioning national committees of CIAP--the Deutsche Gesellschaft fur
Volkskunde--also reacted negatively to a system based only on individual
membership. (32) The argument for maintaining the national committee
system was not only UNESCO's formal requirement. It was repeatedly
argued in the debate that national committees were indispensable for
planning and organizing big international projects. And there was the
"democracy argument" turned around: designated national
delegates would secure a more equal and even representation and prevent
special groups from dominating the organization. The latter argument was
repeatedly stressed by Riviere, who would never serve on the Board but
had obtained the lifelong title of "Advisor to CIAP."
To all those who would never have a chance of being designated
through national channels, however, individual membership felt more
"democratic." By addressing the proposal to a very large
number of scholars and amateurs, the Four would logically get support
for individual membership. As demonstrated by the voting in Athens, the
majority wanted individual membership. Erixon had proposed (in Bonn,
April 1963) a combination of the two systems, but to no avail--his
proposal was not even rendered in the minutes from the meeting.
History is full of irony and paradoxes. CIAP/SIEF has alternated
between national delegations and individual membership from the 1920s to
the 1980s. In 1964, the new SIEF leadership wanted both a new membership
system and to keep the contact with UNESCO. But with the change in the
membership, the subventions stopped, as predicted by Erixon and Riviere.
Only four years later, in 1968, the folklorist-dominated SIEF once more
knit contacts with UNESCO and CIPSH, through re-incorporation in the
IUAES (The International Union of Anthropological and Ethnological
Sciences)--an organization they had argued against before 1964. The
pretext was economic support for the forthcoming congress in Paris
(1970, adjourned to 1971) as well as later allocations. (33) A
consequence of this renewed affiliation to UNESCO was that SIEF had to
renounce its global ambitions and accept being a scholarly society for
research on European culture(s)--as a division of labour with the other
anthropological associations. At the same time, SIEF expanded its Board
to make room for more national representatives. (34) Some years later,
SIEF reverted to a system of national delegates. To SIEF's 3rd
congress, in Zurich in 1987, were invited its 35 national delegates plus
specially invited guests, or as stated in the invitation: "SIEF has
35 delegates representing almost all European countries." (35) From
the 1990s, however, membership has been open once again to all scholars.
A Low Degree of Institutionalization and the Amateur Movement
When Dias resigned as general secretary in 1957, his grievance
concerned not only the problems associated with national committees and
formal membership. He was also very disappointed with the lack of
interest in a general organization, especially among folklorists, many
of whom he experienced as an obstacle to CIAP and to the scientific
development of the discipline. (36) He signalled time and again his
scepticism towards the amateurs in the field and his annoyance with the
folklorists who claimed to be a separate discipline and often refused to
cooperate with ethnologists. (37) In a retrospective published in 1964,
just before the split in Athens, he stated:
It is difficult to create a[n] organism to co-ordinate the
ethnological study of Europe. During the three years I was general
secretary of the CIAP I came to know the enormous difficulties, which
were always arising, either from lack of internal understanding within
some countries, or from lack of the spirit of international
collaboration in others. This lack of the spirit of collaboration is due
partly to ethnocentric prejudices, which keep ethnologists from
admitting that European peoples might be studied by ethnological methods
as well as any other peoples. Therefore there are ethnological societies
of Africanists, Americanists, Orientalists etc., but an ethnological
society of Europeanists is not yet possible. [...] The barrier is
certainly due to the different attitudes of folklorists and
ethnologists: many folklorists do not want to consider themselves
ethnologists, although actually a folklorist is an ethnologist who
specializes in oral literature [...] (Dias 28.10.1963, in Jacobeit 1964,
182-83).
In other texts Dias invoked the low degree of institutionalization
of the discipline, the amateurs and their "excessive love of what
is regional and particular":
This state of affairs is even worsened by the fact that in many
countries there is no university tradition in the field of regional
ethnology. All the research is in the hands of small groups of
interested amateurs, who [.] are normally opposed to a superior
organization, where they fear they may lose the state of personal
prestige, which they have conquered in their home setting. (Dias s.a.
