Browse Titles - 38 results
Acting Like a Thief
written by Shashwati Talukdar, fl. 1996 and P. Kerim Friedman, fl. 2006; directed by P. Kerim Friedman, fl. 2006 and Shashwati Talukdar, fl. 1996; produced by P. Kerim Friedman, fl. 2006 and Shashwati Talukdar, fl. 1996 (Watertown, MA: Documentary Educational Resources (DER), 2005), 15 mins
Acting Like a Thief is about a Chhara tribal theatre group in Ahmedabad, India. Starting with the arrest of playwright DaKxin Bajrange (Chhara), the documentary reveals how the Budhan Theatre has transformed the lives of adults and children within the community.
Sample
written by Shashwati Talukdar, fl. 1996 and P. Kerim Friedman, fl. 2006; directed by P. Kerim Friedman, fl. 2006 and Shashwati Talukdar, fl. 1996; produced by P. Kerim Friedman, fl. 2006 and Shashwati Talukdar, fl. 1996 (Watertown, MA: Documentary Educational Resources (DER), 2005), 15 mins
Description
Acting Like a Thief is about a Chhara tribal theatre group in Ahmedabad, India. Starting with the arrest of playwright DaKxin Bajrange (Chhara), the documentary reveals how the Budhan Theatre has transformed the lives of adults and children within the community. Acting Like a Thief is about a Chhara tribal theatre group in Ahmedabad, India. Starting with the arrest of playwright DaKxin Bajrange (Chhara), the documentary reveals how the Budhan The...
Acting Like a Thief is about a Chhara tribal theatre group in Ahmedabad, India. Starting with the arrest of playwright DaKxin Bajrange (Chhara), the documentary reveals how the Budhan Theatre has transformed the lives of adults and children within the community. Acting Like a Thief is about a Chhara tribal theatre group in Ahmedabad, India. Starting with the arrest of playwright DaKxin Bajrange (Chhara), the documentary reveals how the Budhan Theatre has transformed the lives of adults and children within the community. Chhara tribals were notified as "natural criminals" by the British in 1871 and imprisoned in a labor camp in Ahmedabad. After Indian independence, they were de-notified, but the stigma of being a "born criminal" follows them to this day. The Budhan Theatre was inspired by the activism work of Mahasweta Devi.
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Field of Study
Anthropology
Content Type
Documentary
Contributor
Shashwati Talukdar, fl. 1996, P. Kerim Friedman, fl. 2006, Dakxin Bajrange, fl. 2005
Author / Creator
Shashwati Talukdar, fl. 1996, P. Kerim Friedman, fl. 2006
Date Published / Released
2005
Publisher
Documentary Educational Resources (DER)
Topic / Theme
Chhara, Politics, Theatrical productions, Tribal and national groups, Cultural change and history, Cultural identity, Ethnic relations, Indigenous peoples, Ethnography, Haryanvi
Copyright Message
© Documentary Educational Resources
×
Barbarians: Fierce and Friendly
written by Dr. Ronald P. Toby; directed by Ikeda Hajime and Chet Kincaid, fl. 2010; produced by Chet Kincaid, fl. 2010 and Ikeda Hajime, National Institute of Multimedia Education, Japan (Watertown, MA: Documentary Educational Resources (DER), 1999), 11 mins
Like people elsewhere, Japanese throughout their history have encountered aliens in reality and in fantasy, and then have tried to incorporate them into their view of the world. Ronald P. Toby, noted Japanese historian, examines ways in which the Japanese have expressed their understanding of the foreign such as K...
Sample
written by Dr. Ronald P. Toby; directed by Ikeda Hajime and Chet Kincaid, fl. 2010; produced by Chet Kincaid, fl. 2010 and Ikeda Hajime, National Institute of Multimedia Education, Japan (Watertown, MA: Documentary Educational Resources (DER), 1999), 11 mins
Description
Like people elsewhere, Japanese throughout their history have encountered aliens in reality and in fantasy, and then have tried to incorporate them into their view of the world. Ronald P. Toby, noted Japanese historian, examines ways in which the Japanese have expressed their understanding of the foreign such as Koreans, Okinawans, Chinese and Americans, both black and white. Like people elsewhere, Japanese throughout their history have encounter...
