IDNO

N.132097.MST


Description

On Strathern's listing: Mi (taboo sign) put up for tipu rømi (wild spirits) with jawbones of pigs.
Tipu rømi are also called kor wakl (see Women in Between 1972: 170), and are associated with particular places. They are capricious and unpredictable, and attack if they think people have taken what is theirs, e.g when new gardens are cut into places where the spirits live.

Physical Condition: Light damage on negative. [JD 4/26/2017]


Place

Oceania Melanesia; Papua New Guinea; Western Highlands Province; towards Mope; Kawelka Membo country


Cultural Affliation


Named Person


Photographer

Strathern, Marilyn (later Prof., Dame)


Collector / Expedition


Date

18 May 1964


Collection Name

Strathern Collection


Source

Strathern, Marilyn (Prof., Dame)


Format

Film Negative Black & White


Primary Documentation


Other Information

N.132096.MST - N.132115.MST were identified by Marilyn Strathern as Set 9.

Context: Kor Wakl = see Tipu Rømi. [Strathern's Glossary word document, JD 4/26/2017]

Context: Tipu Rømi or Kor Wakl = wild spirits. They are associated with particular places. They are capricious and unpredictable, and attack if they think people have taken what is theirs, e.g when new gardens are cut into places where the spirits live. (MS. Women in Between. 1972: 170). [Strathern's Glossary word document, JD 4/26/2017]

Context: mi = substance, usually a plant, with which each tribe is associated (p194); sometimes translated as ‘totem’, it is used in divination. Can also be a taboo sign. (Melpa). [Strathern's Glossary word document, JD 4/25/2017]

A grant from the Wenner-Gren Foundation Historical Archives Program supported the documentation and preservation of the Strathern photographic collection. [JD 6/11/2017]


FM:267235

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