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I. Sanders, J. Obrebski and K. Karavidas

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Title: I. Sanders, J. Obrebski and K. Karavidas


1
I. Sanders, J. Obrebski and K. Karavidas
  • Interwar ethnography in the Balkans

2
  • We will focus on the common aspects of
  • their methodology
  • their research agenda,
  • their theoretical background.
  • (Other similar cases)

3
Sanders, Obrebski and Karavidas
  • Conducted fieldwork in central Bulgaria and the
    geographic region of Macedonia
  • Started their research projects in the period
    between mid 1920s late 1930s
  • Were in favor of ethnographic fieldwork research
  • Focus their attention on community studies
  • Shared similar political agendas (Sanders and
    Karavidas)

4
Fieldwork sites
5
Irwin Sanders (1909 - 2005)
  • (I. Sanders in 1981)

6
The American College of Sofia(Main entrance)
7
The American College of Sofia(Sanders Building)
8
I. Sanders
  • 1929 Washington and Lee University, Va.
  • 1929 travels in the southern Balkans
  • 1930 Fieldwork research in the village of Talpa,
    lecturing at the ?.C.S.
  • 1936 A Bulgarian Village
  • 1938 Ph.D. (Cornell University)
  • 1940 Staff member at the USA Consulate in
    Belgrade
  • 1940 1956 University of Kentucky
  • 1949 Balkan Village
  • 1951 1952 Fieldwork research in ?????a??a and
    Greek Macedonia
  • 1952 53 Rainbow in the Rock People of Rural
    Greece
  • 1960 1963 Boston University (Graduate
    Community Sociology Program)
  • 1963 Ford Foundation (Assist. Director of the
    international educational and research program)

9
  • 1936, A Bulgarian Village.
  • 1939, May. Neighborhoods and Neighborly
    Relations in a Bulgarian Village, Social Forces,
    Vol.17, No. 4, pp. 532-537.
  • 1939, Oct. Sociometric work with a Bulgarian
    woodcutting group, Sociometry, Vol. 2, No. 4,
    pp. 58-68.
  • 1940, Alabama Rural Communities A study of
    Chilton County, Alabama College.
  • 1940, Mar. The School Discovers the Community,
    Journal of Educational Sociology, Vol. 13, No. 7,
    pp. 397-402.
  • 1940, Oct. Bulgarians and the Southern Rural
    Whites in Contrast, Social Forces, Vol. 19, No.
    1, pp. 88-94.
  • 1943, Aug. Sociometry and the Sociology
    Classroom, Vol. 6, No. 3, pp. 249-250.
  • 1945, Farmer of the World the development of
    agricultural extension, New York, Columbia
    University Press.
  • 1947, Dec. Societies around the World, Journal
    of Educational Sociology, Vol. 21, No. 4, pp.
    238-242.
  • 1949, Oct. Societies around the World A Social
    Science Course at the University of Kentucky,
    Social Forces, Vol. 28, No. 1, pp. 40-45.

10
  • 1949, Balkan Village, University of Kentucky
    Press Lexington, KY.
  • 1949, Oct. Societies around the World A social
    science course at the University of Kentucky,
    Social Forces, Vol. 28, No. 1, pp. 40-45.
  • 1949, Nov. The Use of Block Leader in Effective
    Community Mobilization, Sociometry, Vol. 12, No.
    4, pp. 265-275.
  • 1950, Making good communities better a handbook
    for civic-minded men and women, University of
    Kentucky Press, Lexington.
  • 1950, Preparing a Community Profile The
    Methodology of a Social Reconnaissance
    (Lexington, KY Kentucky Community Series No. 7,
    Bureau of Community Services, University of
    Kentucky).
  • 1950, Sep. Changing Status of the Peasant in
    Eastern Europe, Annuals of the American Academy
    of Political and Social Sciences, Vol. 271,
    Moscows European Satellites, pp. 78-93.
  • 1953, Making Good Communities Better, Lexington,
    KY University of Kentucky Press.
  • 1954, Dec. The Nomadic People of Northern
    Greece Ethnic Puzzle and Cultural Survival,
    Social Forces, Vol. 33, No. 2, pp. 122-129.
  • 1955, A statement on a proposal resettlement
    project in Bolivia.
  • 1955, Nov. Selection of Participants in a Mutual
    Aid Group in Rural Greece, Sociometry, Vol. 18,
    No. 4, Sociometry and the Science of Man, pp.
    326-329.
  • 1955, Dec. The Contribution of the Specialist to
    Community Development, Journal of Educational
    Sociology, Vol. 29, No. 4, The rule of the
    Community Consultant, pp. 151-163.