Like people elsewhere, Japanese throughout their history have encountered aliens in reality and in fantasy, and then have tried to incorporate them into their view of the world. Ronald P. Toby, noted Japanese historian, examines ways in which the Japanese have expressed their understanding of the foreign such as Koreans, Okinawans, Chinese and Americans, both black and white. Like people elsewhere, Japanese throughout their history have encountered aliens in reality and in fantasy, and then have tried to incorporate them into their view of the world. Ronald P. Toby, noted Japanese historian, examines ways in which the Japanese have expressed their understanding of the foreign such as Koreans, Okinawans, Chinese and Americans, both black and white. The program includes a rich array of drawings, paintings and other visual images, mostly from eighteenth and nineteenth century Japan, showing aliens in popular art and aliens as enacted in festivals of the era. The program is suitable for use at the secondary school level and above, for courses not only about Japan but also about ethnic relations anywhere.
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Field of Study
Anthropology
Content Type
Documentary
Contributor
Dr. Ronald P. Toby, Chet Kincaid, fl. 2010, Ikeda Hajime, National Institute of Multimedia Education, Japan
Author / Creator
Dr. Ronald P. Toby, Ikeda Hajime, Chet Kincaid, fl. 2010
Date Published / Released
1999
Publisher
Documentary Educational Resources (DER)
Speaker / Narrator
Dr. Ronald P. Toby
Topic / Theme
Japanese, Cultural change and history, Memories, Violence, War, Cultural identity, Politics, Fine arts, Ethnography
Copyright Message
© Documentary Educational Resources
×
Caribbean Eye, Indigenous Survivors
written by Bruce Paddington, fl. 1974-2016, Christopher Laird, 1945-, Tony Hall, fl. 1991 and Ken Corsbie, fl. 1991-2006; directed by Bruce Paddington, fl. 1974-2016, Christopher Laird, 1945- and Tony Hall, fl. 1991; produced by Bruce Paddington, fl. 1974-2016, Christopher Laird, 1945- and Tony Hall, fl. 1991, in Caribbean Eye (Trinidad and Tobago: Banyan Archive, 1991), 26 mins
Although the indigenous population of the Caribbean was decimated by the European invasion, many peoples and many cultural traditions have survived and grown stronger through change and hybridization. This program looks at survivors from Guyana, Trinidad, St. Vincent, Dominica, and Belize, examining their current...
Sample
written by Bruce Paddington, fl. 1974-2016, Christopher Laird, 1945-, Tony Hall, fl. 1991 and Ken Corsbie, fl. 1991-2006; directed by Bruce Paddington, fl. 1974-2016, Christopher Laird, 1945- and Tony Hall, fl. 1991; produced by Bruce Paddington, fl. 1974-2016, Christopher Laird, 1945- and Tony Hall, fl. 1991, in Caribbean Eye (Trinidad and Tobago: Banyan Archive, 1991), 26 mins
Description
Although the indigenous population of the Caribbean was decimated by the European invasion, many peoples and many cultural traditions have survived and grown stronger through change and hybridization. This program looks at survivors from Guyana, Trinidad, St. Vincent, Dominica, and Belize, examining their current movements toward exchange, cooperation, and united action.
Field of Study
Anthropology
Content Type
Documentary
Contributor
Bruce Paddington, fl. 1974-2016, Christopher Laird, 1945-, Tony Hall, fl. 1991, Ken Corsbie, fl. 1991-2006
Author / Creator
Bruce Paddington, fl. 1974-2016, Christopher Laird, 1945-, Tony Hall, fl. 1991, Ken Corsbie, fl. 1991-2006
Date Published / Released
1991
Publisher
Banyan Archive
Series
Caribbean Eye
Speaker / Narrator
Ken Corsbie, fl. 1991-2006
Topic / Theme
Carib, Caribbean, Politics, Ethnic groups, Cultural assimilation, Cultural change and history, Cultural identity, Ethnic relations, Ethnography
Copyright Message
Copyright © 1991 by Banyan
×
Cubanos, Life and Death of a Revolution
written by Yan Giroux, fl. 2007; directed by Yan Giroux, fl. 2007; produced by Jérôme Couture, fl. 2010 (Watertown, MA: Documentary Educational Resources (DER), 2007), 1 hour 22 mins
Cubanos draws an impressionist portrait of the international Cuban community, whose identity has been fragmented by 48 years of dictatorship, as it struggles to leave the 20th century behind.
