a_s1576_12_c84-021 | Florida Ranching Workshop at the 1984 Florida Folk Festival Folklife Area | Sound | Folk festivals Florida Folk Festival Oral narratives Cowboys -- Florida Florida Crackers Ranching -- Florida Storytelling Florida history Cattle -- Florida | /fpc/memory/omeka_images/thumbnails/audio.jpg |
a_s1576_38_tape17 | Recordings of the 1987 Summer Folk Culture Seminar | Sound | Conferences and seminars series Seminars Teaching of folklore Education Teachers Folklife Native Americans Seminole Indians Storytelling Tales Teacher Educators Folklorists | /fpc/memory/omeka_images/thumbnails/audio.jpg |
Recordings of the 1987 Summer Folk Culture Seminar
- Date
- 1987-07-13
- Description
- Ten audio cassettes. (The final tape appears to be blank.) The theme for this year was Seminole Indian folklore. The main speaker was Dr. Rayna Green, director of the American Indian Program with the Smithsonian Institute. A graduate from the Indian university folklife program, she researched and wrote on Native American culture and images. She also taught at several universities, and published several books. Other speakers included traditional healer Jeanette Cypress and Seminole Tribe of Florida president James Billie.
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a_s1576_12_c84-020 | Women & Ranching Workshop at the 1984 Florida Folk Festival Folklife Area | Sound | Ranching -- Florida Florida Folk Festival Folk festivals Oral narratives Workshops (Adult education) Occupational folklore Cattle -- Florida | /fpc/memory/omeka_images/thumbnails/audio.jpg |
Women & Ranching Workshop at the 1984 Florida Folk Festival Folklife Area
- Date
- 1984-05-26
- Description
- One audio cassette. Nancy Nusz introduces Sarah Childs, Faye Blackstone, Mary Carothers, and Julia Parrish who discuss women and ranching; growing up and learning to work on a ranch; canning and beef demonstration. Sarah Childs and Mary Carothers discuss women in veterinary school - 50% of students in vet school are women.
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a_s1576_14_c84-093 | 1984 Summer Folk Culture Seminar | Sound | Teacher Conferences and seminars series Seminars Teaching of folklore Education Teachers Folklife Jack tales Marchen Storytelling Tales Children Family history Writing Naming practices Jokes Beliefs and cultures Educators Folklorists | /fpc/memory/omeka_images/thumbnails/catalog_audio.jpg |
1984 Summer Folk Culture Seminar
- Date
- 1984-07-23
- Description
- Nine audio cassettes. Liz Simmons, folklorist and teacher from California, leads discussion with teachers on folklore and the place of jokes, legends, and games in folklore. Topics include Zora Neale Hurston; African American folklore; writing folklore; memory and expressive writing; tooth fairy stories; reinforced roles and stereotypes; politics, race and gender in folklore; teaching folklore; children's games; naming traditions; children's folklore; Jack Tales; and family folklore and stories.
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a_s1576_24_c89-031 | Louise Sanders presentation at the 1986 Summer Folk Culture Seminar | Sound | Folklorists Conferences and seminars series Teaching of folklore Workshops (Adult education) Forums (Discussion and debate) Educators Performing arts Latinos Emigration and immigration | /fpc/memory/omeka_images/thumbnails/catalog_audio.jpg |
Louise Sanders presentation at the 1986 Summer Folk Culture Seminar
- Date
- 1989-07-10
- Description
- Nine audio cassettes. The theme this year was "Folklife and Immigration." C89-31: Nancy Nusz and Ormond Loomis open the Seminar. Olivia Cadaval is the primary speaker. She opens with a discussion of her family's background and traditions as immigrants. She also discusses her ethnicity as a Latin American; layers of identity; definitions of culture; folk culture and folklife; festivals; aesthetic use of space; identity through items and structures; participant view of folk culture; institutions within the community; material culture and how it is meaningful to us; elite, popular, and folk culture as a continuum. C89-32: Olivia Cadaval continues her discussion focusing on time concept; pop pressure; defines folk culture-groups/communities; ethnicity and material culture; "built environment"; extended family in the neighborhood, community, home, occupation, religion, society, etc.; regionalism; border traditions; stereotypes. She approaches these subjects from a Latin American perspective referring to terms such as comadres and copadres, and subjects such as the Virgen de Guadalupe. C89-33: Olivia Cadaal continues her discussion on stereotypes focusing on such subjects as virgins; significant plants; Spanish bayonet; the piƱata. Nancy Nusz conducts/discusses community building. Olivia Cadaval on the immigrant home. C89-34: Continuation of Olivia Cadaval on the immigrant home; discussion of occupational traditions including Curly Dekle and whipmaking; Haitian traditions; society at work; hierarchies; illustration of traditional occupations. C89-35: Discussion of occupations is continued. Ricki Saltzman discusses folk religion and Jewish folklore and ethnicity; foodways in religion; the Jewish religious year and generational upbringing; Jewish cookbooks as showing community value; variation differences between ideal and reality; festive foodways; wedding, birthday, and funeral customs. Specific aspects of the topics mentioned include Eastern Europe; the Passover/Easter; Torah; Mezuzah. C89-36: Riki Saltzman continues her discussion with ways to get children and their families to use/investigate folklore; ritual comparison (Kwanza is used as an example). Seminar attendees form groups of three, interview one another, and discuss results. Olivia Cadaval discusses folk examples of today; shows video clips of neighborhood celebrations seen and discussed; ethnic community celebrations (Corpus Christi, Holy Cross, and comparsa used as examples). C89-37: Olivia Cadaval continues discussion of community celebrations and material culture; toys. She reviews folk culture and material culture and discusses it as applied to folk art (Seminole art used as example). C89-38: Nancy Nusz continues discussion of folk art and discusses examples such as the Quetzal (bird symbolic of Guatemala). Slides are shown. There is an indication that a machine breaks part way into Side B - the index sheet does not specify whether it is tape recorder or slide machine. C89-39: Slideshow of folk artisans discussed.
