OLAC Record oai:www.mpi.nl:1839_00-0000-0000-0016-7DE9-7 |
Metadata | ||
Title: | The historical origins of the Medicine Rite: How tKerexusak obtained two medicine pouches from a Sauk | |
OH1.4 | ||
Documentation of Hoocąk | ||
Contributor: | Unknown | |
Paul Radin | ||
Contributor (consultant): | MS4 | |
Contributor (researcher): | Juliane Lindenlaub | |
Coverage: | United States | |
Date: | Unknown | |
Description: | no information | |
The overall goal of the project is the documentation and preservation of the Hoocąk language. The project therefore includes the following sub-projects: (1) (audio- and video-)recording, analysing, processing and archiving a representative corpus of Hoocąk texts, (2) linguistic analysis and representation of texts that have previously been recorded by other linguists or anthropologists, (3) development of a comprehensive and linguistically consistent lexicon, (4) training of Hoocąk language instructors, (5) development of teaching material (6) further analyses (e.g. investigation of dialectal differences among Wisconsin and Nebraska Hoocąks) | ||
This story is about how a Hoocąk obtained two medicine pouches from a Sauk. | ||
no detailed information available | ||
no information given about the speaker | ||
Paul Radin was born on April 2, 1883 in Lodz, Poland. He was son or Dr. Adolf M. and Johanna Theodor Radin. He attended school at City College and received his bachelors degree in 1902. He pursued several different courses of graduate studies, and received his Ph.D. from Columbia University in 1911, where he studied under Franz Boas. Radin was predominatly an ethnologist who conducted extensive fieldwork among the Ojibwa ans Winnebago Indians of the Great Lakes region. He died 1959 in New York City. Paul Radin has worked with the Hoocąks for several years and conducted field research from 1909-1913. | ||
MS4 is our main consultant and a highly respected elder and Hoocąk speaker. He worked for the movie industry (Hollywood) for 40 years as an actor. MS4 appears in several recordings. | ||
JL has been concerned with the Hoocąk language since 2003 and has gained experience in field research. | ||
this file contains the original representation (as annotated by Radin), the text (using the Erfurt orthography), the morphemic gloss and the translation | ||
original representation and original translation in: Radin, Paul (1950), The origin myth of the Medicine Rite: Three versions . The Historical origins of the Medicine Rite. Waverly Press, Baltimore, 70f+77f. | ||
Format: | text/x-eaf+xml | |
Identifier: | oai:www.mpi.nl:1839_00-0000-0000-0016-7DE9-7 | |
Publisher: | Johannes Helmbrecht | |
Regensburg University | ||
Subject: | myth | |
the passing on of knowledge | ||
Ho-Chunk language | ||
Hocák | ||
Subject (ISO639): | win | |
OLAC Info |
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Archive: | The Language Archive at the MPI for Psycholinguistics | |
Description: | http://www.language-archives.org/archive/www.mpi.nl | |
GetRecord: | OAI-PMH request for OLAC format | |
GetRecord: | Pre-generated XML file | |
OAI Info |
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OaiIdentifier: | oai:www.mpi.nl:1839_00-0000-0000-0016-7DE9-7 | |
DateStamp: | 2017-02-14 | |
GetRecord: | OAI-PMH request for simple DC format | |
Search Info | ||
Citation: | Unknown; Paul Radin; MS4 (consultant); Juliane Lindenlaub (researcher). Unknown. Johannes Helmbrecht. | |
Terms: | area_Americas country_US iso639_win | |
Inferred Metadata | ||
Country: | United States | |
Area: | Americas |