“请私信给我……”贾安·萨尔韦格给雅各布·赫尔达的信中的主体间性

Q2 Social Sciences Maetagused Pub Date : 2023-08-01 DOI:10.7592/mt2023.86.kikas
Katre Kikas
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In 1888 Hurt started widespread folklore collecting campaigns; he published appeals in several newspapers and with the help of these hoped to build up a dense network of local collectors. The campaign lasted until Hurt’s death in 1907, and during this time about a thousand people stepped in. Saalverk participated in the campaign in 1896–1905 and he was one of the most prolific co-workers of Hurt from Jüri parish. As in most cases the organizers of the campaigns and the local collectors did not meet in person, the collecting campaigns can be considered as epistolary events – people who participated had to be able to use the postal system and know how to address other people in epistolary exchanges. In this article I do not cover everything that was sent by Saalverk to Hurt but, taking a narrower focus, study one special genre – the letters sent by him. Letters were not an obligatory part of collecting campaigns and there were collectors who never sent a letter to Hurt. However, most of the collectors wrote letters on several occasions. Some were added to collected materials and commented on them, some were sent in between collections; most of the letters dealt with collecting activity, but there were plenty of those that addressed other issues. The folklore collecting campaigns provide quite a special epistolary context. One aspect to be noted is social hierarchy – Hurt was a parson and had a university degree, while most of the collectors were farmers, that is, had considerably lower social standing. Besides, the communication took place on the borderline between private and public spheres – letters sent by collectors were private, but Hurt often quoted them in his public reports. This context of epistolary communication was marked by asymmetry – collectors always wrote more than Hurt. In his letters to Hurt, Saalverk touches upon several issues that can be found in the letters of other collectors as well. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

信件是与远方的人交流的一种方式。因此,信件总是意在创造寄信人和收信人共同的主体间空间。主体间性可以通过不同的方式产生;例如,暗指共同的记忆,使用共同的习语或在字母中插入直接的地址。理想情况下,信件的交换是对称的,但现实往往是不理想的——信件丢失,一方更被动,寄信人和收信人之间可能存在等级关系。然而,这种不对称并不会减少任何特定字母的潜在主体间性。本文主要探讨农民、民俗收藏家Jaan Saalverk(1874-1932)写给雅各布·赫特的信中的主体间性。1888年,赫特开始了广泛的民间传说收集运动;他在几家报纸上发表了呼吁,并希望在这些报纸的帮助下建立一个密集的当地收藏家网络。这场运动一直持续到1907年赫特去世,在这段时间里,大约有一千人参与了进来。Saalverk参加了1896-1905年的运动,他是j里教区赫特最多产的同事之一。由于在大多数情况下,运动的组织者和当地的收集者并不亲自见面,收集运动可以被视为书信活动-参与的人必须能够使用邮政系统,并知道如何在书信交流中与他人交谈。在这篇文章中,我不会涵盖萨尔韦克寄给赫特的所有信件,但是,采取一个狭窄的焦点,研究一种特殊的类型——他寄给赫特的信件。信件并不是募捐活动的必要组成部分,有些募捐者从来没有给赫特寄过一封信。然而,大多数收藏家都写过几次信。有些被添加到收集的材料中并对其进行评论,有些在收集之间发送;大多数信件都是关于收集活动的,但也有很多涉及其他问题。民间典藏活动提供了相当特殊的书信体语境。值得注意的一个方面是社会等级——赫特是一个牧师,有大学学位,而大多数收集者都是农民,也就是说,他们的社会地位要低得多。此外,这种交流发生在私人和公共领域的边界上——收藏家寄来的信件是私人的,但赫特经常在他的公开报告中引用它们。这种书信交流的背景是不对称的——收藏者总是比赫特写得多。在他给赫特的信中,Saalverk提到了几个问题,这些问题也可以在其他收藏家的信中找到。他写到了收藏对国家和他自己的重要性,写到了他对自己贡献的价值的担忧,以及他所在地区的人们对民俗收藏的偏见。虽然他一直在强调收藏的重要性,但他似乎认为收藏是现代世界的一部分(而不是把喝酒和打架当作打发空闲时间的非现代方式),这让他感到有了力量;但考虑到当地人的偏见,他似乎感到困惑,不再那么自信了。萨尔韦克信件的一个特别之处在于他在自己和赫特之间创造了一个主体间的空间。他没有使用民间传说收藏家最常用的手段——赫特在民间传说收集的公共文本中使用的隐喻语言。Saalverk依靠直接的地址——在他的大部分信件中,他都请求赫特给他寄一封私人信件,并向他解释民间传说收集的重要性,这样Saalverk就可以引用这些观点来反驳当地人的偏见。这些请求同时连接到两个不同的主体间空间。一方面,他们试图打破这种语境中交流的实质性不对称,另一方面,萨尔韦克似乎希望,如果他成功地在自己和赫特之间创造出真正的主体间性,这将有助于他解决他在自己和周围人之间的主体间性空间中遇到的问题。
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“Ma palun saatke mulle üks erakiri…” Intersubjektiivsus Jaan Saalvergi kirjades Jakob Hurdale
Letters are a means of communication with people who are far away. As such, letters are always intended to create intersubjective space common to the sender and receiver of the letter. The intersubjectivity can be created in different ways; for example, alluding to shared memories, using shared idioms or inserting direct addresses into the letters. Ideally the exchange of letters is symmetrical, but the reality tends to be nonideal – letters go missing, one partner is more passive and there can be a hierarchical relationship between the sender and the receiver. This asymmetricity, however, does not diminish the potential intersubjectivity of any particular letter. The article focuses on intersubjectivity in the letters sent by a farmer and folklore collector Jaan Saalverk (1874–1932) to Jakob Hurt. In 1888 