Have a personal or library account? Click to login
Alone in the Country of the Catholics: Labrador Inuit in Prague (1880) Cover

Alone in the Country of the Catholics: Labrador Inuit in Prague (1880)

Open Access
|Oct 2021

References

  1. AMES, Eric (2008): Carl Hagenbeck’s Empire of Entertainments. Seattle: University of Washington Press.
  2. [anon.] (1871): History of the Mission of the Church of the United Brethren in Labrador for the Past Hundred Years. London: W. Mallalieu & Co.
  3. ASH, Mitchell G. – SURMAN, Jan (eds.) (2012): The Nationalization of Scientific Knowledge in the Habsburg Empire, 1848-1918. New York: Springer.10.1057/9781137264978
  4. BAEHRE, Rainer (2008): Early Anthropological Discourse on the Inuit and the Influence of Virchow on Boas. In Études/Inuit/Studies 32 (2), pp. 13-34.
  5. BLANCHARD, Pascal – LEMAIRE, Sandrine – DEROO, Éric (eds.) (2012): MenschenZoos: Schaufenster der Unmenschlichkeit. Hamburg: Editions du Crieur Public.
  6. COHEN, Gary B. (2006): The Politics of Survival: Germans in Prague, 1861-1914. 2nd ed. West Lafayette: Purdue University Press.
  7. DICKINS, Tom (2011): The Czech-Speaking Lands, Their Peoples, and Contact Communities: Titles, Names and Ethnonyms. In Slavonic and East European Review 89 (3), 401-454.10.5699/slaveasteurorev2.89.3.0401
  8. FUDGE, Thomas A. (2010): Jan Hus: Religious Reform and Social Revolution in Bohemia. London: I.B. Tauris.10.5040/9780755621859
  9. GLASSHEIM, Eagle (2005): Between Empire and Nation: The Bohemian Nobility, 1880-1918. In: Pieter Judson, Marsha Rozenblit (eds.): Constructing Nationalities in East Central Europe. New York/Oxford: Berghahn Books, pp. 61-87.10.2307/j.ctv22jntk6.6
  10. GOUAFFO, Albert (2013): Prince Dido of Didotown and ‘Human Zoos’ in Wilhelmine Germany: Strategies for Self-Representation under the Othering Gaze. In Eve Rosenhaft, Robbie Aitken (eds.): Africa in Europe: Studies in Transnational Practice in the Long Twentieth Century. Liverpool: Liverpool University Press, pp. 19-33.10.5949/liverpool/9781846318474.003.0002
  11. GRÉGR, Eduard (1858): O lebkách člověčích vůbec a o slovanských zvláště [On Human Skulls in General and on Slavic in Especial]. In Živa 6 (4), pp. 223-242.
  12. HAMILTON, J. Taylor – HAMILTON, Kenneth G. (1967): History of the Moravian Church, Bethlehem: Moravian Church.
  13. HERBSMEIER, Michael (1994): Schauspiel Europa: Die Außereuropäische Entdeckung Europas im 19. Jahrhundert am Beispiel afrikanischer Texte. In Historische Anthropologie 2 (3), pp. 331-349.
  14. HERZA, Filip (2016a): Anthropologists and Their Monsters: Ethnicity, Body, and Ab/Normality in Early Czech Anthropology. In East Central Europe 43 (1-2), pp. 64-98.10.1163/18763308-04302007
  15. HERZA, Filip (2016b): Black Don Juan and the Ashanti from Asch: Representations of “Africans” in Prague and Vienna, 1892-1899. In Adéla Jůnová Macková, Lucie Storchová, Libor Jůn (eds.): Visualizing the Orient: Central Europe and the Near East in the 19th and 20th Centuries. Prague: Academy of Performing Arts, 95-105.
  16. HERZA, Filip (2018): Imaginace jinakosti a přehlídky lidských ‘kuriozit’ v Praze v 19. a 20. století [Imagination of Otherness and the ‘Freak’ Shows in Prague in the 19th and 20th Century]. PhD dissertation. Prague: Charles University.
