ENACTING GEMEINDE IN THE LANGUAGE OF STORY: NARRATIVE PERFORMANCE AMONG KANSAS MENNONITES FROM VOLYN

This article examines oral narrative performance within the cultural context of the Swiss Volynian Mennonites in Moundridge, Kansas, whose forbears were members of a congregational group that migrated from Volyn Province in Polish Russia in 1874. A Swiss Volynian Mennonite himself, the author tape-r...

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Main Author: John McCabe-Juhnke
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Lesya Ukrainka Volyn National University 2015-11-01
Series:Психологічні перспективи
Subjects:
Online Access:https://psychoprospects.eenu.edu.ua/index.php/psychoprospects/article/view/85
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spelling doaj-789197304681460fac6e5a805eb75a182020-12-02T01:39:34ZengLesya Ukrainka Volyn National UniversityПсихологічні перспективи2227-13762308-37432015-11-012620922185ENACTING GEMEINDE IN THE LANGUAGE OF STORY: NARRATIVE PERFORMANCE AMONG KANSAS MENNONITES FROM VOLYNJohn McCabe-Juhnke0Bethel CollegeThis article examines oral narrative performance within the cultural context of the Swiss Volynian Mennonites in Moundridge, Kansas, whose forbears were members of a congregational group that migrated from Volyn Province in Polish Russia in 1874. A Swiss Volynian Mennonite himself, the author tape-recorded interviews with second and third generation descendants of the Mennonites from Volyn. Using interview transcriptions and participant observation in the Moundridge community as primary data, the author analyzes how the language of storytelling performance both sustains and is shaped by social and cultural norms of Swiss Mennonite Gemeinde. An analysis of the personal and social roles of Swiss Volynian storytellers reflects a fundamental tension between individuality and conformity. Swiss Volynians most frequently perform at the level of natural or unself-conscious narration rather than intentional or public narration, allowing oral narrators to maintain the community norm of self-effacement despite their obvious competence as storytellers. An exami­nation of the written transcriptions of these oral narratives reveals noticeable contextual overtones. The use of dialect, insider’s code and community-oriented genres demonstrates the storytellers’ evocation of an in-group context for storytellinghttps://psychoprospects.eenu.edu.ua/index.php/psychoprospects/article/view/85Swiss Mennonites, storytelling, narrative performance, Kotosufka, German dialect, Moundridge, Kansas
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author John McCabe-Juhnke
spellingShingle John McCabe-Juhnke
ENACTING GEMEINDE IN THE LANGUAGE OF STORY: NARRATIVE PERFORMANCE AMONG KANSAS MENNONITES FROM VOLYN
Психологічні перспективи
Swiss Mennonites, storytelling, narrative performance, Kotosufka, German dialect, Moundridge, Kansas
author_facet John McCabe-Juhnke
author_sort John McCabe-Juhnke
title ENACTING GEMEINDE IN THE LANGUAGE OF STORY: NARRATIVE PERFORMANCE AMONG KANSAS MENNONITES FROM VOLYN
title_short ENACTING GEMEINDE IN THE LANGUAGE OF STORY: NARRATIVE PERFORMANCE AMONG KANSAS MENNONITES FROM VOLYN
title_full ENACTING GEMEINDE IN THE LANGUAGE OF STORY: NARRATIVE PERFORMANCE AMONG KANSAS MENNONITES FROM VOLYN
title_fullStr ENACTING GEMEINDE IN THE LANGUAGE OF STORY: NARRATIVE PERFORMANCE AMONG KANSAS MENNONITES FROM VOLYN
title_full_unstemmed ENACTING GEMEINDE IN THE LANGUAGE OF STORY: NARRATIVE PERFORMANCE AMONG KANSAS MENNONITES FROM VOLYN
title_sort enacting gemeinde in the language of story: narrative performance among kansas mennonites from volyn
publisher Lesya Ukrainka Volyn National University
series Психологічні перспективи
issn 2227-1376
2308-3743
publishDate 2015-11-01
description This article examines oral narrative performance within the cultural context of the Swiss Volynian Mennonites in Moundridge, Kansas, whose forbears were members of a congregational group that migrated from Volyn Province in Polish Russia in 1874. A Swiss Volynian Mennonite himself, the author tape-recorded interviews with second and third generation descendants of the Mennonites from Volyn. Using interview transcriptions and participant observation in the Moundridge community as primary data, the author analyzes how the language of storytelling performance both sustains and is shaped by social and cultural norms of Swiss Mennonite Gemeinde. An analysis of the personal and social roles of Swiss Volynian storytellers reflects a fundamental tension between individuality and conformity. Swiss Volynians most frequently perform at the level of natural or unself-conscious narration rather than intentional or public narration, allowing oral narrators to maintain the community norm of self-effacement despite their obvious competence as storytellers. An exami­nation of the written transcriptions of these oral narratives reveals noticeable contextual overtones. The use of dialect, insider’s code and community-oriented genres demonstrates the storytellers’ evocation of an in-group context for storytelling
topic Swiss Mennonites, storytelling, narrative performance, Kotosufka, German dialect, Moundridge, Kansas
url https://psychoprospects.eenu.edu.ua/index.php/psychoprospects/article/view/85
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