Sample
written by Yan Giroux, fl. 2007; directed by Yan Giroux, fl. 2007; produced by Jérôme Couture, fl. 2010 (Watertown, MA: Documentary Educational Resources (DER), 2007), 1 hour 22 mins
Description
Cubanos draws an impressionist portrait of the international Cuban community, whose identity has been fragmented by 48 years of dictatorship, as it struggles to leave the 20th century behind. Cubanos draws and impressionistic portrait of a Cuban community fragmented by 48 years of dictatorship. Catuey, a Cuban musician now living in Canada, travels with filmmaker Yan Giroux throughout Cuba. Filming illegally, they are unable to show their subject...
Cubanos draws an impressionist portrait of the international Cuban community, whose identity has been fragmented by 48 years of dictatorship, as it struggles to leave the 20th century behind. Cubanos draws and impressionistic portrait of a Cuban community fragmented by 48 years of dictatorship. Catuey, a Cuban musician now living in Canada, travels with filmmaker Yan Giroux throughout Cuba. Filming illegally, they are unable to show their subjects faces, a formal constraint that becomes an aesthetic symptom of the crumbling landscape of Cuban communism. Catuey revisits a Cuba that is full of music, but also riddled with misery and corruption, where the black market for stolen government rations is one of the only thriving industries. Filmmaker Yan Giroux transforms the chaos of reality into a set of evocative signs, painting a complex portrait of a people held prisoner by their history, and scanning the day-to-day lives of Cubans in Cuba and Miami for vestiges of the revolutionary dream that has been tattered by so much disillusionment. In Miami, the very active Cuban community hangs on to its national identity, but Catuey sees a disconnect between the perceptions of those living in the United States and the realities of their homeland As Cubans on both sides of the straights of Florida struggle to leave the events of the 20th century behind, Cubanos is a road movie that takes us to the heart of their struggle.
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Field of Study
Anthropology
Content Type
Documentary
Contributor
Yan Giroux, fl. 2007, Silvia Ramos, Angel de Fana, Adrian Leiva, Jérôme Couture, fl. 2010
Author / Creator
Yan Giroux, fl. 2007
Date Published / Released
2007
Publisher
Documentary Educational Resources (DER)
Topic / Theme
Cuban, Economic conditions, Communism, Revolutions, Cultural change and history, Immigrant populations, Cultural identity, Ethnography, Cubans
Copyright Message
© Documentary Educational Resources
×
Dead Presumed Missing?
written by Paul Sant Cassia and Colette Piault, 1940-; directed by Colette Piault, 1940- and Paul Sant Cassia (Watertown, MA: Documentary Educational Resources (DER), 2003), 39 mins
Between 1963-74, about 2000 Turkish and Greek Cypriots disappeared during hostilities between the two communities of Cyprus. Following an abortive coup in 1974, Turkey invaded and occupied the north of the island. 200,000 Greek Cypriots, a third of the population, fled their homes, becoming refugees in the south.
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Sample
written by Paul Sant Cassia and Colette Piault, 1940-; directed by Colette Piault, 1940- and Paul Sant Cassia (Watertown, MA: Documentary Educational Resources (DER), 2003), 39 mins
Description
Between 1963-74, about 2000 Turkish and Greek Cypriots disappeared during hostilities between the two communities of Cyprus. Following an abortive coup in 1974, Turkey invaded and occupied the north of the island. 200,000 Greek Cypriots, a third of the population, fled their homes, becoming refugees in the south.
