Much as I Owe to Mannhardt…:. Wald- und Feldkulte at the Roots of The Golden Bough

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dc.contributor.author Rosa, Frederico Delgado
dc.date.accessioned 2024-03-06T15:43:42Z
dc.date.available 2024-03-06T15:43:42Z
dc.date.issued 2023-02-10
dc.identifier.citation Rosa, Frederico Delgado. "Much as I Owe to Mannhardt…:. *Wald- und Feldkulte* at the Roots of The Golden Bough." Paper presented at the Shaking the Tree, Breaking the Bough: Frazer's Golden Bough at 100, Melbourne, Australia, February 10, 2023. In New Age Movements, Occultism, and Spiritualism Research Library. Archives and Special Collections. Valdosta State University. Valdosta, GA. en_US
dc.identifier.other ED920221-5CED-C888-4F2B-926C632B0699
dc.identifier.uri https://hdl.handle.net/10428/7057
dc.identifier.uri https://youtu.be/g2XAre5fBBk
dc.description 1 video file. ms150-40-003_delgado-rosa_mannhardt_2023-02-10.mp4 .mp4 399.79 MB 419,214,860 en_US
dc.description.abstract Wilhelm Mannhardt (1831-1880) is an excluded ancestor par excellence. Never translated, seldom read, his work is only mentioned in passing, as a source of data for The Golden Bough. Despite James Frazer acknowledging his major debt to the German mythologist and folklorist, in particular to his Wald- und Feldkulte (1875-1877) – but also to previous (much less voluminous works), Roggenwolf und Roggenhund (1865), and Die Korndämonen (1868) –, historians of late Victorian anthropology, including specialists of Frazer, have not paid much attention to the originality of Mannhardt's themes and theories. A pathetic figure, suffering since childhood from a disease that gave him the size of a midget, he died aged 49, but that is only one of the reasons for the oblivion in which he fell. The paper is a contribution to filling this surprising historiographic gap through a minute and comparative reading of Frazer, Mannhardt and some of their shared sources. It recaptures the intellectual biography of a man who became a specialist of the prehistoric tree cult in Europe, but most of all highlights his import as a major source of inspiration of Frazer's magnum opus, including its leitmotiv: the killing of the tree spirit's human representative. In the end, the originality of The Golden Bough is both put in perspective and better understood. Additional Authors: Shaking the Tree, Breaking the Bough: Frazer's Golden Bough at 100 (Conference); Tully, Caroline Jane; Budin, Stephanie Lynn; University of Melbourne; en_US
dc.format.mimetype video/mp4 en_US
dc.language.iso en_US en_US
dc.publisher New Age Movements, Occultism, and Spiritualism Research Library en_US
dc.relation.ispartofseries MS/150/40/;003
dc.rights Permission to post this digital asset provided by Dr. Frederico Delgado Rosa to the Valdosta State University Archives & Special Collections to be part of the New Age Movements, Occultism, and Spiritualism Research Library. en_US
dc.subject Mannhardt, Wilhelm, 1831-1880. Wald- und Feldkulte en_US
dc.subject Mannhardt, Wilhelm, 1831-1880--Criticism and interpretation en_US
dc.subject Frazer, James George, 1854-1941. en_US
dc.subject Frazer, James George, 1854-1941. Golden bough en_US
dc.subject Video recordings en_US
dc.title Much as I Owe to Mannhardt…:. Wald- und Feldkulte at the Roots of The Golden Bough en_US
dc.type Video en_US


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