11
  • 1956, Oct. Communist-Dominated Education in
    Bulgaria A study in Social Relationships,
    American Slavic and East European Review, Vol.
    15, No. 3, pp. 364-381.
  • 1956, Oct. Research with Peasants in
    Underdeveloped Areas, Social Forces, Vol. 35,
    No. 1, pp. 1-10.
  • 1958, Theories of Community Development, Rural
    Sociology, Vol. 23, pp. 1-2.
  • 1958, The Community An introduction to a Social
    System, New York, The Ronald Press.
  • 1958, Collectivization of Agricultural in Soviet
    Strategy, in Collectivization of Agriculture in
    Eastern Europe, University of Kentucky Press, pp.
    49-66.
  • 1959, Mar. The moral basis of a Backward
    Society, The American Journal of Sociology, Vol.
    64, No. 5.
  • 1960, Feb. The Community Social Profile,
    American Sociology Review, Vol. 25, No. 1, pp.
    75-77.
  • 1962 Rainbow in the Rock The People of Rural
    Greece. Cambridge. Harvard University Press.
  • 1962, Aug. The involvement of health
    professionals and local officials in fluoridation
    controversies, A. J. P.H., Vol. 52, No. 8, pp.
    1274-1287.
  • 1963 Making Good Communities Better (Rev.).
    Lexington The University of Kentucky Press.
  • 1966 The Community An introduction to a Social
    System. New York The Ronald Press Company.
  • 1968, Sep. Tzintzuntzan Mexican Peasants in a
    Changing World, The American Journal of
    Sociology, Vol. 2, pp. 211-213.

12
  • 1970 Bridges to understanding International
    programs of American colleges and universities,
    New York Mc Graw-Hill.
  • 1975 The Community, New York Ronald Press.
  • 1975 The Community Social Profile, American
    Sociological Review, 25 75-77.
  • 1975 Polish American Community Life A survey of
    Research, New York Polish Institute of Arts and
    Sciences in America.
  • 1976 East European Peasantries Social Behavior.
    An annoted bibliography of periodical articles,
    Boston G. K. Hall.
  • 1976 Rural Community Studies in the United
    States A Decade in Review, Annual Review of
    Sociology, Vol. 2, pp. 35-53.
  • 1977 Rural Society. Englewood Cliff, NJ Prentice
    Hall.
  • 1985 The social renaissance method of community
    study, in F. Fear and H. Schwarzweller (eds.),
    Research in Rural Sociology and Development,
    Greenwich. Connecticut JAI Press.
  • The concept of Community Development, Community
    Development as a process. University of Missouri,
    Columbia, Missouri.

13
K. Karavidas (1890 1973)
14
K. Karavidas
  • 1908 1912 Athens University Law School, active
    in the f??t?t??? s??t??f?? (Students
    companion)
  • 1912 1913 Fighting in the Balkan Wars
  • 1917 Advisor at the Bureau of E. Venizelos
    revolutionary government
  • 1917 1921 Staff member at the Head
    Administration Service of Greek Macedonia
  • Winter Spring 1921 Fieldwork in the Florina
    Bitola valley
  • 1922 Staff member at the Greek Higher
    Commission at Smyrna/Izmir
  • 1922 1924 Head publisher of the ???????S
    (COMMUNITY) Journal
  • 1924 1926 Staff member of the Greek M.F.A.
    positioned in Greek Macedonia
  • 1941 1944 Founding member of the ??µ???at???
    ?µ?da (Democratic Defense) resistance group

15
K. Karavidas
  • 1920 The farmers anthem
  • 1927 The Slavo-Macedonian rural community in the
    region of Monastir
  • 1930 Democracy and local administration in Greek
  • 1931 Ruralis. A comparative study
  • 1936 A communalist addressing a communist
  • 1936 Economic rationalism and local authorities
  • 1938 The institualization of farmers rites de
    passage
  • 1939 Essay on the importance of the nature and
    meaning of community institution in Greece

16
Joseph Obrebski (1905 - 1967)
  • (Obrebski in Volche in 1932 1933)

17
J. Obrebski
  • 1930 ?.?. (Krakow University)
  • 1929 1932 fieldwork in Bulgaria, Dobrudja and
    Macedonia
  • 1932 1933 fieldwork in Volche (Ph.D. research
    under the supervision of ?. Malinowski in the
    L.S.E.)
  • 1934 1936 Fieldwork in Poland
  • 1934 1939 Assist. Director of the Polish
    Institute of Rural Culture1945 1959 L.S.E.
  • 1947 1948 Fieldwork in Jamaica (Development
    etc.)
  • 1959 - 1967 Staff member at the UN Secretariat
    at NY, lecturer at the C.W. Post College of Long
    Island University

18
J. Obrebski
  • 1933 LSE Ph.D Thesis Family organization among
    Slavs as reflected in the custom of couvade
  • 1974 Yesterdays people peasants in Polesie an
    exhibition of photographs of rural eastern
    Poland, Amherst, Massachusetts.
  • 1976 The changing peasantry of Eastern Europe,
    edited by Barbara and Joel
  • 1977 Ritual and social structure in a Macedonian
    village, edited by Barbara Ker
  • Ludwik Krzywicki, in Obrebski Collection,
    Special Collections Archives, W.E.B. Du Bois
    Library, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
  • Ritual and Social Structure in a Macedonian
    village, EthnoAnthropoZoom 21-18
  • Bronislaw Malinowskis Functional Method
    (unpublished)

19
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Obrebski, Sanders and Karavidas common background
  • The existence of two different types of society
    which are treated as the very antithesis of each
    other
  • The assumption that communities are a special
    form of group life which can only be found in the
    one of the two parts of the dichotomy, that is
    the traditional, rural folk etc. society
  • (3) The acceptance of some common characteristics
    of every folk rural society (both on the national
    and Balkan levels)
  • (4) The quest for sample communities

36
  • The presupposed isolation of rural communities
    and their unchanging character
  • The presupposed egalitarianism of community life
  • The romantic nostalgia for community life (S.,
    O., K.)
  • which, in the case of Sanders and Karavidas, is
    developed into a political position refering to
    issues of modernisation and development
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