142
Views
5
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Special Section: South-Eastern Europe

Ideological dimensions of the “Balkan Family Pattern” in the first half of the 20th century

Pages 218-234 | Received 12 Dec 2013, Accepted 14 Jan 2014, Published online: 14 Mar 2014

REFERENCES

  • Assmann, J. (2001). Kulturnata pamet. [in original: Assmann, Jan (1997) Das Kulturelle Gedächtnis. Schrift, Erinnerung und politische Identität in frühen Hochkulturen (Assmann, Jan Cultural Memory and Early Civilization: Writing, Remembrance, and Political Imagination). Verlag C.H. Beck München, translated in Bulgarian by Ana Dimova]Sofia: Planeta 3.
  • Bandić, D. (1997). Carstvo zemaljsko i carstvo nebesko. Ogledi o narodnoj religiji [Earth kingdom and haven kingdom. Essays on Folk religion]. Beograd: XX vek.
  • Bell, C. (1997). Ritual. Perspectives and dimensions. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Bobchev, S. (1907). Bulgarskata chelyadna zadruga v segashno i minalo vreme [Bulgarian family zadruga in the present and the past]. Sbornik za narodni umotvoreniya, XXIII, 1–207.
  • Byrnes, R. F. (Ed.). (1976). Communal families in the Balkans: The zadruga. London: University of Notre Dame Press.
  • Čapo Žmegač, J. Č. (1996). New evidence and old theories: Multiple family households in northern Croatia. Continuity and Change, 11, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press375–398.
  • Dennison, T. (2005). Economy and society in rural Russia: The serf estate of Voshchazhnikovo, 1750–1860. The Journal of Economic History, 65, 536–539.
  • Dennison, T. (2011). Household formation, institutions, and economic development: Evidence from imperial Russia. The History of the Family, 16, 456–465.
  • Drljača, D. (1982). Ženski seniorat u pečalbarskim brakovima Pirotskih sela u poslednjih sto godina [Women's seniority in the labour migrant families in Pirot district during the last 100 years]. In Promene u tradicionalnom porodichnom životu u Srbiji i Poljskoj [The changes in the traditional family life in Serbia and Poland]. ( Ethnographic Institute of SASA ed; Vol. XXV, pp. 87–98). Beograd: Etnografski institut SANU, Posebna izdanja.
  • Hajnal, J. (1965). European marriage patterns in perspective. In D. V.Glass & D. E. C.Eversley (Eds.), Population in history (pp. 101–140). London: Edward Arnold.
  • Hajnal, J. (1982). Two kinds of preindustrial household formation system. Population and Development Review, 8, 449–494.
  • Halpern, J. (1972). Town and countryside in Serbia in the nineteenth-century social and household structure as reflected in the census of 1863. In P.Laslett & R.Wall (Eds.), Household and family in past time. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  • Halpern, J., & Halpern, B. K. (1972). A Serbian village in historical perspective. New York, NY: Holt, Rinehart, and Winston.
  • Halpern, J. M., Kaser, K., & Wagner, R. A. (1996). Patriarchy in the Balkans: Temporal and cross-cultural approaches. The History of the Family, 1, 425–442.
  • Hammel, E. (1980). Household structure in fourteenth-century Macedonia. Journal of Family History, 5, 242–273.
  • Hammel, E. A. (1976). Some medieval evidence on the Serbian zadruga: A preliminary analysis of the chrysobulls of Dečani. In R.Byrnes (Ed.), Communal families in the Balkans: The zadruga (pp. 100–116). London: University of Notre Dame Press.
