30 eThnologia euroPaea 47:1
What actually constitutes an academic discipline?
Being incorporated by academic institutions, de-
scribed by journals and handbooks, delineated
through historiography and reputation? Most im-
portantly, I think, a scholarly field is represented via
its practitioners – the active community of scholars
themselves. They shape the field, renew it and even-
tually pass the scientific baton on to younger gen-
erations by enthusing and inspiring students. They
should create the “charisma” of a discipline that
draws students into the field of study.
It was in the late 1990s, as a historian, that I first
heard about “European ethnology”. I had started
working at the Meertens Institute in Amsterdam
in the department of Volkskunde (Folkloristics). In
1998 – rather late in the European context – this de-
partment was renamed Nederlandse Etnologie (Dutch
Ethnology). I was still puzzled. What did that imply?
Was it a specifically Dutch version of ethnology? If
so, how did it relate to the international discipline
of European ethnology? I was determined to under-
stand this better. My colleagues made the practical
suggestion that, for an initial immersion into that
renamed field, I check the few handbooks available
and browse through the many volumes of a jour-
nal that was being published in Copenhagen. I was
told that the journal started due to an old scholarly
feud between folklorists and ethnologists within the
then Commission internationale des Arts et Traditions
Populaires at Unesco. Comprised mostly of Scandi-
navians (the name of Sigurd Erixon, the leading eth-
nologist of the time, was mentioned in that context),
the publication continued after the schism as a jour-
nal for the ethnology following; most of the folklor-
ists regrouped as the international society SIEF in
Athens in 1964.
2
That they had split up, I was told
again, was not all that surprising, as Nordic ethnol-
ogy was known for its modern views and approaches
after having reinvented itself by breaking the chains
of traditionalist “folkloristic stances”.
However, the volumes on the shelf displayed an
archaic Latin name as an equivalent for the field
of European ethnology: Ethnologia Europaea.
3
And
again, I thought, what does that mean? I took the first
volume from 1967 off the shelf and looked at the first
page. To my surprise, the very first lines mentioned
a short historiographical contribution by the Dutch
professor August Bernet Kempers, dealing with the
Volkskunde in the Netherlands.
4
As it was published
in this very first volume, it felt reassuring that re-
search done in the Netherlands was indeed a part
of European ethnology. This was confirmed by the
fact that Bernet Kempers later became a professor of
European ethnology himself.
5
The browned pages of
the first journal volumes also made clear that those
issues dated back many years. The various historio-
graphical and discipline-focused contributions, rele-
vant in a time frame of establishing, defining, and
distinguishing European ethnology as a reinvented
discipline, had lost the topicality of their time.
I continued my perusal of the numerous volumes
in the library, and volume 19 drew my attention.
It showed the date 1989 on its back, the extraordi-
nary year in which the Berlin Wall was torn down
ETHNOLOGIA NATIONUM
Or, The World as We See It: “strange, but interesting”
1
Peter Jan Margry, Meertens Institute, University of Amsterdam
Peter Jan Margry 2017: ethnologia nationum: or, The World as We see it: “strange, but interesting”.
Ethnologia Europaea 47:1, 30–34. © Museum Tusculanum Press.
Museum Tusculanum Press :: University of Copenhagen :: www.mtp.dk :: info@mtp.dk
Ethnoologia Europaea :: Journal of European Ethnology 47:1
E-journal Copyright © 2017 Ethnologia Europaea, Copenhagen :: ISBN 987 635 4578 5 :: ISSN 1604 3030
http://www.mtp.dk/details.asp?eln=300405