About This Book
An ethnographic study records ceremonial dance festivals among Arctic communities in the Bering Strait region, describing rhythmic pantomime and a drum-based chorus that enact animal lives and clan origins. It details the kásgi (dance house), costumes, masks, painted bodies, and ritual paraphernalia; distinctions between common social dances and trained totemic performances; gender roles and seating and order of honor; named festivals (Asking, Bladder Feast, feasts for the dead, annual and great feasts, and the Inviting-In rite) and their sequences; use of bladders, namesake practices, symbolic numbers, and regional dialect and stylistic differences. Observations emphasize ceremony, social function, and technical aspects of rhythm, choreography, and ritual.
About the Author
You May Also Like
"Five-Head" Creek; and Fish Drugging in the Pacific / 1901
by Louis Becke
"Pennsylvania Dutch," and other essays
by Phebe Earle Gibbons
"Sterminator Vesevo" (Vesuvius the great exterminator) / Diary of the Eruption of April 1906
by Matilde Serao
21 Jahre in Indien. Dritter Theil: Sumatra.
by Heinrich Breitenstein
21 Jahre in Indien. Erster Theil: Borneo.
by Heinrich Breitenstein
A Bakony (1. kötet)
by Károly Eötvös