  17. HOUŽVIČKA, Václav (2016): Czechs and Germans 1848–2004: The Sudeten Question and the Transformation of Central Europe. Prague: Karolinum.
  18. JACOBSEN, Johan Adrian (2014): Voyage with the Labrador Eskimos, 1880-1881, transl. and ed. Hartmut Lutz. Quebec: Polar Horizons.
  19. JAEGER, Jiří (1963): Šest let mezi Eskymáky [Six Years among the Eskimo]. Prague: Orbis.
  20. KISCH, Egon Erwin (1941): Sensation Fair: Tales of Prague,
  21. (2017): To the Origins of American Archaeology in the Czech Lands: The Case of Julius Nestler. In Ethnologia Actualis 17 (1), pp. 89-106.10.1515/eas-2017-0010
  22. KŘÍŽOVÁ, Markéta (2020): Wild Chamacoco’ and the Czechs: The Double-Edged transl. Guy Enode. New York: Modern Age Books.
  23. KLÁPŠŤOVÁ, Kateřina (2015): Labrador Moravian Missions and the Czech Collectors of Inuit objects in the Early Twentieth Century. In Annals of the Náprstek Museum 36 (1), pp. 23-44.
  24. KŘÍŽ, Bohumír – BENEŠ, Čestmír (2010): Historie výskytu pravých neštovic v českých zemích od poloviny 19. století do současnosti [The History of Smallpox in the Czech Lands from the Mid-19th Century to Date]. In Zprávy epidemiologie a mikrobiologie 19 (1-2), pp. 34-36.
  25. KŘÍŽOVÁ, Markéta Ethnographic Show of Vojtěch Frič, 1908-1909. In Dagnoslaw Demski (ed.): Staged Otherness: Ethnic Shows in Central and Eastern Europe, 1850-1939. Warsaw, in press.
  26. LEMMEN, Sarah (2013): Noncolonial Orientalism? Czech Travel Writing on Africa and Asia around 1918. In James Hodkinson, John Walker (eds.): Deploying Orientalism in Culture and History: From Germany to Central and Eastern Europe. Rochester: Camden House, pp. 209-227.
  27. LORING, Stephen (1998): In Torgnak’s Realm: The Nineteenth-Century Photography of Moravian Missionaries in Labrador. In Johathan H. King, Henrieta Lidchi (eds.): Imaging the Arctic. Seattle: University of Washingon Press, pp. 207-220.
  28. LEMPA, Heikki – PEUCKER, Paul (2010): Introduction. In Heikki Lempa, Paul Peucker (eds.): Self, Community, World: Moravian Education in a Transatlantic World. Bethlehem: Moravian Archives, pp. 15-30.
  29. MAJER, Jiří (1994): Vojta Náprstek a počátky českého průmyslového muzejnictví [Vojta Náprstek and the Beginnings of the Czech Industrial Museum]. In Jan Hozák (ed.): Vojta Náprstek a muzejnictví [Vojta Náprstek and Museums]. Prague: NTM, pp. 15-21.
  30. MEIER, Gudrun (1978). Zur Geschichte des Museums. In Völkerkundemuseum Herrnhut: Außenstelle des Staatlichen Museums für Völkerkunde, Dresden, Dresden: Museum für Völkerkunde, pp. 5-9.
  31. MURPHY, Daniel (1995): Comenius: A Critical Reassessment of his Life and Works. Dublin: Irish Academic Press.
  32. NEŠPOR, Zdeněk et al. (2010): Náboženství v 19. století: Nejcírkevnější století, nebo období zrodu českého ateismu? [Religion in the 19th century: The Most Religious Century, or the Period of the Birth of Czech Atheism?]. Prague: Scriptorium.
  33. NIPPA, Annegret (2003): Ethnographie und Herrnhutter Mission. Herrnhut: Völkerkundemuseum.
  34. NOVOTNÝ, Vladimír (ed.) (1997): Hospody a pivo v české společnosti [Pubs and Beer in Czech Society]. Prague: Academia.
