Item details
Item ID
JD1-01
Title New Guinea Film: Map #1
Description Hand-drawn map
Approx Scale: 1/3" = 1 Mile
Trcd. 8 May '69 - ?
Source: Nomad Patrol {No2/6263 No13/6869}

Map represents places and topographic features between the Strictland River from the west and Mt. Sisa and Mt. Bosavi in the north-east and south-east respectively.
Origination date 2023-09-12
Origination date free form 1969-08-05
Archive link https://catalog.nabu-stage.paradisec.org.au/repository/JD1/01
URL
Collector
Jeff Doring
Countries To view related information on a country, click its name
Language as given
Subject language(s) To view related information on a language, click its name
Content language(s)
Dialect
Region / village Nomad, Western Province, PNG
Originating university University of Sydney
Operator Jodie Kell
Data Categories primary text
Data Types Image
Discourse type
Roles
DOI 10.26278/VFEC-K567
Cite as Jeff Doring (collector), 2023. New Guinea Film: Map #1. JPEG/TIFF. JD1-01 at catalog.paradisec.org.au. https://dx.doi.org/10.26278/VFEC-K567
Content Files (2)
Filename Type File size Duration File access
JD1-01-IMG001.jpg image/jpeg 451 KB
JD1-01-IMG001.tif image/tiff 10.6 MB
2 files -- 11 MB -- --

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Collection Information
Collection ID JD1
Collection title Biami - Tidikawa and Friends
Description Jeff Doring is an artist, photographer and filmmaker who produced a documentary film “Tidikawa and Friends” about the daily lives of the Bedamini speakers of the Nomad region of Western Province of Papua New Guinea. This collection was created to document the audio and sounds of his recordings in the film where it captures the spirit medium Tidakawa who communicates with ancestoral spirits.
The fieldwork was undertaken in 1971 with field notes on the Bendamini and the sounds and audio in this collection are part of the film that offers a visual exploration to the Spirit World of Tidikawa.

There were about 3,800 Bedamini speakers on the Great Papuan Plateau in 1972 living in 60 longhouse communities scattered throughout 700 square kilometres of tropical rainforest. A longhouse community consisted of 20-100 individuals and their sites shifts three to four years to allow for new gardens for their subsistence livelihoods.

In 1969, Jeff made recordings of the Kor Wop ceremony in Mt Hagen, Western Highlands.
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Languages To view related information on a language, click its name
Access Information
Edit access Steven Gagau
View/Download access
Data access conditions Closed (subject to the access condition details)
Data access narrative
Metadata
RO-Crate Metadata
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