[1957]). (38)
A longstanding weak foothold at universities in several countries
had marked the discipline profoundly. (39) Much collecting and
dissemination was performed by dedicated persons with little academic
training in folklore studies, their main bases being the local folklore
society, the local museum and the local journal. This can be observed
through most the 20th century, not least in the former colonial powers,
where anthropology was prioritized in the universities. The collecting
and the study of the national popular culture were relegated to places
outside of the universities, to local folklore societies and museums.
Many cases could be cited, but as SIEF now has its legal seat in
Amsterdam, let me quote what Pieter Meertens--founder of the Meertens
Institute and a partisan of Erixon's policy--wrote about the
problem in 1951. He deplored that
In the Netherlands the study of folklore is greatly hampered by its
unfavourable position in the curricula of the universities. The place it
occupies there is indeed a poor one [... The] study of folklore has for
the greater part been left to amateurs. (Meertens s.a./1951). (40)
Half a century later, his compatriots Peter Jan Margry and Herman
Roodenburg give a similar verdict, describing the history of the
discipline until the 1990s as "one of a few scholars and numerous
amateurs, of a limited interest in research and heavy emphasis on
documentation and popularisation" (Margry and Roodenburg 2007,
261).
Let me mention just one case that corresponds to what Dias called
the lack of internal understanding and opposition to comparative
research among amateur folklorists. In Norway, where folklore was
institutionalized very early, the greatest controversy ever concerning
disciplinary issues was when the so-called "War of
decentralization" broke out around 1920. Hundreds of local
folklorists, mostly schoolteachers, had received small public stipends
for collecting work. When Professor Knut Liestol claimed the custodial
right to this material, on behalf of the newly established central
national archive for folklore at the University, a fierce war broke out.
The local collectors created their own organization and claimed property
rights to the material collected. To them, the material belonged to the
locality where it had been collected; it should be kept there and
distributed back to the local population. In Norway this was a forceful
ideological and democratic movement, with a sting against an elite
institution like the university, as well as against scholarly,
comparative research and university professors. (41)
I mention this Norwegian counter-movement because it comprised a
large number of local folklorists who would certainly have been utterly
hostile to an international organization, had it been proposed to them.
Similar conditions were found in other countries, as for example in
Ireland where local collectors tried to fight the centralized Irish
Folklore Commission. (42)
My point is not that folkloristics in general can be reduced to
amateurism. In many ways, it was more theoretically inspired than the
early material culture studies. But much of the support that The Gang of
Four got was from these amateurs, as when they distributed membership
formulas to one thousand persons--when there were hardly more than fifty
university scholars of folklore and ethnology in Europe.
A Poetic Incident
Among the many repositories of CIAP's/SIEF's history,
there is in the collection of SIEF's first president Karel C.
Peeters a very strange document--a poem, (43) which I admit I do not
quite grasp the full meaning of. In September 1964, the Dutch folklorist
and philologist Winand Roukens (1896-1974)--the host of the 1955 CIAP
congress in Arnhem, and short-term secretary of CIAP (autumn 1957)--was
on his way home from Athens. Roukens was in an exuberant mood after the
meeting. He made a stop-over in Strasbourg, where he composed a euphoric
poem.
The poem is entitled Europa-Gedanken (nach
Athenes.)--"Thoughts about Europe (after Athens)"--and bears
the dedication "In Freundschaft fur Prof. Dr. Kurt Ranke." It
is dated September 17, 1964, eight days after the event in Athens, and
is signed Winand Roukens, "Athen-Delegierter der Universitat
Nijmegen." (44) It is a pompous poem, with references to Goethe; it
is about building bridges between peoples and constructing "the
European house"--in the name of humanism, and with clear allusions
to the war. But there are also some disturbing elements from legends and
folklore.
Europa-Gedanken (Nach Athenes ...)
Zur 'Cathedrale' von der 'Hoch-Schule' her schau'ich
still traumend in Hoffnung
mit ... Goethe;
an der Bruck'zwischen Volkern hier bau'ich
in Sehnsucht still hoffend
mit Goethe ...
Von Deutschland nach Frankreich hin schau'ich,
wie einst Er, Kurt, nun traumend mit Dir;
am neuen Europahaus bau'ich
in schweigender Stille
mit Sagenhelden Willen
in hoffnungsschwerem Lenken
und ehrfurchtsvollem Gedenken
wie Goethe einst, mit Dir ...