During the Turkish invasion, many died in the war, but their bodies were never recovered. Others (including women and children) vanishe... Between 1963-74, about 2000 Turkish and Greek Cypriots disappeared during hostilities between the two communities of Cyprus. Following an abortive coup in 1974, Turkey invaded and occupied the north of the island. 200,000 Greek Cypriots, a third of the population, fled their homes, becoming refugees in the south.
During the Turkish invasion, many died in the war, but their bodies were never recovered. Others (including women and children) vanished behind the advancing Turkish army. To this day, Turkey refuses to offer any explanations. The fate and whereabouts of the Greek and Turkish Cypriots missing remains an official secret. Between 1963-74, about 2000 Turkish and Greek Cypriots disappeared during hostilities between the two communities of Cyprus. Following an abortive coup in 1974, Turkey invaded and occupied the north of the island. 200,000 Greek Cypriots, a third of the population, fled their homes, becoming refugees in the south. During the Turkish invasion, many died in the war, but their bodies were never recovered. Others (including women and children) vanished behind the advancing Turkish army. To this day, Turkey refuses to offer any explanations. The fate and whereabouts of the Greek and Turkish Cypriots missing remains an official secret. In the confusion of 1974, some, but not all, of the missing Greek Cypriots were buried hurriedly on the Greek side. The return of the remains of the rest cannot be realised since they are behind Turkish lines. In spite of various attempts at resolution, including a UN Committee, both sides still guard the unidentified hidden bones of each others' missing persons The film was shot in 2001 when the possibility of DNA identifiication redefined the problem and gave it a new urgency. By following the desperate attempts of two Greek women to discover the fates of their loved ones, the film explores the signficance of mortuary rituals and the different political lives of dead bodies among the Greek and Turkish Cypriots. Show more Show less
During the Turkish invasion, many died in the war, but their bodies were never recovered. Others (including women and children) vanishe... Between 1963-74, about 2000 Turkish and Greek Cypriots disappeared during hostilities between the two communities of Cyprus. Following an abortive coup in 1974, Turkey invaded and occupied the north of the island. 200,000 Greek Cypriots, a third of the population, fled their homes, becoming refugees in the south.
During the Turkish invasion, many died in the war, but their bodies were never recovered. Others (including women and children) vanished behind the advancing Turkish army. To this day, Turkey refuses to offer any explanations. The fate and whereabouts of the Greek and Turkish Cypriots missing remains an official secret. Between 1963-74, about 2000 Turkish and Greek Cypriots disappeared during hostilities between the two communities of Cyprus. Following an abortive coup in 1974, Turkey invaded and occupied the north of the island. 200,000 Greek Cypriots, a third of the population, fled their homes, becoming refugees in the south. During the Turkish invasion, many died in the war, but their bodies were never recovered. Others (including women and children) vanished behind the advancing Turkish army. To this day, Turkey refuses to offer any explanations. The fate and whereabouts of the Greek and Turkish Cypriots missing remains an official secret. In the confusion of 1974, some, but not all, of the missing Greek Cypriots were buried hurriedly on the Greek side. The return of the remains of the rest cannot be realised since they are behind Turkish lines. In spite of various attempts at resolution, including a UN Committee, both sides still guard the unidentified hidden bones of each others' missing persons The film was shot in 2001 when the possibility of DNA identifiication redefined the problem and gave it a new urgency. By following the desperate attempts of two Greek women to discover the fates of their loved ones, the film explores the signficance of mortuary rituals and the different political lives of dead bodies among the Greek and Turkish Cypriots. Show more Show less
Field of Study
Anthropology
Content Type
Documentary
Contributor
Paul Sant Cassia, Colette Piault, 1940-
Author / Creator
Paul Sant Cassia, Colette Piault, 1940-
Date Published / Released
2003
Publisher
Documentary Educational Resources (DER)
Topic / Theme
Turk, Greek, Missing persons, Politics, Cultural change and history, Ethnography, Turkish, Greeks
Copyright Message
© Documentary Educational Resources
×
Faces of Change, Afghanistan: Afghan Nomads - The Maldar
written by Herb Di Gioia, fl. 1974-1981; directed by Herb Di Gioia, fl. 1974-1981; produced by Norman N. Miller, fl. 1971, in Faces of Change (Watertown, MA: Documentary Educational Resources (DER), 1974), 21 mins
At dawn a nomad caravan descends on Aq Kupruk from the foothills of the Hindu Kush. In their camp, and in commerce with the townspeople, the Maldar reveal the mixture of faith and distrust that has kept nomads and sedentary people separate and interdependent over the centuries.
