Lecture by Professor Hugh Brody for the World Oral Literature Project Occasional Lecture Series

PDF poster and MPEG4 video file In 1996, a small group of Bushmen, known as the ≠Khomani San, launched a claim to South Africa's second most important National Park. This was one of the first such land claims in Africa, and led to research, negotiation and, in 1999, a settlement. A set of resea...

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Main Author: Brody, Hugh
Format: Moving Image (Video)
Language:unknown
Published: World Oral Literature Project 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.dspace.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/224621
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author_facet Brody, Hugh
author_sort Brody, Hugh
collection Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
description PDF poster and MPEG4 video file In 1996, a small group of Bushmen, known as the ≠Khomani San, launched a claim to South Africa's second most important National Park. This was one of the first such land claims in Africa, and led to research, negotiation and, in 1999, a settlement. A set of research projects - recording oral histories, mapping relationships to land and resources, filming with the community - put together the land claim, and then monitored its consequences. In this lecture, Hugh Brody, who co-ordinated the research projects with the ≠Khomani San from 1997-2008, will describe the process and invite discussion of how the results of such work can have maximum value, both for the people who told the stories and made the claim, and for those who wish to draw on and analyse the materials. Professor Brody is the Canada Research Chair in Aboriginal Studies at the University of the Fraser Valley and an Associate of the Scott Polar Research Institute at the University of Cambridge. He has worked with governments and indigenous communities on land claims issues in Canada and South Africa since the 1970s. He was an adviser to the Mackenzie Pipeline Inquiry, a member of the World Bank's Morse Commission and chairman of the Snake River Independent Review, all of which involved encounters between large-scale development and indigenous communities. World Oral Literature Project: an urgent global initiative to document and make accessible endangered oral literatures before they disappear without record
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spelling ftunivcam:oai:www.repository.cam.ac.uk:1810/224621 2025-01-17T00:41:38+00:00 Lecture by Professor Hugh Brody for the World Oral Literature Project Occasional Lecture Series Land, Truth, Water: Finding the ≠Khomani Bushmen of the Southern Kalahari Brody, Hugh 1996-2008 2010-03-16 application/pdf audio/mpeg audio/x-wav video/mp4 http://www.dspace.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/224621 unknown World Oral Literature Project http://www.dspace.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/224621 Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported (CC BY-NC-ND 3.0) Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 Unported https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/ Oral Literature Oral History Bushmen Kalahari Anthropology Ethnography Visual Land claim Video 2010 ftunivcam 2023-07-10T22:24:54Z PDF poster and MPEG4 video file In 1996, a small group of Bushmen, known as the ≠Khomani San, launched a claim to South Africa's second most important National Park. This was one of the first such land claims in Africa, and led to research, negotiation and, in 1999, a settlement. A set of research projects - recording oral histories, mapping relationships to land and resources, filming with the community - put together the land claim, and then monitored its consequences. In this lecture, Hugh Brody, who co-ordinated the research projects with the ≠Khomani San from 1997-2008, will describe the process and invite discussion of how the results of such work can have maximum value, both for the people who told the stories and made the claim, and for those who wish to draw on and analyse the materials. Professor Brody is the Canada Research Chair in Aboriginal Studies at the University of the Fraser Valley and an Associate of the Scott Polar Research Institute at the University of Cambridge. He has worked with governments and indigenous communities on land claims issues in Canada and South Africa since the 1970s. He was an adviser to the Mackenzie Pipeline Inquiry, a member of the World Bank's Morse Commission and chairman of the Snake River Independent Review, all of which involved encounters between large-scale development and indigenous communities. World Oral Literature Project: an urgent global initiative to document and make accessible endangered oral literatures before they disappear without record Moving Image (Video) Scott Polar Research Institute morse Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository Canada Morse ENVELOPE(130.167,130.167,-66.250,-66.250)
spellingShingle Oral Literature
Oral History
Bushmen
Kalahari
Anthropology
Ethnography
Visual
Land claim
Brody, Hugh
Lecture by Professor Hugh Brody for the World Oral Literature Project Occasional Lecture Series
title Lecture by Professor Hugh Brody for the World Oral Literature Project Occasional Lecture Series
title_full Lecture by Professor Hugh Brody for the World Oral Literature Project Occasional Lecture Series
title_fullStr Lecture by Professor Hugh Brody for the World Oral Literature Project Occasional Lecture Series
title_full_unstemmed Lecture by Professor Hugh Brody for the World Oral Literature Project Occasional Lecture Series
title_short Lecture by Professor Hugh Brody for the World Oral Literature Project Occasional Lecture Series
title_sort lecture by professor hugh brody for the world oral literature project occasional lecture series
topic Oral Literature
Oral History
Bushmen
Kalahari
Anthropology
Ethnography
Visual
Land claim
topic_facet Oral Literature
Oral History
Bushmen
Kalahari
Anthropology
Ethnography
Visual
Land claim
url http://www.dspace.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/224621