Mit unsern Brudern schauen wir,
mit unsern Brudern bauen wir
mit stillem Sagenkampfermut,
als Opfer fur Europablut,
schweigend am Europatempel
mit Goldstrahlendem Widmungsstempel:
HUMANITAT
TRANSLATION: Thoughts about Europe (after Athens) (45)
I am staring from the 'high school' towards the 'cathedral'
silently dreaming, filled with hope
with ... Goethe;
I work here on the building of the bridge between peoples
longing and silently hoping
with Goethe ...
I am staring from Germany towards France
as He, Kurt, once did, now dreaming with you;
I work at the construction of the new European house
in a hushed silence
with the will of legendary heroes
guiding heavy with hope
and awe-filled remembrance
as Goethe once did, with you ...
With our brothers we look,
with our brothers we build
with the silent courage of the warriors of the sagas,
as sacrifice for European blood,
silently at the temple of Europe
with the golden shining stamp of dedication:
HUMANITY
Indeed, a very strange praise to bestow on a scholar like Ranke,
with a dubious past as a prominent member of the Nazi party (NSDAP) and
even its Sturmabteilung, and with close ties to Alfred Rosenberg's
organization Ahnenerbe and NSDAP's Hohe Schule, where Rosenberg had
intended a leading position for him. (46) It should be added, however,
that Roukens was known for his anti-Nazi attitudes during the war, and
he was removed from office during the war for his refusal to collaborate
with the Germans. (47)
Or, perhaps not so strange after all? Was SIEF planned as a bridge
between a German Volkskunde--that was slowly recovering after its
compromises with the Third Reich--and the rest of European ethnology and
folklore? "... The bridge between peoples, a new European
house," in Roukens' words, including France, the traditional
enemy? Was it meant as a kind of exoneration for Ranke for his past in
the service of a totalitarian state?
But then there are the dissonances, the folkloristic elements
making allusions to a Germanic past: "... with the will of
legendary heroes; ... with the silent courage of the warriors of the
sagas; ... as sacrifice for European blood"? Is it just clumsy
praise couched in romantic vocabulary? This strange text leaves some
questions unanswered. It was not a private greeting to Ranke only, but a
document that ended in the archives of the new SIEF. Whatever its deeper
meaning, the poem confirms what other documents also reveal, that Kurt
Ranke was the prime mover behind the new SIEF and that the victorious
camp in Athens was effusively happy with the result.
Roukens was a minor figure in European folklore, but he was an
efficient lieutenant for the mastermind behind the new SIEF, Kurt Ranke.
Ranke was, during most of the process, a withdrawn commander-in-chief.
The dirty work was done by his handpicked "Gang of Four," with
the assistance of Roukens and a few others. And dirty work it was at
times, to judge from the contents of many of the letters and notes that
circulated among the Four, not seldom marked "Confidential."
By Way of Conclusion
In the late 1950s CIAP was in a deep crisis--economically,
scholarly, morally. Everyone saw the need for a rejuvenation, but there
was no unanimity as to the solutions.
Elements that made CIAP a difficult venture was the closed
membership system (as required by UNESCO, and desired by several of the
protagonists), the low level of institutionalization of the
discipline(s), the high number of amateurs with a limited interest in
comparative research and scholarly cooperation, and also the
philological/literary roots of folklore and hence a certain fear of an
anthropologization--as advocated by the Erixon camp.
The campaign towards SIEF (by Ranke and The Gang of Four) was
partly based on ideology--that is on the defence or promotion of
folklore as an independent discipline. Furthermore, the campaign was
conducted strategically; decisions and voting took place only when there
was a majority of folklorists present. Ranke's goal of establishing
an open society may be viewed as a democratic solution; on the other
hand, it opened the doors for that majority of folklorists who would
support him against the ethnologists.
This strategy appears clearly from meeting to meeting. CIAP had no
resources to organize meetings, and all President Christiansen could do
was to convene, at other conferences, those CIAP members who happened to
be present. A strange coincidence, or perhaps not: it was always Kurt
Ranke who offered to host CIAP at his folklorist conferences; once in
Kiel, once in Brussels, twice in Bonn and once in Athens. As Branimir
Bratanic (Zagreb) put it, if CIAP had chosen the Moscow conference in
August 1964 instead of Athens in September, all the ethnologists and
ethnographers present in Moscow would have secured a different result.
