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  • BSZ  (2)
  • 2005-2009  (2)
  • Human Relations Area Files, Inc  (2)
  • African Americans--South Carolina--Saint Helena Island--Social life and customs  (1)
  • Ainu  (1)
  • 1
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Ainu ; Ainu--Medicine
    Abstract: This collection about the Ainu consists of 8 documents, all in English, including three books which were translated from Japanese. The collection contains a variety of cultural and historical information from two widely contrasting time periods. The first covers the years 1877 to 1924 when most Ainu were living in their traditional homeland in southern Sakhalin. The second is from the 1960s-1970s after the Ainu almost disappeared as a distinct group following their relocation in the Hokkaid̄o Island by the Japanese government during World War II. The oldest materials in the collection were compiled by Batchelor, an English missionary who lived among the Ainu for fifty years in 1877-1924; Pilsudski, a German ethnologist who conducted fieldwork there from 1895-1905; and Munro, an English physician who lived in Japan in 1900-1942. These works provide firsthand accounts of pre-relocation Ainu culture and society, covering religion, ceremonials, mythology, folklore, economic activities, life cycles, and health issues. Three of the books in the collection were authored by Japanese scholars focusing on Japanese conquest and assimilation of the Ainu (Takakura), ecological and economic effects of relocation (Watanabe), and features of Ainu kinship system (Sugiura). The remaining two books are by Ohnuki-Tierney, an American anthropologist who, in 1965-1969, sought to retrospectively reconstruct the "Ainu way of life" through extensive ethnographic fieldwork among elderly informants in Sakhalin. Ohnuki-Tierney's works, which also provide extensive review of previous works on the Ainu in Sakhalin, Hokkaid̄o and the neighboring islands, are the most comprehensive sources. Ainu people who lived in Kurile and the other islands taken over by the USSR during World War II are not covered in the collection
    Description / Table of Contents: Ainu - Emiko Ohnuki-Tierney - 2009 -- - The Ainu of northern Japan: a study in conquest and acculturation - [by] Shinichiro Takakura ; translated and annotated by John A. Harrison - 1960 -- - Ainu life and lore: echoes of a departing race - [by] John Batchelor - 1927 -- - Kinship organization of the Saru Ainu - [by] Kenichi Sugiura and Harumi Befu - 1962 -- - Ainu creed and cult - Edited with a pref. and an additional chapter by B.Z. Seligman. Introd. by H. Watanabe - 1963 -- - Pregnancy, birth and miscarriage among the inhabitants of Sakhalin Island (Gilyak and Ainu) - [by] Bronislaw Pilsudski - 1910 -- - The Ainu: a study of ecology and the system of social solidarity between man and nature in relation to group structure - [by] Hitoshi Watanabe - 1964 -- - The Ainu of the northwest coast of southern Sakhalin - Emiko Ohnuki-Tierney - 1974 -- - Illness and healing among the Sakhalin Ainu: a symbolic interpretation - Emiko Ohnuki-Tierney - 1981
    URL: Volltext  (Deutschlandweit zugänglich)
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  • 2
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: African Americans--South Carolina--Saint Helena Island--Social life and customs ; Gullahs ; Saint Helena Island (S.C.)--Social life and customs ; Sea Islanders ; Sea Islands ; Sea Islands ; Bevölkerung
    Abstract: This collection about the Sea Islanders, a Gullah-speaking people who live on the coast and sea islands of Georgia and South Carolina, consists of 14 documents. Four were published between 1926 and 1942, and the rest between 1973 and 2003. The studies focus on folklore and folksongs, oral histories, and language; and the main locations studied are Johns, Wadmalaw, and St. Helena's Islands, South Carolina and St. Simon's Island, Georgia. The Sea Islanders are descendents of slaves first brought to the islands in the seventeenth century. Isolated from the mainland, the Sea Islanders developed a distinct culture, which remained largely intact until the first bridges were built in the 1920s
    Description / Table of Contents: Sea Islanders - Mary H. Moran, Robert Van Kemper, and John Beierle - 2005 -- - Drums and shadows: survival studies among the Georgia coastal Negroes - [by] the Savannah Unit, Georgia Writer's Project, Work Projects Administration, introduction by Charles Joyner, photographs by Muriel and Malcolm Bell, Jr. - 1986 -- - When roots die: endangered traditions on the Sea Islands - [by] Patricia Jones-Jackson - 1987 -- - 'A peculiar people': slave religion and community-culture among the Gullahs - [by] Margaret Washington Creel - 1988 --^
    Description / Table of Contents: The people of Johns Island, South Carolina -- their faces, their words, and their songs - [by] Guy Carawan, recorded and edited by Guy and Candie Carawan ; photographs by Robert Yellin, et al. ; music transcribed by Ethel Raim ; preface by Charles Joyner ; afterword by Bernice Johnson Reagon - 1989 -- - Linguistic change in Gullah: sex, age, and mobility - [by] Patricia Causey Nichols - 1976 [1989 copy] -- - A cross generational study of the parental discipline practices and beliefs of Gullah blacks of the Carolina Sea Islands - [by] Franklin O. Smith - 1973 [1989 copy] -- - The status of Gullah: an investigation of convergent processes - [by] Patricia Ann Jones Jackson - 1978 [1989 copy] -- - Gullah: dedicated to the memory of Ambrose E. Gonzales - [by] Reed Smith - 1926 -- - Slave songs of the Georgia Sea Islands - [compiled by] Lydia Parrish ; foreword by Art Rosenbaum ; introduction by Olin Downes ; music transcribed by Creighton Churchill and Robert MacGimsey - 1942 -- - Folk culture on St. Helena Island, South Carolina - by Guy B. Johnson - 1930 -- - A social history of the Sea Islands, with special reference to St. Helena Island, South Carolina - by Guion Griffis Johnson - 1930 -- - Gullah attitudes toward life and death - Margaret W. Creel - 1990 --^
    Description / Table of Contents: African American communities on a South Carolina sea island - Patricia Guthrie - 1996 -- - An Afrocentric analysis of the transition and transformation of African Medicine (Root Medicine) as spiritual practice among Gullah people of Lowcountry South Carolina - by Wendy Carmen Trott - 2003 [2005 copy]
    URL: Volltext  (Deutschlandweit zugänglich)
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