uk.abstract.en | Memories of the poor and impoverished in Serbian and South Slavic oral poetry are linked to contradictory beliefs: poverty is explained by reasons of fate, some offence, sin, or misfortune, however,
the poor (as well as orphans, widows, wretched, etc.) are considered to be intermediaries between
this world and the next, therefore close to God and the ancestors, and who possess certain healing
and miraculous powers. These beliefs are merged and intermixed with other ideas about the poor,
which entered oral tradition through human experience and everyday life, and were influenced by
historical, social and economic changes (the poor who do not work or do not wish to contribute to
their community, become a social threat and their lifestyle and use of welfare are disapproved of).
In Serbian and South Slavic folk songs and ballads, representations of the poor and impoverished are
diverse regarding aspects, such as, the selection of motifs and genre, time, place, context of recording, etc. Representations of the poor and impoverished in Serbian and South Slavic oral poetry vary
from tragic to comic, from idealistic to ironic, or the subject can be depicted from a moral or realist
standpoint. Poverty is usually related to the person’s private life, his or her feelings and moods, and
may reflect their attitudes toward family, nature, community or society. Different portrayals of the
poor and impoverished may reveal personal experiences, collective customary law and practices,
way of life, ethical and religious norms, a system of values, as well as psychological motivation or
background. Special attention will be paid to poverty as a fact of daily life, and to realistic details
which make the songs and the characters particularly convincing and vivid. | cs |