(48)
The unsolved problem is Kurt Ranke's motives for wanting to
control "all there was" of European folklore and ethnology. He
already controlled the journal Fabula, the Enzyklopadie des Marchens,
and the ISFNR. Why this appetite for CIAP also? Erixon had a clear idea
of what he wanted to do with CIAP, but it is hard to see what scholarly
results Ranke wanted to obtain.
Was it to promote the progress of European ethnology and
international collaboration, as expressed in his Memorandum? As I see
it, that was a strategy in an early phase, but not a goal for his
campaign. Was it the idea of peace and reconciliation, cf. Roukens'
euphoric poem? Hardly, as no such argument was presented during the four
years of warfare.
Two plausible explanations remain. Was it a defence of folklore
against a rising ethnology, based on a fear of an anthropologization of
the field? Or was it simply a quest for personal power? My opinion is
that Ranke's campaign was motivated by a combination of these two
elements. A strong CIAP might turn out a rival to his ISFNR, but a weak
CIAP would do no harm. And an anthropologization of the field might
entail other inconveniences for the more traditional,
"literary" folklorists. By controlling and reorganizing CIAP
the way he wanted, the scholarly landscape would become more clear-cut
and folklore would remain an independent discipline.
Ranke's campaign was successful. ISFNR became an important,
specialized organization, whereas CIAP/SIEF remained a general but weak
umbrella organization. Ranke won the battle, there and then. But by
cementing the division of the disciplines and forcing SIEF into several
sleepy decades, one may ask whether his interference did not do more
harm to European ethnology than actually served the best interests of
folklore in a restricted sense.
Bjarne Rogan
University of Oslo, Norway
Notes
(1) For a detailed presentation of the genesis and development of
CIAP in its early phase, see Rogan 2007.
(2) Minutes/Compte-rendu sommaire des travaux de la 1ere session
pleniere. Paris, Musee de l'Homme, 1-5 oct. 1947. MNATP: Org.
APP-CIAP 1947-48-49 etc.
(3) See Laos vol. III (1955) for a series of presentations of the
cartograhy commission and cartography work.
(4) Erixon 1951. In the first half of the 1950s Erixon published
several articles of this type, in Folk-Liv and elsewhere.
(5) Erixon (ed.) 1956; Rogan 2013, 96-102.
(6) Letter of September 4, 1950, from J. Thomas, director of the
Department for cultural activities, UNESCO. MNATP.
(7) Note de Monsieur Marinus relative au Secretaire-General
Monsieur Foundoukidis (undated/ August-September 1953). MNATP.
(8) See stenographied minutes from the Board sessions, Namur.
MNATP.
(9) See correspondence. UNESCO, ICFAF Reg. 39 A01.
(10) Recommendation from the Amsterdam meeting, September 1955.
MEERTENS 35:1131. See also Erixon 1955-56.
(11) As for the archives, Dias seems to have kept them in good
order, with the one curious exception that they suddenly disappeared in
1957, probably stolen. See letter of 7.1.1957 from Vieiga
d'Oliveira to Dias. LISBON Box 4. Dias 4.
(12) Interview with his daughter Elin Christiansen Smit, September
2007.
(13) Letter of 3.2.1959 from Christiansen to Erixon. SE 8:28.
(14) On the subject of collecting the fees, see letter of
16.10.1957 from Leopold Schmidt to Roukens. VIENNA, CIAP box 02.
Roukens' letter of resignation of 8.1.1959 to Christiansen, ibid.;
also in SE 8:28. It should be added that Roukens encountered some
serious problems at his museum and was forced to resign from his post as
museum director the same autumn.
(15) See for instance the comprehensive correspondence between
Christiansen and Erixon on the problems of arranging a Board meeting in
1958-59. SE 8:28.
(16) See correspondence between Christiansen and Erixon. SE 8:28,
8:30, 8:31.
(17) Letter of 29.4.1962 from Christiansen to Erixon, SE 8:27.
Other correspondence between the two during spring 1962 (SE 8:27, 8:30,
8:31) confirms Christiansen's unwillingness to follow up
Ranke's initiatives. The secretary of the Oslo meeting, Elin
Christiansen Smit (Christiansen's daughter), whom I interviewed in
2012-13, has confirmed that the relationship between Christiansen and
Ranke was far from hearty.