Hurt started widespread folklore collecting campaigns; he published appeals in several newspapers and with the help of these hoped to build up a dense network of local collectors. The campaign lasted until Hurt’s death in 1907, and during this time about a thousand people stepped in. Saalverk participated in the campaign in 1896–1905 and he was one of the most prolific co-workers of Hurt from Jüri parish. As in most cases the organizers of the campaigns and the local collectors did not meet in person, the collecting campaigns can be considered as epistolary events – people who participated had to be able to use the postal system and know how to address other people in epistolary exchanges. In this article I do not cover everything that was sent by Saalverk to Hurt but, taking a narrower focus, study one special genre – the letters sent by him. Letters were not an obligatory part of collecting campaigns and there were collectors who never sent a letter to Hurt. However, most of the collectors wrote letters on several occasions. Some were added to collected materials and commented on them, some were sent in between collections; most of the letters dealt with collecting activity, but there were plenty of those that addressed other issues. The folklore collecting campaigns provide quite a special epistolary context. One aspect to be noted is social hierarchy – Hurt was a parson and had a university degree, while most of the collectors were farmers, that is, had considerably lower social standing. Besides, the communication took place on the borderline between private and public spheres – letters sent by collectors were private, but Hurt often quoted them in his public reports. This context of epistolary communication was marked by asymmetry – collectors always wrote more than Hurt. In his letters to Hurt, Saalverk touches upon several issues that can be found in the letters of other collectors as well. He writes about the importance of collecting for the nation and for himself, about his concerns over the value of his contribution and the prejudices that people from his area have towards folklore collecting. While he dwells on the importance of collecting, he seems to feel empowered by perceiving it as part of the modern world (opposed to drinking and fighting as non-modern ways to spend one’s free time); but considering the prejudices of local people he seems to be puzzled and not so confident anymore. A special trait of Saalverk’s letters is the devices he uses to create an intersubjective space between himself and Hurt. He does not use the most common device of folklore collectors – metaphorical language that Hurt employs in public texts about folklore collecting. Saalverk relies on direct addresses – in most of his letters, there is a plea for Hurt to send him a private letter and explain to him the importance of folklore collecting so that Saalverk could cite these ideas to refute the prejudices of local people. These pleas are connected to two different intersubjective spaces at once. On the one hand, they try to break the substantial asymmetry of the communication in this context, on the other hand Saalverk seems to hope that if he succeeds in creating real intersubjectivity between himself and Hurt, it would help him to solve problems he is having in the intersubjective space between himself and people around him.
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来源期刊
Maetagused
Maetagused Social Sciences-Cultural Studies
CiteScore
0.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
20
审稿时长
16 weeks
期刊介绍: It is the only journal publishing original research on folkloristics, ethnomusicology, cultural anthropology, and religious studies in Estonian, with summaries in English. The journal has an important role in mediating to the scholarly community of one million Estonian speakers original studies and articles by foreign researchers specially submitted to the journal for translating. The journal also publishes translations of selected prime researches from scientific journals in other languages to elaborate specialised terminology in Estonian. In addition, the journal publishes articles on applied sciences, as well as reviews of books and audio materials, conferences and fieldwork, overviews of research centres in the world, defended theses, etc.
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