oralliterature.org
World Oral Literature Project : Research & Outreach
http://www.oralliterature.org/collections/libulakhi001.html
World Oral Literature Project. Libu Lakhi: Namuyi Tibetan Collection. The World Oral Literature Project is pleased to host the collection of Libu Lakhi. Details of the full collection can be browsed on DSpace@Cambridge by clicking here. Collection: Namuyi Tibetan Collection. 1 Namuyi Song Contest 纳木依的唱歌比赛 ཎ མ ཞ འ ག གཞས འག ན བས ར. 2 Namuyi Tibetan Folktales 纳木依藏族的民间故事 ཎ མ ཞ བ ད ཀ དམངས ཁ ད གཏམ ར ད. The second story relates the history of Namuyi clans. 第二个故事讲述了纳木依藏族的家族史和说明了每一个家族是怎样传承下来的。 གཏམ ར ད ལ བའ ནང ད ད...
museums.cam.ac.uk
Museum Ambassadors | Museums and collections
http://www.museums.cam.ac.uk/visit-us/young-people/museum-ambassadors
Events and open days. Student blogs and videos. Executive and professional education. How the University and Colleges work. Term dates and calendars. Email and phone search. Christmas Opening Times 2016. Adorning the Dead: Rituals for the afterlife: Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology. Anthropology, Archaeology and Identity: Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology. Duroliponte: Roman Britain in Cambridgeshire: Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology. Shakespeare’s World: The Fitzwilliam Museum. Professo...
artefactual.co.uk
Frison effect | artefactual
https://artefactual.co.uk/tag/frison-effect
Skip to primary content. Skip to secondary content. Tag Archives: Frison effect. I’m sitting quietly on the top floor of the Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology in Cambridge. Size can affect the way we look at objects. I’ve been thinking about the size of axe heads, because I am busily making handles for different types of Bronze Age axes. When is an axe head a useful tool, when is it a status symbol, when is it a toy or a trinket? It’s an axe head, right? Cutting rods to make a wattle wall? Some tool...
rescite.blogspot.com
RESCITE: September 2008
http://rescite.blogspot.com/2008_09_01_archive.html
The blog of noise, interference and diversity. Federated Cloud Computing - Museums were there first. Last Tuesday, Google announced its Chrome Browser. I am not particularly interested in problems about "letting cartoon cats out of bags," but more so in the issues about ownership and rights to information that this move highlights. It is clear that what Google are doing is to set the stage for their moves into Clouds. Now, why am I telling you all this? The reason is that it is not all that vacant. T...
archaeologyofchildhoodproject.wordpress.com
Archaeology of Childhood Project | From Roman feeding bottles to 20th century childhood | Page 2
https://archaeologyofchildhoodproject.wordpress.com/page/2
Archaeology of Childhood Project. From Roman feeding bottles to 20th century childhood. Research in the Cambridgeshire Archives. January 21, 2016. Whilst a very interesting experience, my time researching the county archives could not help but make me realise just how different an experience childhood was not even two centuries ago. Ben Hinson, PhD Candidate, University of Cambridge. The Benefits of Walking in Each Other’s Shoes: Better Relationships, Better Exhibitions and Better Advocacy. Whilst the fo...
hideandseekexhibition.org.uk
Visit the Exhibition | Hide and Seek
http://www.hideandseekexhibition.org.uk/visit
Skip to main content. Tuesday-Saturday: 10:30am - 4:30pm. Sunday: 12.00pm - 4:30pm. Hide and Seek: Looking for Children in the Past. Was an exhibition at the Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology in Cambridge. The exhibition is now closed. The exhibition ran from 30th January 2016 to the 29th January 2017 in the Li Ka Shing Gallery at the Museum of Archaeology and Anthropolgy, Cambridge. Visit the Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology website.
paediatrics.peninsula.pgme.carboncrayon.com
News - Peninsula Paediatrics
http://paediatrics.peninsula.pgme.carboncrayon.com/news
You are viewing all 31 items. Posted September 20th 2016 (2 months ago). We (Julie Screaton (Director, London and the South East) and Professor Ged Byrne (Director of Education and Quality, Health Education England working across the North West) are pleased to let you know that our survey of higher education institutions about embedding national antimicrobial prescribing and stewardship competences into curricula is now available to access on our website. Undergraduate students have expressed interest in...
oralliterature.org
World Oral Literature Project : About
http://www.oralliterature.org/about/oralliterature.html
World Oral Literature Project. About : What is Oral Literature? Definitions and understandings of oral literature. Oral literature is a broad term which may include ritual texts, curative chants, epic poems, musical genres, folk tales, creation tales, songs, myths, spells, legends, proverbs, riddles, tongue-twisters, word games, recitations, life histories or historical narratives. Most simply,. Refers to any form of verbal art which is transmitted orally or delivered by word of mouth. Affiliated to the ...
oralliterature.org
World Oral Literature Project : About
http://www.oralliterature.org/info/funding.html
World Oral Literature Project. About : Our Funding. The World Oral Literature Project has been established with the generous initial support of the Firebird Foundation for Anthropological Research. We are also grateful to the Charles E. Chadwyck-Healey Charitable Trust, Dr Laura Appell-Warren and Dr John Warren, the Leverhulme Trust and the Onaway Trust for providing additional resourcing and support. Download our new fundraising brochure. To download a PDF copy of our new brochure. Thank you for visitin...
objects2015.wordpress.com
About | Objects in Motion: Material Culture in Transition
https://objects2015.wordpress.com/about
Objects in Motion: Material Culture in Transition. June 18-20, 2015 at CRASSH, University of Cambridge. Although the conference itself has now concluded, the dialog has not! You can listen to audio podcasts. Of sixteen of the conference talks and keynotes, and there are plans for a future publication. Stay tuned either by following the blog or the conference Twitter account @Objects2015. There are two Storify records of the conference tweets – an edited version. From CRASSH and a record of all 450 tweets.
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