World Oral Literature Project Workshop 2009
Created: | 2010-04-22 14:20 |
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Institution: | Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology |
Editors' group: | World Oral Literature Group |
Description: | This two-day workshop brought together established scholars, early career researchers and graduate students with indigenous researchers, museum curators, archivists and audio-visual experts to discuss strategies for collecting, recording, preserving and disseminating oral literatures and endangered narrative traditions. In view of the diversity of current research initiatives on the oral literatures of the Asia-Pacific, and the geographical strengths of Cambridge-based scholars, the workshop had a broad focus on this region. Specific sessions were held on the Himalayas (India and Nepal), High Asia (China, Mongolia and Tibet) and the Pacific (Vanuatu).
The workshop provided a collaborative environment for scholars to present, discuss and be exposed to new techniques and fieldwork methodologies. Topics included the ethical responsibilities of researchers, their engagements with local communities as partners, the place of western universities as archival repositories of living traditions and sites of interaction for indigenous communities, and the role of local digital archives and community cultural centres in knowledge transfer, teaching and research. |
Media items
This collection contains 17 media items.
Media items
Alban von Stockhausen: Reciting Landscape: Documenting Ritual Journeys and Landscape among the Dumi Rai of Eastern Nepal
318 views
Among the Dumi Rai of eastern Nepal, the notions of ethnic identity and its geographical boundaries and reference points are strongly expressed in oral recitations. In many...
Collection: World Oral Literature Project Workshop 2009
Institution: Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology
Created: Thu 22 Apr 2010
Anne de Sales: Collecting Shamanic Songs in Nepal
685 views
Shamanic songs describe what the shaman does as he is doing it. The reflexive character of shamanic performances makes it necessary to study the oral tradition within its ritual...
Collection: World Oral Literature Project Workshop 2009
Institution: Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology
Created: Thu 22 Apr 2010
Carole Pegg: Re-sounding the Spirits of Altai-Sayan Oral Epic Performance
303 views
My paper argues that, when collecting and re-presenting traditions based on orality, we need to consider the challenges of transferring from one medium to another, for instance,...
Collection: World Oral Literature Project Workshop 2009
Institution: Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology
Created: Thu 22 Apr 2010
Christopher Kaplonski: Data, Basically: Computers, Documents and the Oral History of Twentieth Century Mongolia
200 views
The international research project 'The Oral History of Twentieth Century Mongolia' currently has well over 400 interviews in its database. The database encompasses background...
Collection: World Oral Literature Project Workshop 2009
Institution: Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology
Created: Thu 22 Apr 2010
David Nathan: A New Look at Archiving for Sensitive Community Based Materials: A "web 2.0" Approach to Distribution and...
322 views
The Endangered Languages Archive at SOAS is creating a new archiving system that takes advantage of developments in web-based social networking in order to address complexities...
Collection: World Oral Literature Project Workshop 2009
Institution: Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology
Created: Thu 22 Apr 2010
Elin Stangeland: DSpace@Cambridge - Ensuring Access to Cultural Heritage Resources
314 views
DSpace@Cambridge is the institutional repository for the University of Cambridge. It was established to facilitate both dissemination and preservation of digital materials created...
Collection: World Oral Literature Project Workshop 2009
Institution: Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology
Created: Thu 22 Apr 2010
Gerald Roche: Participatory Cultural Preservation on the Sino-Tibetan Fringe
373 views
This paper discusses the application of participatory methods – developed by Robert Chambers within the context of development studies – to the practice of cultural preservation....
Collection: World Oral Literature Project Workshop 2009
Institution: Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology
Created: Thu 22 Apr 2010
Judith Pettigrew: Tamu Shamans' Books: The Challenges of Textualising the Pye-ta Lhu-ta
455 views
In this presentation, I discuss my ongoing work with the Tamu-mai, an ethnolinguistic community of central Nepal with whom I have been working collaboratively for two decades. I...
Collection: World Oral Literature Project Workshop 2009
Institution: Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology
Created: Thu 22 Apr 2010
Katey Blumenthal: Who's Singing Now?: Exploring the Effects of Reframing Lo Monthang's Musical Dialogue
396 views
This talk concerns the ethical dilemmas presented during 2009 fieldwork that sought to archive and disseminate the folk song repertoire of Lo, an ethnically Tibetan region in the...
Collection: World Oral Literature Project Workshop 2009
Institution: Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology
Created: Thu 22 Apr 2010
Lissant Bolton: Collecting Change in Vanuatu: Oral Traditions and Cultural Change
569 views
The nations of the Pacific region are faced with a substantial challenge in preserving and promoting their cultural heritage. Vanuatu, for example, is a nation of approximately...
Collection: World Oral Literature Project Workshop 2009
Institution: Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology
Created: Thu 22 Apr 2010
Martin Gaenszle: Documenting Ceremonial Dialogues in East Nepal: An In Vitro Performance and the Problem of ...
186 views
Among the Rai of eastern Nepal, ritual speech is generally an important part of most ritual behaviour. Even simple formal interactions, like requests for a loan or parting after a...
Collection: World Oral Literature Project Workshop 2009
Institution: Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology
Created: Thu 22 Apr 2010
Michael Oppitz: The Parched Grain Chant: Parallel Verse and Simultaneous Action in Magar Rituals
762 views
The faith healers of the Magar community are renowned for their elaborate ritual traditions. These combine chanting of numerous oral texts with the performance of nightlong...
Collection: World Oral Literature Project Workshop 2009
Institution: Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology
Created: Thu 22 Apr 2010
Peter K. Austin: Reading the Lontars: Endangered Literary Practices of Lombok, Eastern Indonesia
318 views
The Sasaks of Lombok island, eastern Indonesia, have a literary tradition of writing manuscripts on palm leaves (lontar) in a manner similar to that of the Balinese (Rubinstein...
Collection: World Oral Literature Project Workshop 2009
Institution: Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology
Created: Thu 22 Apr 2010
Ruth Finnegan: The Rewards and Issues of Studying Oral Literature: Some Personal Reflections
344 views
The study of oral literature brings many rewards, not just of personal inspiration and service, but also intellectual, humanistic and ethical/political. There are also...
Collection: World Oral Literature Project Workshop 2009
Institution: Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology
Created: Thu 22 Apr 2010
Sara Shneiderman: 'Producing' Thangmi Ritual Texts: Practice, Performance and Collaborative Documentation
221 views
In the course of my research on Thangmi ethnic identity, many members of this community spread across Himalayan areas of Nepal and India expressed a desire to see the oral...
Collection: World Oral Literature Project Workshop 2009
Institution: Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology
Created: Thu 22 Apr 2010
William Sutherland: Languages and Species: Threats and Global Patterns
316 views
Both languages and species are threatened with extinction. This talk will compare patterns of cultural and biological diversity. The aims will be to compare the extinction risk of...
Collection: World Oral Literature Project Workshop 2009
Institution: Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology
Created: Thu 22 Apr 2010
Yarjung Kromchai Tamu: Ritual Drumming and Chanting of the Tamu Shamans of Nepal
490 views
Tamu shamans in Nepal use spiritual healing processes, power and oral texts passed down from their ancestors when performing rituals vital to Tamu life. This power is still as...
Collection: World Oral Literature Project Workshop 2009
Institution: Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology
Created: Thu 22 Apr 2010