Witnesses to Interwar Subcarpathian Rus’: The Sojourns of Petr Bogatyrev and Ivan Olbracht by Slavicist Patricia A. Krafcik is a major, must-read contribution to the ever-burgeoning corpus of Carpatho-Rusyn studies. Brilliantly researched, organized, and written, Witnesses documents the studies of interwar Czechoslovakia’s most ethnically diverse province by ethnographer and folklorist Petr G. Bogatyrev (1893–1971) and writer-journalist Ivan Olbracht (Kamil Zeman, 1882–1952).
— Edward Kasinec, Stanford University
This is a beautifully delineated tale about two individuals who explored a remote mountain land in the heart of Europe, discovering there an intriguing blend of ancient Slavic culture and Christianity. Krafcik’s thorough investigation of their lives and works is a wonderful contribution to our understanding of how scholars’ personalities and backgrounds influence the lenses through which they see society and culture. Krafcik offers readers a thought-provoking journey in which a fascinating intersection of East and West inspires theoretical interpretations as well as contemplation of ethnic and national identities. Biographical treatment of Bogatyrev and Olbracht, for the first time available in English, is an invaluable source for anyone interested in the history of scholarly inquiry and the understanding of other cultures. A captivating story about theory and politics, magic and tradition, clash of cultures and a vanishing old world!
— Tatiana Bužeková, Comenius University
Krafcik has written an eminently readable and impressively documented book about Subcarpathian Rus’, a far-eastern province of interwar Czechoslovakia. Much more than a geographical and historical primer on this little-known region, where the Slavic East meets West, this book offers the reader an intimate familiarity with the life and times of its denizens. Krafcik accomplishes this with the help of two outsiders who became insiders, the Czech journalist and prosaist Ivan Olbracht and the Russian ethnographer and theoretician Petr Bogatyrev, whose works introduce us both to the Carpatho-Rusyns and to their neighbors, the Hasidic Jews. Krafcik’s attention to the Jewish population, their religious practices and political orientations, is particularly noteworthy.
— Robert A. Rothstein, University of Massachusetts Amherst
This comparative and interdisciplinary study of two prominent cultural figures from interwar Czechoslovakia (the Czech Communist Olbracht and the Russian émigré Bogatyrev) provides an erudite yet highly engaging description of one of Central Europe’s least-known regions during a period of great social change. This book's detailed attention to Carpatho-Rusyn and Hasidic Jewish cultural traditions as those writers experienced them is particularly timely as an example of the national diversity within the territory of today’s Ukraine.
— Charles Sabatos, author of Frontier Orientalism and the Turkish Image in Central European Literature
This is a story of how two outsiders to the region—one Russian, one Czech—came to penetrate the mountainous Czechoslovak hinterland known as Subcarpathian Rus’ (today a part of Ukraine) and to study the fascinating folklore and enchanted life worlds of its inhabitants. Steeped in knowledge gleaned from sources in seven languages, the author of Witnesses to Interwar Subcarpathian Rus' takes readers on a journey of discovery of both Petr Bogatyrev and Ivan Olbracht and their scholarly and literary contributions while also bringing to life this bygone world, home to simple Slavic peasants and Hasidic Jews, brigands, and bears.
— Patrice Dabrowski, author of The Carpathians: Discovering the Highlands of Poland and Ukraine
Krafcik’s book is a compelling exploration of the interwar years in Subcarpathian Rus’. Rather than a quantitative data-driven analysis, the author takes a cultural approach that builds on personal accounts and lived realities. Through the subjective perceptions of ethnographer Petr Bogatyrev and writer Ivan Olbracht, Krafcik introduces the place and its people in an engaging manner that captures the reader’s interest and stimulates further exploration.
— Elaine Rusinko, author of Straddling Borders: Literature and Identity in Subcarpathian Rus’
Witnesses to Interwar Subcarpathian Rus offers a fascinating journey into the symbolic landscape of Czechoslovakia’s far-eastern province. Despite Petr Bogatyrev’s significance in Slavic ethnographic studies and Ivan Olbracht’s evocative storytelling, the contributions of these pioneers have remained largely inaccessible in English until now. Amidst debates on identity and colonialism, their meticulous work provides invaluable insights. Not only interwar upheaval and Carpatho-Rusyn and Hasidic Jewish communities in Subcarpathian Rus’ are closely observed, but Krafcik takes us where the textbooks fail. Her attention to detail makes even the theory that Bogatyrev discussed with Roman Jakobson come alive!
— Helena Tužinská, Comenius University
Subcarpathian Rus’, or Ruthenia as it is more commonly known, has long been considered one of the more exotic parts of Europe. Located literally in the geographic heart of the continent, the Carpatho-Rusyn inhabitants of this stunningly enchanting mountainous region preserved their traditional lifestyle, antiquated Slavic language, and age-old folk customs and beliefs well into the twentieth century. The distinguished Russian ethnographer Petr Bogatyrev and the very popular Czech writer, each through his own métier, documented in the 1920s and 1930s the unique cultural world of Subcarpathian Rus’. This volume by Patricia Krafcik provides a beautifully written scholarly account of the popular culture of Carpatho-Rusyns that Bogatyrev and Olbracht helped preserve for posterity.
— Paul Robert Magocsi, University of Toronto
Patricia Krafcik’s book masterfully connects two gifted, innovative but very different figures united by their common interest and expertise in and love for the land and peoples of Subcarpathian Rus’. The Russian ethnographer Petr Bogatyrev and Czech novelist Ivan Olbracht managed to penetrate the society and culture of the Rusyn and Jewish population of the region as few outsiders ever have. Krafcik presents a very human portrait of both men as they navigated the turbulent history of twentieth century Eastern and East Central Europe, while themselves humanizing the peoples of Subcarpathian Rus’ for a broader audience. Krafcik beautifully examines the intersection between these two important cultural figures with the land they came to know intimately and its unique but often-neglected population and history.
— James Felak, University of Washington
Witnesses to Interwar Subcarpathian Rus’ is a brilliant comparative analysis of Russian and Czech representations of the diverse, exotic, impoverished, but magical Carpathian Mountain region and its native peoples, among them Carpatho-Rusyns and Jews. It shows why Petr Bogatyrev and Ivan Olbracht were drawn to these wild mountain locales and how the beliefs of their inhabitants impacted their thought. Krafcik convincingly demonstrates how the local version of Robin Hood—the Carpathian brigand tradition—influenced Russian Formalist and Czech Structuralist theory and Czechoslovak leftist literature and cinema. Krafcik is a master storyteller who brings the world of Subcarpathian Rus’ to life in vivid prose: she weaves together the fates of her various protagonists like a traditional ruchnyk embroidery. In fact, she is the only scholar in the English-speaking world with access to the cultural contexts of her outsider protagonists and the deep knowledge of an insider whose peoples were the objects of analysis. Witnesses to Interwar Subcarpathian Rus’ will be a cornerstone of Carpatho-Rusyn Studies for years to come and will be of great interest to scholars in Anthropology, Cultural Studies, Czech and Slovak Studies, Film Studies, Literary Studies, and Ukrainian Studies.
— Nicholas Kyle Kupensky, United States Air Force Academy