  • Hristov, P. (2001). Ahnenkult in Westbulgarien: das Fest des Schutzheiligen [Ancestor worship in western Bulgaria: the feast of the patron sain]. In U.Brunnbauer & K.Kaser (Eds.), Vom Nutzen der Verwandten. Soziale Netzwerke in Bulgarien (19. und 20. Jahrhundert) [The benefits of relatives. Social networks in Bulgaria (19th and 20th centuries)] (pp. 187–199). Wien: Böhlau.
  • Hristov, P. (2002). The “Ransom” for the missing virginity of the bride. Macedonski Folklor, 60, Skopje25–38.
  • Hristov, P. (2004). Obshtnosti i praznici. Sluzhbi, slavi, sabori i kurbani v Juzhnoslavjanskoto selo prez purvata polovina na XX vek [Communities and celebrations. The Sluzba, Slava, Sabor and Kourban in South Slavic villages in the first half of 20 century]. Sofia: Ethnographic Institute with Museum.
  • Hristov, P. (2008). Trans-border exchange of seasonal workers in the central part of the Balkans (19th – 20th century). Ethnologia Balkanica, 12, Berlin: LIT Verlag215–230.
  • Ivanova, Y. (1966). Rodstvenye obedineniya na Zapade Balkanskogo poluostrova v ih pozdnejshih variantah v XIX–XX vv [Kinship unions in the western part of the Balkan peninsula in their late variants in the 19th and 20th centuries]. In Institute of Slav and Balkan Studies (Eds.), Pervyi congress balkanskih issledovanii (Sofia, 1966) Soobshteniya sovetskoy delegatsii [First congress of Balkan studies. The reports of Soviet delegates] (pp. 1–15). Moscow: Institute of Slav and Balkan Studies.
  • Jezernik, B. (2004). Wild Europe. The Balkans in the gaze of western travellers. London: Saqui Books.
  • Jireček, K. (1899). Knyazhestvo Bulgaria [Kingdom of Bulgaria]. Plovdiv: Hristo G. Danov.
  • Kaser, K. (1993). Ahnenkult und Patriarchalismus auf dem Balkan [Ancestor worship and patriarchalism in the Balkans]. Historische Anthropologie, 1, 93–122.
  • Kaser, K. (1994a). The Balkan joint family: Redefining a problem. Social Science History, 18, 243–269.
  • Kaser, K. (1994b). The Balkan joint family household: Seeking its origins. Continuity and Change, 9, 45–68.
  • Kaser, K. (1996). Introduction: Household and family contexts in the Balkans. The History of the Family, 1, 375–386.
  • Kaser, K. (1997/98). Pisanje o Balkansoj obitelji – pitanje “političke korektnosti”? [The writing for the Balkan family – the “political correctness” question?]. OTIVM, 5–6, Zagreb126–131.
  • Kaser, K. (1999). Descent, relationship and the public. Beiträge zur historischen Sozialkunde, Special Issue: The Balkans. Traditional Patterns of Life, Vienna 1999,21–31.
  • Kaser, K. (2000). Macht und Erbe. Männerherrschaft, Besitz und Familie im östlichen Europa (1500–1900) [Power and heritage. Male domination, property and family in Eastern Europe (1500–1900)]. Wien: Böhlau.
  • Kaser, K. (2008). Patriarchy after patriarchy. Gender relations in Turkey and in the Balkans, 1500–2000. Wien: LIT Verlag.
  • Kassabova-Dintcheva, A. (2002). Migration und Familie. Familienforschung und Politik (am beispiel Bulgariens) [Migration and Family. The Study of Family and Policy]. Sofia: Variant 2000.
  • Kaser, K. (2002). Porodica i srodstvo na Balkanu: Analiza jedne kulture koja nestaje. Beograd: Udruženje zadruštvenu istoriju. [in original (1995) Familie und Verwandtschaft auf dem Balkan. Analyse einer untergehenden Kultur [Family and kinship in the Balkans. Analysis of a declining culture]. Wien-Koln-Weimar].
  • Kosven, M. (1963). Patronimiya [The patronimy]. Izvestiya na Etnografskiya institute i muzey, VI, Sofia pp. 251–258)
  • Krstić, D. (2001). Obred rezanja kolača u Gornjem i Srednjem Timoku [Ritual of cutting the kolach in north and middle Timok district]. Ethnology, 4, Sofia86–161.