Sample
written by Herb Di Gioia, fl. 1974-1981; directed by Herb Di Gioia, fl. 1974-1981; produced by Norman N. Miller, fl. 1971, in Faces of Change (Watertown, MA: Documentary Educational Resources (DER), 1974), 21 mins
Description
At dawn a nomad caravan descends on Aq Kupruk from the foothills of the Hindu Kush. In their camp, and in commerce with the townspeople, the Maldar reveal the mixture of faith and distrust that has kept nomads and sedentary people separate and interdependent over the centuries. At dawn a nomad caravan descends on Aq Kupruk from the foothills of the Hindu Kush. In their camp, and in commerce with the townspeople, the Maldar reveal the mixture of f...
At dawn a nomad caravan descends on Aq Kupruk from the foothills of the Hindu Kush. In their camp, and in commerce with the townspeople, the Maldar reveal the mixture of faith and distrust that has kept nomads and sedentary people separate and interdependent over the centuries. At dawn a nomad caravan descends on Aq Kupruk from the foothills of the Hindu Kush. In their camp, and in commerce with the townspeople, the Maldar reveal the mixture of faith and distrust that has kept nomads and sedentary people separate and interdependent over the centuries. The theme of the film focuses on political and religious beliefs. The film and accompaning instructor notes in this series embrace five different and complex units of analysis concerning how political change occurs; individual attitudes, ethnic identity, national loyalties, institutional affiliations, and ideological beliefs.
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Field of Study
Anthropology
Content Type
Documentary
Contributor
Herb Di Gioia, fl. 1974-1981, Mohammad Ismail Khan, Norman N. Miller, fl. 1971
Author / Creator
Herb Di Gioia, fl. 1974-1981
Date Published / Released
1974
Publisher
Documentary Educational Resources (DER)
Series
Faces of Change
Topic / Theme
Kuchi, Maldar, Migrant life, Intercultural communication, Education, Religion, Cultural identity, Cultural change and history, Ethnography, Kachi Koli, Pashto
Copyright Message
by Documentary Educational Resources
×
Faces of Change, Kenya: Harambee ("Pull Together")
written by David MacDougall, 1939- and James Blue, 1930-; directed by David MacDougall, 1939- and James Blue, 1930-, in Faces of Change (Watertown, MA: Documentary Educational Resources (DER), 1974), 19 mins
Harambee is a traditional Swahili chant meaning heave-ho or pull together the slogan for a united Kenya. Harambee Day or Independence Day is celebrated in this small town in North Kenya with political speeches and an auction at the native school.
Sample
written by David MacDougall, 1939- and James Blue, 1930-; directed by David MacDougall, 1939- and James Blue, 1930-, in Faces of Change (Watertown, MA: Documentary Educational Resources (DER), 1974), 19 mins
Description
Harambee is a traditional Swahili chant meaning heave-ho or pull together the slogan for a united Kenya. Harambee Day or Independence Day is celebrated in this small town in North Kenya with political speeches and an auction at the native school. Harambee is a traditional Swahili chant meaning heave-ho or pull together the slogan for a united Kenya. Harambee Day or Independence Day is celebrated in this small town in North Kenya with political sp...
Harambee is a traditional Swahili chant meaning heave-ho or pull together the slogan for a united Kenya. Harambee Day or Independence Day is celebrated in this small town in North Kenya with political speeches and an auction at the native school. Harambee is a traditional Swahili chant meaning heave-ho or pull together the slogan for a united Kenya. Harambee Day or Independence Day is celebrated in this small town in North Kenya with political speeches and an auction at the native school. The film shows how North Kenya- isolated for years- tries to adapt to the new concept of nationhood. Government officials from South Kenya are appointed as ambassadors to spread the idea of national unity to a people unaccustomed to it.
