The Merry Mystery of the Maypole. A Few Observations on the Role of the Comic Object in Religion and Culture<br>Vedra skrivnost mlaja. Nekaj opažanj o vlogi komičnega v verovanjih in kulturi</br>

This article begins by analysing the maypole rituals in European folklore as a case study to make a point that it is arguably expandable to religious practice in general: that the humorous is intimately interwoven with the sacred and that the comic object is the most rudimentary type of a sacred ent...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Izar Lunaček
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: ZRC SAZU, Založba ZRC 2013-10-01
Series:Studia Mythologica Slavica
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ojs.zrc-sazu.si/sms/article/view/1550
Description
Summary:This article begins by analysing the maypole rituals in European folklore as a case study to make a point that it is arguably expandable to religious practice in general: that the humorous is intimately interwoven with the sacred and that the comic object is the most rudimentary type of a sacred entity. Carnivalesque or New Year’s rituals, it is claimed, are characterized precisely by a temporary reign of the comic object, while their ending in the banishment or killing of the comical ruler open up a space for the emergence of a transcendent, wholly serious god. Frazer, Freud and Girard’s theories of culture and religion are re-examined in the view of this assumption and a number of concrete rituals and mythologies from different cultures re-evaluated as a test of its consistency.
ISSN:1408-6271
1581-128X