  • Laslett, P., & Wall, R. (Eds.) (1972). Household and Family in Past Times. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  • Mitterauer, M. (1994). Edin arhaichen relikt? “Balkanskoto semeystvo” v diskusiya [An archaic relict? “Balkan family” in discussion]. Balkanistichen forum, 2, Blagoevgrad5–32.
  • Mitterauer, M. (1996). Family contexts: The Balkans in European comparison. The History of the Family, 1, 387–406.
  • Pesheva, R. (1960). Edin starinen semen praznik. Praznuvane na svetec v Severozapadna i Sredna Zapadna Bulgaria [An archaic family feast. Celebration of patron saints in Northwestern and Midwestern Bulgaria]. Ezikovedsko-etnografski izsledvaniya v pamet na akad. Romanski [Linguistic and Ethnographic Studies in the Memory of Acad. Stoyan Romansk] ( Bulgarian Academy of Sciences ed.; pp. 731–754). Sofia: BAN.
  • Pesheva, R. (1983). Rodoviyat institut v Bulgaria i negovata rolya v etnoobedinitelnite procesi na bulgarskata durzhava [Institution of Kinship in Bulgaria and its significance for the ethno-unifying processes in the Bulgarian state]. Bulgaria 1300. Institutsii i durzhavna traditsiya, III, Sofia541–547.
  • Plakans, A. (1984). Kinship in the past. An anthropology of European family life, 1500–1900. Oxford: Basil Blackwell.
  • Radcliffe-Brown, A. R. (1986). Structure and function in primitive society. London: Cohen & West.
  • Rheubottom, D. B. (1976). The saint's feast and Skopska Crna Goran social structure. Man, 11, 18–34.
  • Rihtman-Auguštin, D. (1984). Struktura tradicijskog mišlenja [The structure of traditional thought]. Zagreb. Zagreb: Skolska knjiga.
  • Schneeweiss, E. (1935). Grundris des Volksglaubens und Volksbrauchs bei den Serbokroaten [Essay on folk beliefs and folk rites of the Serbo-Croats]. Celje: Druzba Sv. Mohorja v Celju.
  • Sikimić, B., & Hristov, P. (Eds.). (2007). Kurban in the Balkans. Belgrade: Institute for Balkan Studies.
  • Stahl, P. H. (1986). Household, village and village confederation in South-Eastern EuropeVol. CC. New York, NY: East European Monographs.
  • Stamenova, Z. (1985). Rodovi praznitsi i obichai [Kinship feasts and customs]. Etnografiya na Bulgariya [Ethnography of Bulgaria] (Vol. III, pp. 139–162). Sofia: Bulgarian Academy of Sciences.
  • Taylor, E. B. (1989). Pervobytnaja kuljtura. [in original: Taylor, E.B. Primitive Culture. London: John Murray, Albemarle Street, 1871]. Moskva: Izdatel'stvo politicheskoy literatuty.
  • Todorova, M. (1993). Slava und Zadruga. Historische Anthropologie, 1, 123–129.
  • Todorova, M. (1999). Balkani, Balkanizam. [in original (1997). Todorova, Maria Imagining the Balkans. Oxford University Press]. Sofia: FNBK, 1997.
  • Todorova, M. (2006). Balkan family structure and the European pattern. Demographic developments in Ottoman Bulgaria. Budapest: Central European University Press.
  • Tyszka, Z. (1974). Socjologia rodziny [Sociology of kinship]. Warszawa: PWN.

Reprints and Corporate Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

To request a reprint or corporate permissions for this article, please click on the relevant link below:

Academic Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

Obtain permissions instantly via Rightslink by clicking on the button below:

If you are unable to obtain permissions via Rightslink, please complete and submit this Permissions form. For more information, please visit our Permissions help page.