OLAC Record
oai:crdo.vjf.cnrs.fr:cocoon-fb9bdf6d-2304-39ef-a732-7d6995505c74

Metadata
Title:The island of the Dancing Spirits
Access Rights:Freely accessible
Alternative Title:L'île des Esprits dansants
Contributor (depositor):François, Alexandre
Contributor (researcher):François, Alexandre
Contributor (speaker):Teliki James Pae
Date Available (W3CDTF):2010-11-28
Date Created (W3CDTF):2005-05-01
Date Issued (W3CDTF):2010-11-28T17:13:03+01:00
Description:This myth tells the origin of the “Tamate” headdresses that are worn during certain ritual dances on Vanikoro. These characteristic headdresses are unique to Vanikoro in their shape and colour; but they are reminiscent of the ritual headdresses that are worn in the nearby islands of northern Vanuatu, in the south. s1–s22 – Once upon a time, a married couple left Vanikoro on their sailing canoe. They sailed northwest to Utupua, where they spent a few months with their relatives. When the winds finally blew southeast again, they embarked to return home. s23–s52 – But they missed their island, and went too far southeast… till they found a mysterious islet named “Veluko”. They were welcomed by the islanders – human-like godly creatures called Tamate. The couple stayed with them for a few months, witnessing the beautiful dances of these spiritual creatures. s53–s93 – When the winds blew finally northwest again, the couple decided to return home; but they took with them five of these Tamate creatures. When they finally landed again on Vanikoro, the couple hid the Tamate in a cave for a few weeks. s94–s149 – The couple organised a large dancing festival on the island of Teanu, which lasted for a whole month. s150–s183 – On the last day of the festival, they gathered all their countrymen on the shore, and finally revealed publicly the majestic dances of the Tamate spirits.
Mythe
Extent:PT23M34S
Format (IMT):audio/x-wav
Identifier:Cote producteur: DD2-16
Ancienne cote: crdo-TKW_AF040216_SOUND
doi:10.24397/PANGLOSS-0002634
Identifier (URI):https://cocoon.huma-num.fr/exist/crdo/meta/cocoon-fb9bdf6d-2304-39ef-a732-7d6995505c74
https://doi.org/10.34847/cocoon.fb9bdf6d-2304-39ef-a732-7d6995505c74
https://cocoon.huma-num.fr/exist/crdo/ark:/87895/1.5-147954
https://cocoon.huma-num.fr/data/archi/mp3/147954_record_44k.mp3
Is Format Of (URI):https://cocoon.huma-num.fr/data/archi/masters/147954.wav
http://purl.org/net/crdo/data/cocoon-fb9bdf6d-2304-39ef-a732-7d6995505c74.version1
Is Part Of (URI):oai:crdo.vjf.cnrs.fr:cocoon-af3bd0fd-2b33-3b0b-a6f1-49a7fc551eb1
oai:crdo.vjf.cnrs.fr:cocoon-70d01dae-6b12-4acf-901d-ae6b122acf20
Is Required By (URI):oai:crdo.vjf.cnrs.fr:cocoon-91993506-a6ca-3614-b9c0-abb8d859ba58
Language:Teanu
Language (ISO639):tkw
License (URI):http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/
Publisher:Laboratoire de langues et civilisations à tradition orale
Relation (URI):http://alex.francois.online.fr/AFtxt_tea-tamate_e.htm
http://alex.francois.online.fr/AFtxt_tea-tamate_fr.htm
Rights:Copyright (c) François, Alexandre
Spatial Coverage:Solomon Islands, Vanikoro Island, Temwo
Spatial Coverage (ISO3166):SB
Spatial Coverage (Point):east=166.973219; north=-11.708384
Subject:Teanu language
Subject (ISO639):tkw
Subject (OLAC):text_and_corpus_linguistics
Table Of Contents:s1–s22 – Once upon a time, a married couple left Vanikoro on their sailing canoe. They sailed northwest to Utupua, where they spent a few months with their relatives. When the winds finally blew southeast again, they embarked to return home. s23–s52 – But they missed their island, and went too far southeast… till they found a mysterious islet named “Veluko”. They were welcomed by the islanders – human-like godly creatures called Tamate. The couple stayed with them for a few months, witnessing the beautiful dances of these spiritual creatures. s53–s93 – When the winds blew finally northwest again, the couple decided to return home; but they took with them five of these Tamate creatures. When they finally landed again on Vanikoro, the couple hid the Tamate in a cave for a few weeks. s94–s149 – The couple organised a large dancing festival on the island of Teanu, which lasted for a whole month. s150–s183 – On the last day of the festival, they gathered all their countrymen on the shore, and finally revealed publicly the majestic dances of the Tamate spirits.
Type (DCMI):Sound
Type (Discourse):narrative
Type (OLAC):primary_text

OLAC Info

Archive:  COllections de COrpus Oraux Numeriques (CoCoON ex-CRDO)
Description:  http://www.language-archives.org/archive/crdo.vjf.cnrs.fr
GetRecord:  OAI-PMH request for OLAC format
GetRecord:  Pre-generated XML file

OAI Info

OaiIdentifier:  oai:crdo.vjf.cnrs.fr:cocoon-fb9bdf6d-2304-39ef-a732-7d6995505c74
DateStamp:  2021-06-04
GetRecord:  OAI-PMH request for simple DC format

Search Info

Citation: François, Alexandre (depositor); François, Alexandre (researcher); Teliki James Pae (speaker). 2010. Laboratoire de langues et civilisations à tradition orale.
Terms: area_Pacific country_SB dcmi_Sound iso639_tkw olac_narrative olac_primary_text olac_text_and_corpus_linguistics

Inferred Metadata

Country: Solomon Islands
Area: Pacific


http://www.language-archives.org/item.php/oai:crdo.vjf.cnrs.fr:cocoon-fb9bdf6d-2304-39ef-a732-7d6995505c74
Up-to-date as of: Tue Dec 10 7:06:30 EST 2024