Abstract
This is an accepted article with a DOI pre-assigned that is not yet published.
The first part of the paper gives a historical overview of some ways in which the interest in the local, the national and the global has shifted European ethnology – mainly in Sweden – during this century, whereas the second part discusses current research strategies for linking these levels, exploring some possible ethnological contributions to the current debate on space, place and identity formations.
Publisher Notes
- This article was previously published by Museum Tusculanum Press.