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OLAC Record oai:scholarspace.manoa.hawaii.edu:10125/110565 |
Metadata | ||
Title: | SD1-338 | |
Bibliographic Citation: | Agustina Woni, Danerek, H. Stefan, Danerek, H. Stefan, Danerek, H. Stefan, Danerek, H. Stefan; 2023-08-17; Genre: Weaving. Title: 'Weavers’ histories and methods' (6. Agustina Woni. b. approx. 1980). Recording and interview with Mrs. Agustina Woni (originally from Woja, desa Lidi, Palu'e, now living in Nangahure, Flores). Woni tells about her life as a weaver. Woni followed or watched her mother do weaving work when she was a child. Her mother wove both Palu'e and Flores type cloths. The first cloth Woni wove was a 'moko', an Ende type of cloth that lives on Palu'e Island. Like other Palu'e weavers, they wove to give the wifetakers (weta hina) and for personal/family wear. Woni learned weaving after finishing 6th grade, and she is one of the Mbola so group's weavers who knew how to ties Palu'e patterns already from before she moved to Nangahure after the volcanic eruptions 2012-2013. Most of the others had only woven Flores cloths before. For most Palu'e women, weaving is a side activity, continuous, but secondary to farming work, while also preparing food and caring for the children. Woni was given the weaving tools by her mother, who instructed her how important weaving is for life, to give 'weta hina' (wifetakers), or even to sell in the future. Woni, like Laju (see SD1-336), began focusing on weaving after moving to Flores after the natural disaster. In Nangahure the Palu'e refugee community have little access to arable land, so many women decided to focus on weaving, later forming a weaving group, Mbola so, which Woni and Laju are members of. They decided to focus on natural dyes, and they used memory for this but also received training from WARLAMI a couple of times, upgrading their skills. Today, most of Woni's weaving is for selling, the children cost, and she must be diligent. Her husband Wongga is also actively involved in Woni's weaving, aiding with many things, like preparing yarns. Naturally dyed cloths tend to be reserved for selling. Recorded by SD late morning 17 Aug 2023 by Woni's 'woga' bamboo platform just outside the house, using both a Canon EOS (vid) and a H4N Zoom audio recorder. (The video stopped after a few minutes). See also SD1-329–SD1-331, SD1-336–SD1-337. The annotation work was supported by a Firebird Foundation Supplemental Research Grant for the Documentation of Oral Literature and Traditional Ecological Knowledge.; wav file at 44,1 KHz 16 bits, mp4 file, eaf file; Kaipuleohone University of Hawai'i Digital Language Archive;https://hdl.handle.net/10125/110565. | |
Contributor (depositor): | Danerek, H. Stefan | |
Contributor (interviewer): | Danerek, H. Stefan | |
Contributor (recorder): | Danerek, H. Stefan | |
Contributor (researcher): | Danerek, H. Stefan | |
Contributor (speaker): | Agustina Woni | |
Coverage (ISO3166): | ID | |
Date (W3CDTF): | 2023-08-17 | |
Description: | Genre: Weaving. Title: 'Weavers’ histories and methods' (6. Agustina Woni. b. approx. 1980). Recording and interview with Mrs. Agustina Woni (originally from Woja, desa Lidi, Palu'e, now living in Nangahure, Flores). Woni tells about her life as a weaver. Woni followed or watched her mother do weaving work when she was a child. Her mother wove both Palu'e and Flores type cloths. The first cloth Woni wove was a 'moko', an Ende type of cloth that lives on Palu'e Island. Like other Palu'e weavers, they wove to give the wifetakers (weta hina) and for personal/family wear. Woni learned weaving after finishing 6th grade, and she is one of the Mbola so group's weavers who knew how to ties Palu'e patterns already from before she moved to Nangahure after the volcanic eruptions 2012-2013. Most of the others had only woven Flores cloths before. For most Palu'e women, weaving is a side activity, continuous, but secondary to farming work, while also preparing food and caring for the children. Woni was given the weaving tools by her mother, who instructed her how important weaving is for life, to give 'weta hina' (wifetakers), or even to sell in the future. Woni, like Laju (see SD1-336), began focusing on weaving after moving to Flores after the natural disaster. In Nangahure the Palu'e refugee community have little access to arable land, so many women decided to focus on weaving, later forming a weaving group, Mbola so, which Woni and Laju are members of. They decided to focus on natural dyes, and they used memory for this but also received training from WARLAMI a couple of times, upgrading their skills. Today, most of Woni's weaving is for selling, the children cost, and she must be diligent. Her husband Wongga is also actively involved in Woni's weaving, aiding with many things, like preparing yarns. Naturally dyed cloths tend to be reserved for selling. Recorded by SD late morning 17 Aug 2023 by Woni's 'woga' bamboo platform just outside the house, using both a Canon EOS (vid) and a H4N Zoom audio recorder. (The video stopped after a few minutes). See also SD1-329–SD1-331, SD1-336–SD1-337. The annotation work was supported by a Firebird Foundation Supplemental Research Grant for the Documentation of Oral Literature and Traditional Ecological Knowledge. | |
Region: Flores, Nusa Tenggara Timur, Indonesia. Recording made in the Palu'e village in Nangahure, near Maumere. | ||
Format: | wav file at 44,1 KHz 16 bits | |
mp4 file | ||
eaf file | ||
0:25:09 | ||
Identifier: | SD1-338 | |
Identifier (URI): | https://hdl.handle.net/10125/110565 | |
Language: | Palu'e | |
Language (ISO639): | ple | |
Subject: | Palu'e language | |
Subject (ISO639): | ple | |
Table Of Contents: | SD1-338.eaf | |
SD1-338.wav | ||
OLAC Info |
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Archive: | Kaipuleohone | |
Description: | http://www.language-archives.org/archive/scholarspace.manoa.hawaii.edu | |
GetRecord: | OAI-PMH request for OLAC format | |
GetRecord: | Pre-generated XML file | |
OAI Info |
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OaiIdentifier: | oai:scholarspace.manoa.hawaii.edu:10125/110565 | |
DateStamp: | 2025-04-10 | |
GetRecord: | OAI-PMH request for simple DC format | |
Search Info | ||
Citation: | Agustina Woni (speaker); Danerek, H. Stefan (recorder); Danerek, H. Stefan (researcher); Danerek, H. Stefan (depositor); Danerek, H. Stefan (interviewer). 2023. Kaipuleohone. | |
Terms: | area_Asia country_ID iso639_ple | |
Inferred Metadata | ||
Country: | Indonesia | |
Area: | Asia |