(18) Letter of 12.10.1962 from Erixon to Christiansen, SE 8:31.
(19) Ibid.
(20) Ibid.
(21) Letter of 19.12.1962 from Erixon to Christiansen, SE 8:27.
(22) Compte rendu de la Reunion tenue a Bonn les 26 et 27 avril
1964 en vue d'examiner les dernieres propositions de la Commission
de Reforme de la CIAP. SE 8:27. Also MNATP.
(23) For a more general discussion of the name question (CIAP,
SIEF), see Rogan 2008b.
(24) Letters of 17.9.1964 from Zender to Peeters and of 12.10.1964
from Peeters to Zender. MNATP: Peeters 8.
(25) Letter of 26.9.1964 from de Rohan-Csermak to Nettelbladt.
MNATP: Peeters 7.
(26) Letter of 25.09.1964 from Bratanic to a series of colleagues.
SE 8:27.
(27) For a more detailed treatment of the Athens meeting, see Rogan
2008c.
(28) This may also be due to a lack of archive sources. The
archives after General Secretary E. Foundoukidis, who was fired in 1953
for irregularities and alleged embezzlement, were more or less
inexistent. It was E. F. who had been the contact person with UNESCO.
(29) Manuscript to Erixon's speech, 14.12.1948, on the
occasion of the establishment of the Swedish national committee and a
discussion whether to join CIAP or not. SE archives, Stockholm.
(30) Minutes from the Board meeting in Kiel, 18.8.1959. MNATP, Org.
App. CIAP.
(31) In 1958 Sigurd Erixon persuaded the Swedish doctor Anna-Maja
Nylen to function as secretary for CIAP, but she too resigned after a
short time. See letter of resignation from Nylen to Erixon of 18.8.1959.
SE 8:28.
(32) Stellungsnahme zu den Vorschlagen der
Reorganizationskommission der 'CIAP', 20.6.1963, signed
Heilfurth and Weber-Kellermann. MNATP: Peeters 5; SE 8:31.
(33) Minutes. Meeting of the Board of Directors in Bucarest on 28th
August [1968]. MNATP: Peeters 13.
(34) Minutes. General meeting of SIEF, held in Paris on 27th August
1971. NF, box 84.
(35) SIEF's third congress. "The Life Cycle." April
8-12, 1987. Zurich, Switzerland. MNATP: Comptabilite, Tresorerie
(1976-1985).
(36) Letter of resignation from Dias to Christiansen, 16.4.1957;
Dias' Rapport moral sur les activites du secretariat de la ClAP,
30.5.1957. SE 8:38.
(37) Letter of 4.5.1955 from Dias to Riviere. MNATP.
(38) Dias' Rapport moral sur les activites du secretariat de
la ClAP, 30.5.1957. SE 8:28. Translation B.R.
(39) See for instance Rogan 2012b for a discussion and further
references.
(40) The State of Folklore in the Netherlands. SE 8:77.
(41) This battle between amateurs and professionals is treated in
several publications in Norwegian, i. a. Kristoffersen 2013, the title
of which may be translated as follows: The institutionalization of folk
narratives. Norsk Folkeminnesamling [the university archive] and the
Battle of decentralization.
(42) See f. ex. Briody 2011 on the internal fights in the 1920s and
1930s, even within the folklore organizations, where many were
indifferent or even hostile to folklore as an international research
discipline and opposed a university affiliation.
(43) Europa-Gedanken ... 17.9.1964. MNATP: Peeters 8.
(44) The use of "Delegierter/delegated" in the signature
clearly indicates that the backdrop for the poem is CIAP/SIEF, and not
ISFNR. Roukens was since 1955 one of 8 members of the CIAP Board, which
formally consisted of representatives of the national committees. ISFNR
had no such structure.
(45) Translated by BjR. Thanks to Regina Bendix for assistance with
the translation.
(46) Klee 2005: 479. See also
http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kurt_Ranke_(Germanist). Date read:
2015-2.22.
(47) Information from Peter Jan Margry, November 2014.
(48) Letter of 25.09.1964 from Bratanic to a series of colleagues.
SE 8:27.