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Field of Study
Anthropology
Content Type
Documentary
Contributor
David MacDougall, 1939-, James Blue, 1930-, Peter Boru
Author / Creator
David MacDougall, 1939-, James Blue, 1930-
Date Published / Released
1974
Publisher
Documentary Educational Resources (DER)
Series
Faces of Change
Topic / Theme
Swahili, Cultural change and history, Education, Speeches, Independence Day, Ethnography
Copyright Message
© Documentary Educational Resources
×
Faces of Change, Kenya: Kenya Boran Part II
written by James Blue, 1930- and David MacDougall, 1939-; directed by David MacDougall, 1939- and James Blue, 1930-; produced by Norman N. Miller, fl. 1971, in Faces of Change (Watertown, MA: Documentary Educational Resources (DER), 1974), 33 mins
The film focuses on the life of Peter Boru, a sixteen-year-old former herdsboy who has become a boarding school student. Peter's life is juxtaposed to a traditional herdsboy, Dokata. The question, 'Education for what?' is posed when both tradition and modern forces common to developing areas make the economic outl...
Sample
written by James Blue, 1930- and David MacDougall, 1939-; directed by David MacDougall, 1939- and James Blue, 1930-; produced by Norman N. Miller, fl. 1971, in Faces of Change (Watertown, MA: Documentary Educational Resources (DER), 1974), 33 mins
Description
The film focuses on the life of Peter Boru, a sixteen-year-old former herdsboy who has become a boarding school student. Peter's life is juxtaposed to a traditional herdsboy, Dokata. The question, 'Education for what?' is posed when both tradition and modern forces common to developing areas make the economic outlook bleak for young people, even if they are able to complete local educational requirements. The film focuses on the life of Peter Bor...
The film focuses on the life of Peter Boru, a sixteen-year-old former herdsboy who has become a boarding school student. Peter's life is juxtaposed to a traditional herdsboy, Dokata. The question, 'Education for what?' is posed when both tradition and modern forces common to developing areas make the economic outlook bleak for young people, even if they are able to complete local educational requirements. The film focuses on the life of Peter Boru, a sixteen-year-old former herdsboy who has become a boarding school student. Peter's life is juxtaposed to a traditional herdsboy, Dokata. The question, "Education for what?" is posed when both tradition and modern forces common to developing areas make the economic outlook bleak for young people, even if they are able to complete local educational requirements. Kenya Boran Part II was made to show the complex set of educational problems facing young people and governments in a typical Third World setting. It has special relevance in courses that focus on comparative education, socialization and learning.
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Field of Study
Anthropology
Content Type
Documentary
Contributor
James Blue, 1930-, David MacDougall, 1939-, Iya Duba, Guyo Ali, Dokata, Peter Boru, Norman N. Miller, fl. 1971
Author / Creator
James Blue, 1930-, David MacDougall, 1939-
Date Published / Released
1974
Publisher
Documentary Educational Resources (DER)
Series
Faces of Change
Topic / Theme
Borana, Adolescence, Cultural assimilation, Ethnosociology, Economics, Politics, Cultural change and history, Education, Ethnography
Copyright Message
© Documentary Educational Resources
×
Full Circle
written by Wen-jie Qin, fl. 2002; directed by Wen-jie Qin, fl. 2002; produced by Wen-jie Qin, fl. 2002 (Watertown, MA: Documentary Educational Resources (DER), 2002), 27 mins
In the summer of 2001, under the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act, a totem pole in the Peabody Museum at Harvard University was returned to its original owners' ancestors, a Tlingit community in Southeast Alaska. The journey of the pole began a hundred years ago when it was removed by the Har...
