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         Winiama Indigenous Peoples Africa:     more detail

1. African Studies Videos
Vital concepts indigenous to the Ibos of southeastern Nigeria such as the social andspiritual customs of the Mossi, winiama, Bobo and other peoples of the
http://www.columbia.edu/cu/lweb/indiv/africa/afvid.html
A Guide to Videos in African Studies
Columbia University Libraries
and
elsewhere at Columbia.
(January 2003)
Compiled by Dr. Joseph S. Caruso,
African Studies Department
, Columbia University Libraries
Send comments or questions to: caruso@columbia.edu
Most of the video titles listed and summarized here are available at one of two locations: Butler Media Center, 208B Butler Library ; and, Barnard Media Center, Barnard Library, Barnard College. ***PLEASE NOTE : Access to videos at Columbia University are restricted to persons with current Columbia IDs and library borrowing privileges.
  • Butler Media Collections, 208B, Butler Reserves, Butler Library
    • RESERVES: On-site for all CUID holders or off-site viewing (with prior arrangements) for Columbia faculty only.
    • GENERAL: On-site viewing and over night loan periods for CUID holders to view videos off-site.
    • For more information, see the LibraryWeb guide to the Butler Media collection.
  • Barnard Media Center, Barnard Library, Lehman Hall, Barnard College : Students and faculty with Columbia ID can view videos on-site. Only Barnard faculty can borrow videos for off-site viewing/classroom use. Elsewhere
  • At the , students and faculty with Columbia ID can view on-site; only Columbia "officers" can borrow videos off-site.
  • 2. VADA - Volken Peoples Tribes V - Z
    winiama (Burkina Faso)/a . winiama Information Zo'é See also indigenous Peoplesin Brazil. Zoque Indians ZULU amaZULU (Zuid Afrika South africa).
    http://www.vada.nl/volkenvz.htm

    3. Carleton College: Art Gallery: Burkina Faso
    centuries ago, they subjugated indigenous populations fiercely independent, politicallydecentralized peoples to the Nuna, Nunama, Toussian, Turka, and winiama.
    http://www.carleton.edu/campus/gallery/exhibitions/2002/burkinaFaso/
    Exhibition Description Calendar of Events
    Exhibition Description:
    Art and Life in Burkina Faso, Land of Upright People
    Carleton College Art Gallery
    April 3 - May 8, 2002 The art works gathered here come from Burkina Faso, the West African nation formerly known as Upper Volta. In 1984, former President Thomas Sankara (1949-1987) renamed the country Burkina Faso, drawing together words from the languages of the country's major populations, the Mossi and the Dyula. Roughly translated, Burkina Faso means "the land of upright people." Located at the southern edge of the Sahara Desert, with national boundaries drawn by the French during the colonial era, many diverse peoples live in this dry, landlocked country, independent since 1960. Burkina Faso's population is made up of more than sixty different ethnic groups. The country's complex cultural diversity is reflected in this exhibition which includes works of art by Bwa, Bobo, Kassena, Lela, Lobi, Mossi, Nuna, Nunama, Toussian, Turka, and Winiama artists. While Burkina Faso is often described as one of the most economically impoverished countries in the world, with an average annual per capita income of between two and three hundred dollars, in terms of cultural traditions, it is one of the richest places on earth. The peoples of Burkina Faso create a wide range of objects, diverse in form, function, size and scale, and employing many different materials and technologies. Within their original contexts, art works are valued not only for their aesthetic qualities, but also for their functional efficacy. In Burkina Faso, art is not just something to look at, but also serves life-sustaining purposes, vital to the well-being of individuals and the larger society.

    4. Bibliography
    Environment The peoples that are discussed for rural peoples, especially during the peoples that are often called gurunsi; they call themselves Léla, Nunuma or Nuna, winiama,
    http://www1.appstate.edu/~bentore/mask/bibliogr.htm
    Igbo Ijele at Powell Library: the elephant and king of African masquerades [exhibition folder] . Los Angeles, Museum of Cultural History, UCLA.
    Keywords: Nigeria, Igbo, art, masquerade, mask, Ijele. [Y]
    Ornament
    Keywords: Igbo, mask, artist. [N]
    Máscaras en el Poliforum. Catálogo . Mexico City, Poliforum Siqueiros.
    Keywords: mask, art, modern, Mexico, Mesoamerica. [N]
    Nigeria Magazine
    Keywords: Nigeria, Igbo, religion, secret society, ekpe, Aro, Arochukwu, Bende, festival, masquerade, nsibidi, graphic systems. [X]
    *Abasi, Chigorom O. (1975). Ekpe Festival in Ogbodi-Ukwu in Umuopara-Umuahia Division of East-Central State. Institute of Education . Ibadan, University of Ibadan
    Keywords: Nigeria, Igbo, art, festival, Ekpe, Umuahia, Ogbodi-Ukwu. [N]
    *Achebe, Chinua and Ulli Beier (1991). The world is a dancing masquerade: a conversation between Chinua Achebe and Ulli Beier . Bayreuth, Iwalewa Haus. Keywords: Nigeria, Igbo, masquerade, art, Chinua Achebe, cosmology. [X] *Achinivu, A. K. (1986). Arochukwu Cultural Heritage: music and dance. Arochukwu: history and culture . J. Okoro Ijoma. Enugu, Fourth Dimension

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