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- Permanent Link:
- https://digital.soas.ac.uk/LOADI03826/00001
Notes
- Abstract:
- Each year, several Apatani families celebrate a three-week long feast Murung (Feast of Merit), involving mithun and cow sacrifice, and complex gift-giving between the feast sponsor and various kin and ceremonial friends : In the second week, as part of a day-long procession by the feast sponsor's clansmen and boys, people gather in the dry paddy fields to watch games : Here we see a man practising the high-jump, the favourite Apatani sport : Without an audience to watch, he nevertheless adds a flourish by holding a bamboo stick in his hand as he leaps over the bamboo pole set up in the field. ( en )
- Restriction:
- This item is protected by copyright. Please use in accord with Creative Commons license: Attribution-NonCommercial (CC BY-NC). High resolution digital master available from SOAS, University of London - the Digital Library Project Office.
- Restriction:
- Dieses Bild ist urheberrechtlich geschützt. Creative Commons (CC)-Lizenzen: Namensnennung-NichtKommerziell unter gleichen Bedingungen 4.0 international (CC BY-NC). Dieses Bild ist als in hoher Auflösung zur Verfügung. Kontaktieren Sie den Digital Library Project Office an der SOAS, University of London.
- Restriction:
- Cette image est protégée par le droit d'auteur. S'il vous plaît, utiliser en accord avec la licence Creative Commons: Attribution-Pas d'Utilisation Commerciale (CC BY-NC). Fichiers numériques de haute résolution sont disponibles sur la SOAS, Université de Londres - le Bureau du projet de bibliothèque numérique.
- General Note:
- Christoph von Fürer-Haimendorf (1909-1995) was born and educated in Vienna, gaining a PhD in anthropology from the University of Vienna in 1931. A grant from the Rockefeller Foundation enabled him to study at the London School of Economics, under the anthropologist Bronislaw Malinowski. In 1936, he went to the Naga Hills in northeast India for his first fieldwork; over the next four decades, he worked extensively in south & central India, northeast India and Nepal. In 1950 he was appointed Professor of Anthropology at SOAS, where he established the Department of Anthropology. During his career, he published seventeen books, most of them ethnographies of tribal cultures. He was President of the Royal Anthropological Institute (1975-77) and a pioneer in the field of visual anthropology.
- General Note:
- This scene was photographed between 19450101 and 19450230
- General Note:
- Other designation of photograph: 188/14/Michi BaminHaja (Feb 1945)
- General Note:
- Original Container: BW Negatives Box III
- General Note:
- Haimendorf's reference: 188_14_Michi Bamin-Haja (Feb 194
- General Note:
- BW Negatives Box III
- Funding:
- Funded in the United Kingdom by JISC
- General Note:
- SOAS name authority for "Haimendorf, Christoph Von Fürer- (1909-1995); anthropologist" is GB/NNAF/P146323.
- General Note:
- VIAF (name authority) : Fürer-Haimendorf, Christoph von, 1909-1995 : record number 109123273
Record Information
- Source Institution:
- SOAS, University of London
- Holding Location:
- Archives and Special Collections
- Rights Management:
- © 1945, The Estate of Christoph von Fürer-Haimendorf. The Estate is currently (2015) represented by Nicholas Haimendorf, son of Christoph von Fürer-Haimendorf. ----- Creative Commons (by-nc-nd). -- This image may be used in accord with Creative Commons license Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs.
- Resource Identifier:
- PP MS 19/6/APA/0645 ( SOAS manuscript number )
188_14_Michi Bamin-Haja (Feb 194 ( Haimendorf reference )
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