Primeval Forest, Homeland, Catastrophe Travels in Malaya and "Modern Ethnology" with Pavel Šebesta / Paul Schebesta

The SVD ethnologist/ethnographer mostly known as Paul Schebesta (1887-1967) was often introduced in Czechoslovakia as "our Czech" Pavel Šebesta. Querying origins, selves and homelands, his own and in his writings (ethnography/travelogues/fiction on "dwarfs" in the "primeval...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Anthropos Vol. 116; no. 1; p. 29
Main Author: Mrázek, Jan
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Sankt Augustin Editions Saint-Paul, Anthropos Institut 01-01-2021
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Summary:The SVD ethnologist/ethnographer mostly known as Paul Schebesta (1887-1967) was often introduced in Czechoslovakia as "our Czech" Pavel Šebesta. Querying origins, selves and homelands, his own and in his writings (ethnography/travelogues/fiction on "dwarfs" in the "primeval forest"), this essay traces the multiplicity/borderlands/nomadism of Schebesta/Šebesta, also in his relation to the "Other," a concept/distinction/border that is thus destabilized or blurred. Interweaving apparently separate questions about his life and scholarship, the essay finds continuities and mirroring across distance and otherness. Following-mirroring Šebesta/Schebesta, we recognize the familiar in the strange, Silesia/Moravia in Malaya, the contemporary in the primeval, the native in the ethnologist, the head-hunter in the biological anthropologist. The essay's motley style mirrors what has been described as his "jumbled" writing, "highly coloured … scarcely in consonance with the scientific material"; it reflects his nomadism, emphasis on "experiencing together," and the conflict that he sensed between "theories" and "life, rhythm, poetry."
ISSN:0257-9774
DOI:10.5771/0257-9774-2021-1-29