Mujo and Haso

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Mujo and Haso ( Serbo-Croatian Mujo i Haso ; Slovenian Mujo in Haso ; Macedonian Мујо и Хасо; short for Mohammed and Hassan ), more rarely Mujo and Suljo , are the most famous comedy characters from the Serbo-Croatian- speaking area. They are primarily identified as stereotypical but nuanced Yugoslav Muslims . The two characters are sometimes supplemented by Mujo's wife Fata (short form of Fatima ); they are characterized by intellectual inferiority, mostly in the form of naivety , compared to the other nations of Yugoslavia , but are mostly the happier ones. Their Vojvodin counterparts are the sedate Lala and Sosa .

literature

  • Joachim Raecke: "Lala and Sosa, Mujo and Haso - South Slavic peoples as jokes or why people like to laugh at other peoples". Slavic Linguistics 2001. Papers of the XXVII. Constance Slavic Working Meeting. Frankfurt / Friedrichsdorf 11th – 13th September 2001. Ed. by H. Kuße. Munich 2003, 211-251.

Web links

  • Website ( Serbo-Croatian , English , Slovenian )

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Veljko Vujačić: Nations, Regions, Mentalities: The Many Faces of Yugoslavia . In: Victoria E. Bonnell (Ed.): Identities in Transition: Eastern Europe and Russia After the Collapse of Communism . University of California Press, Berkeley 1996, pp. 103-116, p. 105 (American English, cdlib.org ).
  2. Radovan Grahovac: How much truth is there in jokes? (American English, orf.at [accessed August 4, 2020]).
  3. ^ Kristina Toplak: The Film Chese and Jam : Migration in Self-Perspective . In: AEMI Journal . No. 4 , 2006, p. 36–43, p. 39 (British English, aemi.dk [PDF]). The Film Chese and Jam : Migration in Self-Perspective ( Memento of the original from January 31, 2012 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.  @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.aemi.dk
  4. ^ Veljko Vujačić: Nations, Regions, Mentalities: The Many Faces of Yugoslavia . In: Victoria E. Bonnell (Ed.): Identities in Transition: Eastern Europe and Russia After the Collapse of Communism . University of California Press, Berkeley 1996, pp. 103-116, p. 108 (American English, cdlib.org ).