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Culture:
Language:English | Pomo, Central
Date:1984-1985
Contributor:Jack, Frances | Mithun, Marianne
Subject:Linguistics | California--History | Folklore | Medicine
Type:Sound recording
Genre:Interviews | Stories
Extent:11 audiocassettes (9 hr., 37 min.) : DIGITIZED
Description: Linguistic field recordings and interviews with consultant Frances Jack on Central Pomo language and culture. Includes elicitations of Central Pomo words and expressions (some untranslated), discussion of differences between different kinds of Pomo, folkloric stories, anecdotes about local healers, and description of domestic activities. Also includes interview and discussion in English about various healing practices and attitudes towards traditional beliefs. (NOTE: This material has been digitized and can be accessed online for free by users not physically at the APS Library through a login and password. Please see our Audio Access Page for information on how to request these materials.)
Collection:Interview with Frances Jack (Mss.Rec.142)
Culture:
Seneca includes: Onöndowága
Haudenosaunee includes: Iroquois, Onkwehonwe
Date:1973
Subject:Dance | Folklore | Food | Material culture | Rites and ceremonies | Social life and customs | New York (State)--History | Plants | Sullivan's Campaign of 1779 | Religion
Type:Sound recording
Genre:Interviews | Stories
Extent:11 sound tape reels (29 hr., 41 min.)
Description: Interviews and discussions with the Seneca artist Ernest Smith on his paintings of Seneca customs, stories, ceremonies, crafts, food preparation, and other traditional ways. Smith was a Seneca from the Tonawanda Reservation in New York state. The paintings were done in the 1930s and are presently in the Rochester Museum and Science Center in Rochester, New York. The recordings were made by William N. Fenton and his student, Jeanette Collamer, in 1973 at the museum in Rochester. The paintings are referred to on the recordings by the museum's catalog numbers for the paintings. Some of the paintings do not have assigned titles. Sound quality is fair overall, with severe distortion and prominent background noise on the final tape. Some of the recordings are restricted due to potential cultural sensitivity.
Collection:Interviews concerning the paintings of the Seneca artist Ernest Smith (Mss.Rec.126)
Culture:
Inuit includes: Inuk, Eskimo (pej.), ᐃᓄᐃᑦ
Language:English
Date:c. 1930-1937
Subject:Folklore | Politics and government | Rites and ceremonies | Dance | Food | Clothing and dress | Hunting | Music | Religion | Warfare | Social life and customs | Ethnography
Type:Still Image | Text
Genre:Newspaper clippings | Notes | Bibliographies | Stories
Extent:3 folders
Description: The Inuit materials in the Hallowell Papers include notes on ethnographic materials, analyses of myths, shamanism, property, racial identification, anthropometry, and somaltology. There are newspaper clippings, one entitled "Artic Adventure" by Peter Freuchen and reading notes from secondary sources.
Collection:Alfred Irving Hallowell Papers (Mss.Ms.Coll.26)
Culture:
Seneca includes: Onöndowága
Oneida includes: Onyota'a:ka
Haudenosaunee includes: Iroquois, Onkwehonwe
Date:circa 1925-1967
Contributor:Voegelin, C. F. (Charles Frederick), 1906-1986 | Bloomfield, Leonard, 1887-1949 | Lounsbury, Floyd Glenn | Wells, Herman B
Subject:Linguistics | Anthropology | Iroquoian languages | Folklore | Ethnography
Type:Text
Genre:Correspondence | Notes | Notebooks | Stories | Grammars
Extent:6 folders
Description: There are some materials relating to Iroquoian languages in the C. F. Voegelin Papers. This entry is intended as a catch-all for materials labeled as "Iroquois" or "Iroquoian." Researchers should also view the entries for specific Iroquoian languages and culture groups (i.e., Oneida, Seneca, Cherokee). Iroquoian materials are located in both Subcollection I and Subcollection II. In Subcollection I, there is relevant correspondence with Floyd Lounsbury (regarding Oneida, Seneca, and Cherokee work) and Herman B Wells (to William Fenton regarding sending Voegelin to the Iroquois Conference accompanied by slips of notes including potential language consultants including Leroy Cooper, Sherman and Clara Red Eye, Jesse Cornplanter, and Will Bomberry) in Series I. Correspondence; and one folder each of Iroquois (an exam bluebook containing notes on Iroquois history, documentary sources, and some words) and Siouan-Iroquois material (a word list) in Series V. Research Notes, Subseries V-A: Language Notes. In Subcollection II, there are Ojibwe stories about the Iroquois people (Haudenosaunee) titled "Iroquois War near Spanish River," "War with the Iroquois," and "Another Iroquois attack repulsed" in Ojibwe Texts IV, an arrangement of texts by Leonard Bloomfield located in Series II. Research Notes, Subseries III. Macro-Algonquian. Finally, there is a folder of Iroquoian materials in Subseries IV. Macro-Siouan, also of Series II. Research Notes.
Collection:C. F. Voegelin Papers (Mss.Ms.Coll.68)
Culture:
Date:1900-1951
Contributor:Barbeau, Marius, 1883-1969 | Cooke, Charles, 1870-1958
Subject:Folklore | Linguistics | New York (State)--History | Pennsylvania--History | Ontario--History | Québec (Province)--History | Social life and customs
Type:Text
Genre:Personal names | Essays | Vocabularies | Stories
Extent:1380 pages
Description: This manuscript is an alphabetical list of about 6200 Iroquoian names, collected over 5 decades by Charles Cooke (Thawennensere), a Mohawk scholar from Wahta. Each entry includes the name in its Mohawk rendering, with phonetic spelling, gender, tribe, location, date, and clan. The name is then analyzed by radicals, with historical information about its bearer (where relevant). Cross reference to variants and from English names of Indians. Preface by Cooke, edited by C. Marius Barbeau, classifies names and gives numbers and sex. See also an accompanying audio collection (Mss.Rec.10), listed separately in this guide, in which Cooke reads the majority of the names. (Note: this item is currently restricted as potentially culturally sensitive pending further review. Reproduction is restricted.)