Sample
written by Wen-jie Qin, fl. 2002; directed by Wen-jie Qin, fl. 2002; produced by Wen-jie Qin, fl. 2002 (Watertown, MA: Documentary Educational Resources (DER), 2002), 27 mins
Description
In the summer of 2001, under the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act, a totem pole in the Peabody Museum at Harvard University was returned to its original owners' ancestors, a Tlingit community in Southeast Alaska. The journey of the pole began a hundred years ago when it was removed by the Harriman Expedition from the deserted village of Gash at Cape Fox. In the summer of 2001, under the Native American Graves Protection and...
In the summer of 2001, under the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act, a totem pole in the Peabody Museum at Harvard University was returned to its original owners' ancestors, a Tlingit community in Southeast Alaska. The journey of the pole began a hundred years ago when it was removed by the Harriman Expedition from the deserted village of Gash at Cape Fox. In the summer of 2001, under the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act, a totem pole in the Peabody Museum at Harvard University was returned to its original owners' ancestors, a Tlingit community in Southeast Alaska. The journey of the pole began a hundred years ago when it was removed by the Harriman Expedition from the deserted village of Gash at Cape Fox. The totem pole makes its way from Cambridge, Massachusetts to Ketchikan, Alaska, where the Cape Fox community holds a ceremony to welcome home artifacts taken by the Expedition.
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Date Written / Recorded
2001
Field of Study
Politics & Current Affairs
Content Type
Documentary
Contributor
Wen-jie Qin, fl. 2002, Willard Jackson, Sr., Harvey Shields, Elizabeth Denny, Barbara Isaac, Rubie Watson, Anne-Marie Victor-Howe
Author / Creator
Wen-jie Qin, fl. 2002
Date Published / Released
2002
Publisher
Documentary Educational Resources (DER)
Topic / Theme
Tlingit, Politics, Revitalization and ethnogenesis, Tribal and national groups, Property rights, Totem poles, Ethnography
Copyright Message
by Documentary Educational Resources
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Gogodala: A Cultural Revival?
written by Chris Owen, 1980-; directed by Chris Owen, 1980-; produced by Chris Owen, 1980- (Watertown, MA: Documentary Educational Resources (DER), 1983), 57 mins
This film examines the implications of the Australian colonial era for the Gogodala people of the Fly River Delta, Western Papua New Guinea. Excessive missionary zeal, tolerated and encouraged by the government, contributed to the almost total destruction of Gogodala art and culture.
Sample
written by Chris Owen, 1980-; directed by Chris Owen, 1980-; produced by Chris Owen, 1980- (Watertown, MA: Documentary Educational Resources (DER), 1983), 57 mins
Description
This film examines the implications of the Australian colonial era for the Gogodala people of the Fly River Delta, Western Papua New Guinea. Excessive missionary zeal, tolerated and encouraged by the government, contributed to the almost total destruction of Gogodala art and culture. This film examines the implications of the Australian colonial era for the Gogodala people of the Fly River Delta, Western Papua New Guinea. Excessive missionary zea...
This film examines the implications of the Australian colonial era for the Gogodala people of the Fly River Delta, Western Papua New Guinea. Excessive missionary zeal, tolerated and encouraged by the government, contributed to the almost total destruction of Gogodala art and culture. This film examines the implications of the Australian colonial era for the Gogodala people of the Fly River Delta, Western Papua New Guinea. Excessive missionary zeal, tolerated and encouraged by the government, contributed to the almost total destruction of Gogodala art and culture. More recently, an indirect grant from the Australian government has enabled the people to reconstruct a traditional longhouse, along with a new meaning and function: as a cultural center.
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Field of Study
Anthropology
Content Type
Documentary
Contributor
Chris Owen, 1980-, Babadi Sowasi, Murray Marx, Gainama Mulake, Tony Crawford, Harry Holt, Saliki Kawaiya
Author / Creator
Chris Owen, 1980-
Date Published / Released
1983
Publisher
Documentary Educational Resources (DER)
Topic / Theme
Gogodala, Canoes and kayaks, Tribal and national groups, Christianity, Revitalization and ethnogenesis, Cultural change and history, Missionaries, Imperialism, Ethnography
Copyright Message
by Documentary Educational Resources
×