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a_s1576_21_c86-206 | Meeting of the Florida Folklife Council, 10 June 1986 | Sound | Public officer Meetings Folklife Folklore Arts administrators Oral communication Public officers Public officials Folklorists | /fpc/memory/omeka_images/thumbnails/catalog_audio.jpg |
Meeting of the Florida Folklife Council, 10 June 1986
- Date
- 1986-06-10
- Description
- Five audio cassettes. Held at the Social Science building on the University of South Florida campus. Council Members present: Patricia Waterman (Chair), Ronald C. Foreman, Jr., Jeanette Cypress, Mick Moloney, Catherine Sugrue, William Green; Council Members absent: Beverly Carter; Florida Folklife Programs Staff: Ormond H. Loomis (Director), Iris Greene (Secretary), Barbara Beauchamp (Folklife Programs Administrator), Peggy Bulger (Folklife Programs Administrator), Merri Belland (Folklife Specialist); Visitors: Thelma Boltin (Consultant), Randall Kelley (Director, Division of Archives, History and Records Management), Ross Morrell (Assistant Director, Division of Archives, History and Records Management), Bill Dudley (WMNF Radio, Tampa), LeeEllen Friedland. For minutes and details of the meeting, see the S 1579, box 1, folder: Indexes for C86-150 through C86-210. And copies of tapes (but not the minutes)for this meeting can also be found in S 1717, box 2. The Florida Folklife Council (FFC) was created by legislation in 1979 (79-322, SB 1203) within the Department of State to advise the Secretary of State on issues relating to folk arts and folk life as well as stimulate and encourage statewide public interest and participation in folk arts and folklore, sponsor conferences and workshops throughout the state, and make recommendations for the development of a statewide Florida Folk Arts program. The Florida Folklife Council consists of seven members appointed by the Secretary of State for four-year terms.
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a_s1576_25_c88-027 | Meeting of the Florida Folklife Council, 19 February 1988 | Sound | Public officer Meetings Folklife Folklore Arts administrators Oral communication Public officers Public officials Folklorists | /fpc/memory/omeka_images/thumbnails/catalog_audio.jpg |
Meeting of the Florida Folklife Council, 19 February 1988
- Date
- 1988-02-19
- Description
- Three audio cassettes. Council Members present: Cathy Sugrue (Chair), Miguel Bretos, Ronald C. Foreman, Jr., Mick Moloney, Patricia Waterman; Council Members absent: Jeanette Cypress; Florida Folklife Programs Staff: Ormond H. Loomis (Chief), Iris Greene (Secretary), Barbara Beauchamp (Arts Administrator), Peggy Bulger (Arts Administrator), Nancy Nusz (Folk Arts Coordinator), Merri Belland (Folklife Specialist), Nancy Michael (Folklife Specialist), Patricia Stafford (Senior Clerk); Visitors: Thelma A. Boltin (Consultant), Bill Fenton (Public Relations Consultant). For minutes and details of the meeting, see the S 1579, box 1, folder: Indexes for C88-1 through C88-31. And copies of tapes (but not the minutes)for this meeting can also be found in S 1717, box 2. The Florida Folklife Council (FFC) was created by legislation in 1979 (79-322, SB 1203) within the Department of State to advise the Secretary of State on issues relating to folk arts and folk life as well as stimulate and encourage statewide public interest and participation in folk arts and folklore, sponsor conferences and workshops throughout the state, and make recommendations for the development of a statewide Florida Folk Arts program. The Florida Folklife Council consists of seven members appointed by the Secretary of State for four-year terms.