  35. PALACKÝ, František (1867): Dějiny národu českého v Čechách a v Moravě [History of the Czech Nation in Bohemia and Moravia]. Prague: Friedrich Tempsky.
  36. PÁNEK, Jaroslav – TŮMA, Oldřich et al. (2018): A History of the Czech Lands, transl. Justin Quinn, Petra Key, Lea Bennis. Prague: Karolinum.
  37. RIVET, France (2014): In the Footsteps of Abraham Ulrikab: The Events of 1880-1881, Quebec: Polar Horizons.
  38. ROZHOŇ, Vladimír (2005): Čeští cestovatelé a obraz zámoří v české společnosti [Czech Travellers and the Image of Overseas Regions in Czech society]. Prague: A. Skřivan.
  39. ŘEZNÍKOVÁ, Lenka et al. (2014): Figurace paměti: J. A. Komenský v kulturách vzpomínání 19. a 20. století [Figuration of Mmory: J. A. Comenius in Culture of Remembrance of the 19th and 20th Century]. Dolní Břežany: Scriptorium.
  40. SECKÁ, Milena (2011): Vojta Náprstek: Vlastenec, sběratel, mecenáš [Vojta Náprstek: Patriot, Collectioner, Maecenas]. Prague: Vyšehrad.
  41. SECKÁ, Milena (2016): Jen Náprstková, prosím…: Neobyčejný život v dobových pramenech [Just Mrs. Náprstek, Please…: Extraordinary Life in the Sources]. Prague: National Museum.
  42. SECKÁ, Milena – ŠÁMAL, Martin (eds.) (2014): Byl to můj osud…: Zápisky Josefy Náprstkové [It Was My Destiny…: Notes of Josefa Náprstková]. Prague: National Museum.
  43. SLÁDEK, Josef Václav (1875): Básně [Poems]. Prague: Ferd. Dattel.
  44. ŠÁMAL, Martin (2013): Emil Holub: Cestovatel – etnograf – sběratel [Emil Holub: Traveller – Ethnographer – Collector]. Prague: National Museum.
  45. ŠKERLJ, Božo – BOŽEK, Josef (1952): Jindřich Matiegka and the Development of Czech Physical Anthropology. In American Journal of Physical Anthropology 10 (4), pp. 515-519.10.1002/ajpa.1330100408
  46. TAYLOR, J. Garth (1981): An Eskimo Abroad, 1880: His Diary and Death. In Canadian Geographic 101 (5), pp. 38-43.
  47. ULRIKAB, Abraham (2005): The Diary of Abraham Ulrikab: Text and Context, transl. and ed. Hartmut Lutz. Ottawa: University of Ottawa Press.
  48. VIRCHOW, Rudolf (1880): Eskimos von Labrador (Ausserordentliche Zusammenkunft im zoologischen Garten am 7. November 1880). In Zeitschrift für Ethnologie 12, pp. 253-274.
  49. VUORELA, Ulla (2009): Colonial Complicity: The ‘Postcolonial’ in a Nordic Context. In Suvi Keskinen et al. (eds.): Complying with Colonialism: Gender, Race and Ethnicity in the Nordic Region. Farnham: Ashgate, pp. 19-33.
  50. WHITELEY, William H. (1966): The Moravian Missionaries and the Labrador Eskimos in the Eighteenth Century. In Church History 35 (1), pp. 76-92.10.2307/3162673
  51. WOLFF, Larry (1994): Inventing Eastern Europe: The Map of Civilization in the Mind of the Enlightenment. Stanford: Stanford University Press.
  52. ZANTOP, Susanne (1997): Colonial Fantasies: Conquest, Family and Nation in Precolonial Germany, 1770–1870. Durham: Duke University Press.10.2307/j.ctv11cw4kw
DOI: https://doi.org/10.2478/eas-2021-0010 | Journal eISSN: 1339-7877 | Journal ISSN: 1339-7834
Language: English
Page range: 20 - 45
Published on: Oct 5, 2021
Published by: University of Ss. Cyril and Methodius in Trnava
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 2 issues per year

© 2021 Markéta Křížová, published by University of Ss. Cyril and Methodius in Trnava
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 License.