Author
Abstract

The present study introduces the role played by the Hungarian Heritage House in applied ethnography and the folk art revival. It is the first such study to review their antecedents over the past 70 years, the evolution of the institutional background, and activities of varying emphasis (research, teaching, certification) in the fields of folk dance, folk music, and folk handicrafts. The second part of the study evaluates professional tasks in the context of the organizational framework of the Hungarian Heritage House, which was founded in 2001, highlighting the internal relationships among activities embedded within the historically developed structure. The study then goes on to describe the intermediary role of the institution in relation to the practical use/usefulness of basic ethnographic research in terms of: (a) knowledge transfer - the utilization of basic ethnographic research in trainings and courses; and (b) digitization - ensuring wide access to ethnographically authentic archive folk music and dance recordings as the socialization of basic ethnographic research; and (c) research activities within the scope of applied ethnography and existing and potential cooperation with the academic sector. By way of conclusion, the study outlines pressing tasks in the field of applied ethnographical research that are crucial to the everyday, practical work of folklorism. These tasks include delineating the image (i.e., concept) of folk art and folk tradition in the Hungarian Heritage House; clarifying the terminological issues that affect the profession as a whole; creating a professional historical archive of folklorism; organizing a regular forum for critical discussion; and rethinking the cultural context and function of the folklore revival in light of the present-day challenges.

Year of Publication
2023
Journal
Acta Ethnographica Hungarica
Volume
66
Number
2
Number of Pages
343-355
Publisher: Akademiai Kiado ZRt. Type: Article
Publication Language
English
ISSN Number
12169803
URL
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85148440325&doi=10.1556%2f022.2021.00030&partnerID=40&md5=de75f5139bd6dded0e23570de4725ddc
DOI
10.1556/022.2021.00030
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