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a_s1576_15_c84-106 | Meeting of the Florida Folklife Council, 19 September 1984 | Sound | Public officer Meetings Folklife Folklore Arts administrators Oral communication Public officers Public officials Folklorists | /fpc/memory/omeka_images/thumbnails/catalog_audio.jpg |
Meeting of the Florida Folklife Council, 19 September 1984
- Date
- 1984-09-17
- Description
- Five audio cassettes. Council Members present: Ronald C. Foreman (Chairman), E. W. Carswell, Jeanette Cypress, Mick Moloney, Catherine Sugrue, Patricia Waterman; Council Members absent: William Green; Florida Folklife Programs Staff: Ormond H. Loomis (Director), Iris Greene (Secretary), Peggy Bulger (Folklife Programs Administrator), Nancy Nusz (Folk Arts Coordinator), Barbara Beauchamp (Folklife Specialist), Blanton Owen (Folk Arts Coordinator), Eric Larsen (Folklife Specialist), Andrea Graham (Folklife Specialist), David Taylor (Folk Arts Coordinator). For minutes and details of the meeting, see the S 1579, box 1, folder: Indexes for C84-102 through C84-125. The Florida Folklife Council (FFC) was created by legislation in 1979 (79-322, SB 1203) within the Department of State to advise the Secretary of State on issues relating to folk arts and folk life as well as stimulate and encourage statewide public interest and participation in folk arts and folklore, sponsor conferences and workshops throughout the state, and make recommendations for the development of a statewide Florida Folk Arts program. The Florida Folklife Council consists of seven members appointed by the Secretary of State for four-year terms.
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a_s1576_21_c86-152 | Meeting of the Florida Folklife Council, 20 September 1985 | Sound | Public officer Meetings Folklife Folklore Arts administrators Oral communication Public officers Public officials Folklorists | /fpc/memory/omeka_images/thumbnails/catalog_audio.jpg |
Meeting of the Florida Folklife Council, 20 September 1985
- Date
- 1985-09-20
- Description
- Three audio cassettes. Council Members present: Jeanette Cypress, Ronald C. Foreman, Jr., Mick Moloney (Vice-Chairman), Catherine Sugrue, Patricia Waterman; Council Members absent: William Green, (one vacancy); Florida Folklife Programs Staff: Ormond H. Loomis (Director), Iris C. Greene (Secretary), Barbara Beauchamp (Folklife Programs Administrator), Peggy Bulger (Folklife Programs Administrator), Merri Belland (Folklife Specialist), Eric Larsen (Folklife Specialist), Nancy Nusz (Historian), Blanton Owen (Historian), David Taylor (Historian); Visitors: Randall Kelley (Director, Division of Archives, History and Records Management), Ross Morrell (Assistant Director, Division of Archives, History and Records Management), Loretta Van Winkle (Tampa/Hillsborough Arts Council), Suzanne Nicola (Pine Castle Center of the Arts), Mary Jean Jones (Seminole Tribe of Florida). For minutes and details of the meeting, see the S 1579, box 1, folder: Indexes for C86-150 through C86-210. And copies of tapes (but not the minutes)for this meeting can also be found in S 1717. The Florida Folklife Council (FFC) was created by legislation in 1979 (79-322, SB 1203) within the Department of State to advise the Secretary of State on issues relating to folk arts and folk life as well as stimulate and encourage statewide public interest and participation in folk arts and folklore, sponsor conferences and workshops throughout the state, and make recommendations for the development of a statewide Florida Folk Arts program. The Florida Folklife Council consists of seven members appointed by the Secretary of State for four-year terms.
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a_s1576_15_c84-122 | Meeting of the Florida Folklife Council, 22 February 1985 | Sound | Public officer Meetings Folklife Folklore Arts administrators Oral communication Public officers Public officials Folklorists | /fpc/memory/omeka_images/thumbnails/catalog_audio.jpg |
Meeting of the Florida Folklife Council, 22 February 1985
- Date
- 1985-02-22
- Description
- Two audio cassettes. Council Members present: E.W. Carswell (Chairman), Jeanette Cypress, Mick Moloney, Catherine Sugrue, Patricia Waterman; Council Members absent: Ronald C. Foreman, William H. Green; Florida Folklife Programs Staff: Ormond H. Loomis (Director), Irish C. Greene (Secretary), Barbara Beauchamp (Folklife Programs Administrator), Peggy Bulger (Folklife Programs Administrator), Blanton Owen (Folk Arts Coordinator), Nancy Nusz (Folk Arts Coordinator), Eric Larsen (Folklife Specialist), Andrea Graham (Folklife Specialist); Visitors: Ernie Williams (Florida Folklore Society). For minutes and details of the meeting, see the S 1579, box 1, folder: Indexes for C84-102 through C84-125. The Florida Folklife Council (FFC) was created by legislation in 1979 (79-322, SB 1203) within the Department of State to advise the Secretary of State on issues relating to folk arts and folk life as well as stimulate and encourage statewide public interest and participation in folk arts and folklore, sponsor conferences and workshops throughout the state, and make recommendations for the development of a statewide Florida Folk Arts program. The Florida Folklife Council consists of seven members appointed by the Secretary of State for four-year terms.
- Collection