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Document Description
Title
Some
masking
customs
of
German-speaking
central
Europe
:
a
descriptive
survey
Author
Jackson
,
Susan
Helen
Description
Thesis
(M.A.)
--
Memorial
University
of
Newfoundland
,
1973.
Folklore
Date
1973
Pagination
vi, 181 leaves : map
Subject
Mumming;
Carnival;
Degree
M.A.
Degree Grantor
Memorial University of Newfoundland. Dept. of Folklore
Discipline
Folklore
Language
Eng
Notes
Bibliography
:
leaves
[176]-181.
Abstract
Masking
festivals
and
Carnival
celebrations
are
well
known
in
all
Christian
civilizations.
It
is
now
generally
assumed
by the
European
scholars
whose
writings
I
have
read
for this
dissertation
that they have their
origins
in
old
heathen
beliefs
which
have
long
been
forgotten.
The
principal
carriers
of
masking
customs
are the
young
,
preferably
unmarried
men
of the
communities.
In their
disguise
they
try
to
chase
away
evil
spirits
during
the
longest
nights
of
winter
around
Christmas
time
, or
welcome
spring
and
new
life
in
general
with their
various
Carnival
activities.
--
In
German-speaking
central
Europe
the
best
preserved
masking
customs
are
found
in the
Alpine
regions
of
Austria
,
Switzerland
and
Bavaria
in
Southern
Germany.
Masking
customs
practised
around
Christmas
time
or
mid-winter
are
usually
internal
affairs
, not
intended
to be
tourist
attractions.
They
used
to be
rather
wild
,
boisterous
and
noisy
affairs
where
the
young
men
dressed
in
frightening
costumes
,
equipped
with a
variety
of
noise-making
instruments
,
hoped
to
"cleanse"
the
countryside
from
wicked
demons.
At the
same
time
they
tried
to
encourage
fertility
by
stamping
the
ground
with their
feet
or by
hitting
it
with the
poles
they
carried.
In
more
recent
times
these
customs
have
,
however
,
either
been
taken
over
entirely
by
children
or
lost
the
element
of
fear
altogether.
Masking
customs
at
Carnival
time
are
all
tourist
attractions.
At these
occasions
young
men
,
often
dressed
in
very
elaborate
costumes
,
wearing
specially
made
and
beautifully
decorated
hats
march
,
skip
and
dance
-
often
in
pairs
and
accompanied
by
bells
-
in
parades
and
processions.
--
The
"Morgenstreich"
of
Basel
distinguishes
itself
by its
timing
as
it
takes
place
at
4
a.m.
on the
first
Monday
and
Wednesday
afternoon
in the
Lenten
season.
The
various
participating
groups
each
ridicule
some
local
,
national
or
international
event
not
only
with the
costumes
of their
drummers
and
pipers
who
carry
small
lanterns
on their
heads
but also with the
huge
hand
painted
transparent
lanterns
inscribed
with
satirical
poetry.
--
Newfoundland
also
enjoys
a
vivid
masking
tradition
during
the
twelve
days
of
Christmas
when
social
barriers
are
broken
down
and a
short
period
of
licentious
behaviour
is
permissible.
In
Newfoundland
where
parades
have been
replaced
by the
house-visit
which
focuses
on the
guessing
game
,
maskers
have to
wear
a
complete
disguise
whereas
a
partial
one
often
suffices
in
Europe.
Since
Newfoundland
mummers
are not
obliged
to
chase
away
demons
or
re-fertilize
nature
, the
noise
element
is
not as
important
in their
activities.
Type
Text
Resource Type
Electronic
thesis
or
dissertation
Format
Image/jpeg;
Application/pdf
Source
Paper copy kept in the Centre for Newfoundland Studies, Memorial University Libraries
Local Identifier
76005917
Rights
The author retains copyright ownership and moral rights in this thesis. Neither the thesis nor substantial extracts from it may be printed or otherwise reproduced without the author's permission.
Collection
Electronic
Theses
and
Dissertations
Scanning Status
Completed
PDF File
(29.54
MB)
--
http://collections.mun.ca/PDFs/theses/Jackson_SusanH.pdf
CONTENTdm file name
313309.cpd