Aufsatz(elektronisch)März 2001

Eastern Finno-Ugrian Cooperation and Foreign Relations

In: Nationalities papers: the journal of nationalism and ethnicity, Band 29, Heft 1, S. 181-199

Verfügbarkeit an Ihrem Standort wird überprüft

Abstract

Britons and Iranians do not wax poetic when they discover that "one, two, three" sound vaguely similar in English and Persian. Finns and Hungarians at times do. When I speak of "Finno-Ugrian cooperation," I am referring to a linguistic label that joins peoples whose languages are so distantly related that in most world contexts it would evoke no feelings of kinship. Similarities in folk culture may largely boil down to worldwide commonalities in peasant cultures at comparable technological stages. The racial features of Estonians and Mari may be quite disparate. Limited mutual intelligibility occurs only within the Finnic group in the narrow sense (Finns, Karelians, Vepsians, Estonians), the Permic group (Udmurts and Komi), and the Mordvin group (Moksha and Erzia). Yet, despite this almost abstract foundation, the existence of a feeling of kinship is very real. Myths may have no basis in fact, but belief in myths does occur. Before denigrating the beliefs of indigenous and recently modernized peoples as nineteenth-century relics, the observer might ask whether the maintenance of these beliefs might serve some functional twenty-first-century purpose.

Sprachen

Englisch

Verlag

Cambridge University Press (CUP)

ISSN: 1465-3923

DOI

10.1080/00905990120036457

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