Works Cited
Actes de la Conference de Namur de la Commission Internationale des
Arts et Traditions Populaires (CIAP tenue a Namur du 7 au 12 Septembre
1953. Bruxelles 1956.
Actes du Congres International d'Ethnologie Regionale (20-24
Septembre 1955). Arnhem 1956.
Erixon, Sigurd (ed.). 1956. International Congress of European and
Western Ethnology. Stockholm 1951. Stockholm.
Jacobeit, Wolfgang. 1964. "Intensification of International
Cooperation in the Field of European Agrarian Ethnography." Current
Anthropology 5(3): 179-190.
Klee, Ernst 2005. Das Personenlexikon zum Dritten Reich. Wer war
was vor und nach 1945. Frankfurt am Main: Fischer Taschenbuch Verlag, 2.
ed.
Kristoffersen, Eirik 2013. Institusjonaliseringen av folkeminnene.
Norsk Folkeminnesamling og Desentraliseringsstriden. Master thesis in
cultural history, University of Oslo.
Margry, Peter Jan and Hermann Roodenburg. 2007. "A History of
Dutch Ethnology in 10 1/2 pages." In Reframing Dutch Culture.
Between Otherness and Authenticity, edited by Peter Jan Margry and
Herman Roodenburg [Series: Progress in European Ethnology], 261-271.
Aldershot: Ashgate.
Rogan, Bjarne. 2007. "Folk Art and Politics in Inter-War
Europe: An Early Debate on Applied Ethnology." Folk Life 45: 7-23.
Rogan, Bjarne. 2008a. From Rivals to Partners on the Inter-War
European Scene. Sigurd Erixon, Georges Henri Riviere and the
International Debate on European Ethnology in the 1930s. Arv. Nordic
Yearbook of Folklore 64: 275-324.
Rogan, Bjarne. 2008b. The Troubled Past of European Ethnology. SIEF
and International Cooperation from Prague to Derry. Ethnologia Europaea
38(1), 66-78.
Rogan, Bjarne. 2008c. "From CIAP to SIEF: Visions for a
Discipline or Power Struggle?" In Everyday Culture in Europe.
Approaches and Methodologies, edited by Mairead Nic Craith, Ulrich
Kockel and Reinhard Johler, 19-63. Aldershot: Ashgate.
Rogan, Bjarne. 2011. "A Remarkable Congress and a Beloved
General Secretary. CIAP & SIEF, Arnhem 1955 and Jorge Dias."
[Inaugural keynote address at SIEF's 10th congress, Lisbon, April
17th 2011. In press/PDF version at Siefhome.org].
Rogan, Bjarne. 2012a. "An Internationalist among Norwegian
Folklorists. A Biographical Sketch of Reidar Th. Christiansen."
Arv. Nordic Yearbook of Folklore 68: 91-119.
Rogan, Bjarne. 2012b. "The Institutionalization of
Folklore." In A Companion to Folklore, edited by Regina Bendix and
Galit Hasan-Rokem, 598-630. Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell.
Rogan, Bjarne. 2013. "Sigurd Erixon on the Post-War
International Scene. International Activities, European Ethnology and
CIAP from 1945 to the mid 1950s." Arv. Nordic Yearbook of Folklore
69: 89-152.
Rogan, Bjarne. 2014. "Popular Culture and International
Cooperation in the 1930s." In Networking the International System.
Global Histories of International Oranizations, edited by Madeleine
Herren, 175-185. Heidelberg: Springer.
Archives (Abbreviations used in the endnotes)
LISBON: The Jorge Dias collection, Museu Nacional de Etnologia,
Lisbon.
MEERTENS: Meertens Instituut, Amsterdam.
MNATP: Musee des Arts et Traditions Populaires, Paris.
NB: I use the MNATP references, although the greater part of this
collection was transferred to the Meertens Institute, Amsterdam, in May
2012. The rest is now being transferred to MuCEM in Marseille.
NF: Norsk Folkemuseum, Oslo.
SE: The Sigurd Erixon collections, Nordiska Museet, Stockholm.
UNESCO: The League of Nations, Paris (UNESCO building).
VIENNA: Osterreichisches Museum fur Volkskunde, Vienna.
All translations to English from Norwegian, Danish, Swedish, French
and German by Bjarne Rogan.