A collection of course work by Mark Bandera including book reviews, annotated bibliographies, and essay on topics such as folklore, folksongs, tsymbaly, and bandury.
UntitledA description of how an outdoor oven (p'iets) was made and how the weather influenced the use of it from the recollections of Ivan Ivasiuk.
UntitledA comparison of traditional Ukrainian folksongs from contemporary Poland with those in North America. An analysis of Lemko features in music and a general discussion of song types, texts and translations.
UntitledA book review on "Ukrains'ka radians'ka fol'kloristika" (Soviet Ukrainian Folklore) by Berezovs'kyi.
UntitledA review of Robert Kylmasz's doctoral dissertation "Ukrainian folklore in Canada: An immigrant complex in transition".
UntitledA summary of two articles: "Folklore Politics in the Soviet Ukraine: Perspective on Some Recent Trends and Developments" by Robert Kylmasz and "Concepts of Folklore and Folklife Studies" by Richard Dorson.
UntitledAn investigation of Ukrainian folklore theory as presented in Ukrainian serial publications in the 20th century.
UntitledThe collection consists of various course assignments submitted by Andriy when he was a master and PhD student in the Ukrainian Folklore Program at the University of Alberta. The assignments cover different topics of Ukrainian and Ukrainian Canadian traditional culture and folklore, and include field recordings as well as final essays.
UntitledAn analysis and comparative sources of some beliefs about weather collected from a taped interview.
Comparison of two essays: “The History and Present State of Research” and “Rozvykok ukrains’koi fol’klorystyky"
A summary of a book by Berezovs’yi “Ukrains’ka radians’ka fol’klorystyka”
“Folklore politics in the Soviet Ukraine” by Klymasz and “Concepts of folklore and folklife studies” by Dorson
Description of the wedding of Nykola Nahachewsky and Maria Kowch in Swan Lake, Saskatchewan, 1920. The wedding is analyzed in terms of the influence of four factors: momentum of tradition, personalities of the participants, incidental circu
Based on Kotsiubynsky’s Shadows of Forgotten Ancestors and Klymasz’s Funerary rhetoric among Ukrainians in western Canada
A study of the soviet Ukrainian journal Narodna tvorchist' taethnohrafiia for the years 1983 and 84 in an attempt to understand the relative roles of the comparative and national orientations in contemporary Soviet folkloristics. bib.