Apatani women in a Nyishi village

Material Information

Title:
Apatani women in a Nyishi village
Creator:
Fürer-Haimendorf, Christoph von, 1909-1995 ( Photographer )
Furer-Haimendorf, Christoph von, 1909-1995 ( contributor )
Haimendorf, Christoph Von Fürer- (1909-1995); anthropologist ( contributor )
Place of Publication:
[S.l.]
Publisher:
[s.n.]
Publication Date:
Language:
English
Materials:
Photographic film: 35mm B&W negative, Eastman Kodak : Panatomic-X ( medium )

Notes

General Note:
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.
General Note:
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General Note:
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 19450102 and 19450112
General Note:
Seated Apatani woman is weaving in Talo, a Nyishi village only 10 kilometres and four hours walk from the Apatani valley : the standing Apatani woman is there to assist her : Both women wear the large hoop earrings, set of necklaces, coarse skirt and top garment that were common at the time : the standing woman also wears a coarse cotton and wool shawl and smokes a pipe with bamboo stem and bowl : Her wooden plugs in her nostrils and facial tattoos were also traditional, until the 1970s : apatani women often spent several weeks in nearby Nyishi settlements, where they wove textiles for their hosts in return for raw cotton, which they took back to the Apatani valley for weaving there : Nyishis cultivated cotton, and Apatanis were the better weavers : Backstrap weaving is the traditional method among Apatanis and is still practised : Usually the frame is secured by tying it to a house porch or similar fixed structure, : Here, however, the frame has been fixed to bamboo pieces that are driven into the ground : this backstrap limits the width of any single woven piece, so that wide garments, such as shawls and skirts, required two or three pieces sewn together.
General Note:
Haimendorf's reference: 180_10_Talo (Jan 1945), Kajo Bid
General Note:
Original Container: BW Negatives Box III
General Note:
BW Negatives Box III
General Note:
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/NYI/0299 ( SOAS manuscript number )
180_10_Talo (Jan 1945), Kajo Bid ( Haimendorf reference )