TEODOR FLONTA
JAMAIS DEUX SANS TROIS / NON C'È DUE SENZA
TRE
As the proverb in the bilingual title of this editorial
confirms, De Proverbio has made it to the third
issue. Just over a year has gone by since the publication of
the first issue and international interest in our electronic
journal can perhaps be best expressed in terms of numbers.
The weekly
statistics on the homepage reveal that, for the period of September '95-March '96, De Proverbio recorded more than 200,000 hits coming
from countries as diverse as Bahrain, Romania, Hong Kong,
Brazil, Kuwait, Lithuania, Indonesia, Taiwan, Croatia and
the Slovak Republic, which encourages us to think proudly
that our journal is contributing in furthering interest in
paremiology and folklore across the planet.
The technological progress of the Internet software since
the publication of our first issue has been enormous. We
would like to keep up with it, but as our readers come from
such diverse countries, some of them technologically and
economically more disadvantaged than those in the Western
World, we feel that, in order to help those who do not have
access to the latest technological tools, content over
technology should be our rule. However, as the cyberworld is
changing very fast, and the Internet's appeal relies more
and more on a combination of word, sound and image, I would
like to ask our readers for ideas regarding a better graphic
presentation of the journal and, perhaps, a new logo. We
need all the help we can get because our journal does not
have any resources apart from the editorial board and the
editor's good will and enthusiasm.
I am very pleased to devote the present issue to the
writings of two giants of paremiological studies: the late
Professor Archer Taylor and the present world authority,
Professor Wolfgang Mieder. I am very indebted indeed to
Professor Mieder for having made available for this issue
his article Archer
Taylor the Paremiologist which was written originally as
an introduction to his edition of Taylor's The
Proverb published in 1985 by Peter Lang and his Bibliography of Archer
Taylor's Proverb Studies published in the same
volume.
As has become customary for our first issue of the year,
we are publishing the international bibliographies of proverb collections and proverb
studies compiled by Professor Mieder on a yearly basis.
They are invaluable resources for anyone involved in or
thinking of approaching serious paremiological research.
Copyright © Teodor Flonta
Teodor
Flonta
April 1996