Collection:Iroquois personal names (Mss.497.3.C772)
Culture:
Isleta includes: Tiwa
Language:English | Tiwa, Southern
Date:1965
Contributor:Long, Ronald W.
Subject:Folklore | New Mexico--History
Type:Sound recording
Genre:Autobiographies | Elicitation sessions | Stories | Vocabularies
Extent:2 sound tape reels (2 hr., 50 min.) : DIGITIZED
Description: Four folkloric stories and one personal narrative about the consultant's father given in the Isleta dialect of Tiwa, with accompanying English translations as stories are played back to the same consultant, Mrs. Jojola. Also includes grammatical eliciations. Recorded at Isleta Pueblo, New Mexico, in the summer of 1965. (NOTE: This material has been digitized and can be accessed online for free by users not physically at the APS Library through a login and password. Please see our Audio Access Page for information on how to request these materials.)
Collection:Isleta Tiwa material (Mss.Rec.57)
Culture:
Lenape includes: Lenni-Lenape, Delaware
Date:1985-1993
Contributor:Rementer, James
Subject:Folklore | Pennsylvania--History | Oklahoma--History | Social life and customs | Rites and ceremonies
Type:Text
Genre:Correspondence | Stories
Extent:144 pages
Description: These papers consist of letters from James A. Rementer to John Bierhorst (1990-1993) and Christmas letters (1985-1992) concerning Delaware language and culture. Christmas letters contain Delaware stories. A long-time student of Delaware history, language, and culture, Rementer was appointed by the Delaware Tribe of Indians to be the director of the Lenape Language Project in 1997 and continued to work in various tribal offices thereafter.
Collection:James A. Rementer papers (Mss.497.3.R281)
Culture:
Choctaw includes: Chahta
Date:1972-1973
Contributor:Heath, Jeffrey | Tubby, Hudson J. | Gardner, Jim | Isaac, Jackson | Henry, Frank | Denson, Charles | Henry, Bob | Willis, Basil | Ray, Thomas | Cox, Delton | Isaac, Calvin | Peterson, Jan | Evelyn, Wendy | Bell, Nicholas | Gibson, Clay | Tubby, Lewis | Thompson, Bobby
Subject:Folklore | Linguistics | Mississippi--History
Type:Sound recording | Text
Genre:Conversations | Interviews | Stories | Reports
Extent:1 linear foot (3 folders; 27 reel-to-reel tapes and cassettes)
Description: Two field notebooks, a report on fieldwork, and 27 reel-to-reel tapes and cassettes of recordings of the Mississippi Choctaw language made in 1972 and 1973. Most of the tapes match identified sections in the field notebooks. The collection includes texts, and lexica. Field notebooks describe where people are from (largely Pearl River, Mississippi), but it is not clear if the recordings were made here.
(NOTE: Part of this material has been digitized and can be accessed online for free by users not physically at the APS Library through a login and password. Please see our Audio Access Page for information on how to request these materials.)
Collection:Jeffrey Heath Papers (Mss.Ms.Coll.228)
Culture:
Date:Undated
Contributor:Hoijer, Harry, 1904-1976 | Haile, Berard, 1874-1961 | Caramillo, Cevero | Tiznada, Alasco | Goddard, Pliny Earle, 1869-1928
Subject:Linguistics | Ethnography | Folklore | New Mexico--History
Type:Text
Genre:Notebooks | Field notes | Monographs | Stories
Extent:8 items
Description: Materials by both Harry Hoijer and Father Berard Haile, O.F.M., relating to the academic study of Jicarilla Apache. These include several Jicarilla texts--including many Coyote stories--in phonemic transcription, with interlinear English glosses and many explanatory notes of ethnographic interest; Haile's rewriting of Pliny Earle Goddard's "Jicarilla Texts"; and what seems to be a typed draft of a monograph. Cevero Caramillo and Alasco Tiznada are mentioned as Apache collaborators, particularly with the Coyote stories. Titles of texts/stories are listed in the guide to the Harry Hoijer Collection.
Collection:Harry Hoijer Collection (Mss.497.3.H68)
Culture:
Date:1915-1930
Contributor:Angulo, Jaime de | Boas, Franz, 1858-1942 | Frachtenberg, Leo Joachim, 1883-1930 | Freeland, L. S. (Lucy Shepard), 1890-1972 | Kenoy, Louis
Subject:Ethnography | Folklore | Linguistics | Marriage customs and rites | Material culture | Music | Oregon--History | Personal names | Religion | Social life and customs | Oregon--History
Type:Text
Genre:Autobiographies | Essays | Grammars | Stories | Vocabularies
Extent:430 pages
Description: The Kalapuya material in the ACLS collection is concentrated primarily in the "Kalapuya" section of the finding aid, which contains several manuscripts relating to Kalapuya language, folklore, and ethnology, primarily recorded by Leo Frachtenberg and Jaime de Angulo. Additional materials can also be found in the "Tualatin" (also known as Atfalati/Wapato Lake) section of the finding aid, which includes autobiographical stories and linguistic analyses.
Collection:ACLS Collection (American Council of Learned Societies Committee on Native American Languages, American Philosophical Society) (Mss.497.3.B63c)