This thesis seeks to describe the indigenous realities, meanings, and perspectives that are central to the music and dance practices of the Lak (Siar) people in Southern New Ireland, Papua Now Guinea. The insights recorded here are those gained through the experience of twenty-three months living in Rei and Siar villages as a participant in many aspects of Lak social life. The music and dance practices of the region are examined in the context of the wider social and cultural setting. Lak performance realities, are indivisible from kinship structures, ritual proceedings and spirituality. By contextualising Lak music and dance within the frame of the extensive and socially defining mortuary, rites my intention is to show how music and dance ...
For 31 months between 1979 and 1995, James F. Weiner conducted anthropological research amongst the ...
Gamelan gong luang is a rare and sacred music ensemble performed in Bali, Indonesia. Its origins ar...
This thesis examines how indigenous Papua New Guinean notions of identity and belonging are embodied...
Dancing through time is an ethnographic account of Ambonwari village, in East Sepik Province, Papua ...
I open with a Christian song, popular in the Duna community of the Southern Highlands Province of Pa...
In North Malaita, Solomon Islands, oral histories, songs and music have archived cultural knowledge ...
In western Arnhem Land, a diverse song tradition—referred to as kun-borrk in Bininj Gunwok language ...
The Vula'a people of south-eastern Papua New Guinea have been Christians for more than a century. Th...
This dissertation investigates the attitudes and perceptions of the students and faculty towards dan...
Relationships among the Aesthetic, culture, and music are problematic- Frequently considered as epip...
[Extract] Lamenting is a very important aspect of musical culture across Papua New Guinea, a country...
This dissertation investigates the attitudes and perceptions of the students and faculty towards dan...
Terng Ly Tow is a form of performing arts from the Karen ethnic group. Based on the fieldwork inform...
Ambonwari people from the East Sepik Province, Papua New Guinea, had a rich repertoire of song-dance...
This thesis is an ethnography of children's practice and performance of dance, music and song in the...
For 31 months between 1979 and 1995, James F. Weiner conducted anthropological research amongst the ...
Gamelan gong luang is a rare and sacred music ensemble performed in Bali, Indonesia. Its origins ar...
This thesis examines how indigenous Papua New Guinean notions of identity and belonging are embodied...
Dancing through time is an ethnographic account of Ambonwari village, in East Sepik Province, Papua ...
I open with a Christian song, popular in the Duna community of the Southern Highlands Province of Pa...
In North Malaita, Solomon Islands, oral histories, songs and music have archived cultural knowledge ...
In western Arnhem Land, a diverse song tradition—referred to as kun-borrk in Bininj Gunwok language ...
The Vula'a people of south-eastern Papua New Guinea have been Christians for more than a century. Th...
This dissertation investigates the attitudes and perceptions of the students and faculty towards dan...
Relationships among the Aesthetic, culture, and music are problematic- Frequently considered as epip...
[Extract] Lamenting is a very important aspect of musical culture across Papua New Guinea, a country...
This dissertation investigates the attitudes and perceptions of the students and faculty towards dan...
Terng Ly Tow is a form of performing arts from the Karen ethnic group. Based on the fieldwork inform...
Ambonwari people from the East Sepik Province, Papua New Guinea, had a rich repertoire of song-dance...
This thesis is an ethnography of children's practice and performance of dance, music and song in the...
For 31 months between 1979 and 1995, James F. Weiner conducted anthropological research amongst the ...
Gamelan gong luang is a rare and sacred music ensemble performed in Bali, Indonesia. Its origins ar...
This thesis examines how indigenous Papua New Guinean notions of identity and belonging are embodied...