Fieldwork for Every Island Has Its Own Song: Interview with Emmanuel Gombos (Video 22-23) | Fieldwork for Every Island Has Its Own Song: Interview with Emmanuel Gombos (Video 22-23) | Moving Image | Teacher Fieldwork Interviews Teachers Local history Emigration and immigration Greek Americans | /fpc/memory/omeka_images/thumbnails/catalog_video.jpg |
Fieldwork for Every Island Has Its Own Song: Interview with Emmanuel Gombos (Video 22-23)
- Date
- 1987-11
- Description
- Two video cassettes. 20 minutes. (Copy can be found on FV-10, S 1615.) Emmanuel Gombos (influential church lay leader and local high school Greek teacher) on the unique Greek heritage of Tarpon Springs; scenes of local Greek organizations. Created for the Every Island Has Its Own Song project. The finished product was a documentary about Nikitas Tsimouris, a Greek bagpipe player, and his family, and the Tarpon Springs Greek community he lived in. A co-production of WEDO-TV and the FFP, it was funded in part by the Florida Endowment for the Humanities. Offenbach narrated. Folklorist Michael researched, wrote and produced, and Yvonne Bryant was assistant producer.
- Collection
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.
- Collection
a_s1576_t77-266 | Cora McKinney speaking and singing at the Stephen Foster Center in 1963 | Sound | Folk festivals Folklore revival festivals Oral histories Special events Oral performance Oral narratives Oral poetry Local history Singing Singers Teacher Storytellers Poets | /fpc/memory/omeka_images/thumbnails/audio.jpg |
a_s2034_04_cd03-090 | Friday performances at the 2003 Florida Folk Festival (Folklife Stage) (Disc 5) | Sound | Dancers Teacher Singers Festivals Folk festivals Folklore revival festivals Special events Performing arts Music performance Dance Old time music Singing Demonstrations Students | /fpc/memory/omeka_images/thumbnails/audio.jpg |
a_s1576_13_c84-050 | Ft. White Fourth Grade Class | Sound | Teacher Storytellers Fieldwork Elementary schools Storytelling Teachers Teaching of folklore Ghosts Jump rope rhymes Games Supernatural legends Children Students | /fpc/memory/omeka_images/thumbnails/catalog_audio.jpg |
Ft. White Fourth Grade Class
- Date
- 1983-10
- Description
- One audio cassette. Students and teachers discuss family photographs brought in by students; scary stories; games and rhymes; jump rope rhymes.
- Collection
a_s1576_t85-225 | Interview with Myakka City teacher Charlotte Tucker | Sound | Teacher Fieldwork Interviews Personal experience narratives Oral histories Community culture Teachers Teaching Education Students Schools Churches Religion Railroads Family history Local history Church services Leisure Educators | /fpc/memory/omeka_images/thumbnails/catalog_audio.jpg |
Interview with Myakka City teacher Charlotte Tucker
- Date
- 1984-06-20
- Description
- One reel to reel. Tucker talks about education in Myakka City, as well as her reaction to Florida, and the local community as a newly arrived resident (in the 1960s). The Myakka Community Profile Project was conducted between October 1983 and March 1984 through a partnership with the Crowley Museum and Nature Center, and the Florida Folklife Program, funded by the Florida Endowment for the Humanities. The fieldwork and resultant booklet/slideshow, created by museum employee Robert Cottrell and folklorist Pat Waterman, was to profile the lifestyles and values of the Myakka community, located in Southwest Florida in Manatee County. See S 1682 for more information on the project.
- Collection
a_s1595_02_tape05 | Interview with Polly Billie | Sound | Teacher Seminole Indians Family history Oral histories Education Schools Native Americans Fishing Food habits | /fpc/memory/omeka_images/thumbnails/audio.jpg |
Interview with Polly Billie
- Date
- 1988-12
- Description
- Two audio cassette recordings. Index to interview recording located in S 1595, Box 1. Interview with Seminole Polly Billie, daughter of Nancy Billie, and granddaughter of Lottie Shore. The interview was recorded at the Hollywood Reservation in Hollywood, Florida. The interview dealt mostly with family relations and growing up on a reservation. Also discussed Seminole culture, such as fishing and education. There is also a transcript of a second interview (no tape recording in collection) with Polly Billie located in S 1595, Box 1, folder 6. The recording was conducted in part for use in an exhibit on Seminole culture at the Museum of Florida History.
- Collection
a_s1576_18_c86-042 | Recording of the 1985 Summer Folk Culture Seminar | Sound | Educators Teacher Conferences and seminars series Seminars Workshops (Adult education) Teaching of folklore Interviewing Teachers Fieldwork (educational method) Education Folklife Publishers and publishing Oral history Oral tradition Editing Writing Folklorists | /fpc/memory/omeka_images/thumbnails/catalog_audio.jpg |
Recording of the 1985 Summer Folk Culture Seminar
- Date
- 1986-05-14
- Description
- Five audio cassettes. Recordings of a seminar regarding teaching folklore in the class room (in the previous years, the seminars were called Folklife in the Classroom Teachers Seminar.) The theme dealt with field research and publishing. The keynote speaker was George Reynolds, author/editor of the Foxfire books. He spoke, along with some of his students, on research, interviewing, editing, and publishing as an educational tool.
- Collection
a_s1576_24_c88-001 | Recording of the 1988 Summer Folk Culture Seminar | Sound | Teacher Conferences and seminars series Seminars Teaching of folklore Education Teachers Folklife Children Collecting Storytelling Tales Games Riddles Educators Folklorists | /fpc/memory/omeka_images/thumbnails/catalog_audio.jpg |
Recording of the 1988 Summer Folk Culture Seminar
- Date
- 1988-07-11
- Description
- Eight audio cassettes. Sylvia Grider (professor of folklife at Texas A&M) and Nancy Nusz gives presentations on children and folklife. Topics include: childhood games, storytelling, adult versus children culture; psychological development of children; collecting children folklife; legends; urban legends; paper folding; and riddles.
- Collection
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.
- Collection