IDNO

N.132241.MST


Description

On Strathern's listing: Pela øi laid out just to show – not part of the prestation being planned.
Nassa shell mats (pela øi) and cowrie shell ‘ropes’ (kokla rangkel), of the kind that were rapidly going out of fashion in 1964.


Place

Oceania Melanesia; Papua New Guinea; Western Highlands Province; Mbukl


Cultural Affliation


Named Person


Photographer

Strathern, Marilyn (later Prof., Dame)


Collector / Expedition


Date

September 1964


Collection Name

Strathern Collection


Source

Strathern, Marilyn (Prof., Dame)


Format

Film Negative Black & White


Primary Documentation


Other Information

N.132225.MST - N.132246.MST were identified by Marilyn Strathern as Set 16.

Context: kokla rangkel = cowrie shell ‘ropes’. [Strathern's Glossary word document, JD 4/25/2017]

Context: pela øi = shell ‘mat’ made of nassa shells, sometimes worn as forehead ornament (see description of objects MAA 1967.60 and 1967.61). [Strathern's Glossary word document, JD 4/27/2017]

Related Object: MAA 1967.60 "Nassa-shell headband. A small headband, 4" wide and 18" long, used as a forehead ornament only. The shells are sewn on to a bark backing, which has a strip of European cloth incorporated into it. A central panel is left bare and covered in red ochre. cf. 1967.59 eg. Vicedom I:105." From Buk, Mount Hagen Area. Donated by A.M. and A.J. Strathern, 1967. [JD 4/25/2017]

Related Object: MAA 1967.61 "Four large nassa-shell mats. These were used as valuables in bridewealth, moka and compensation payments in the Buk area till c.1960 although their popularity had begun to wane by the mid 1950s, and earlier in the Kelua area near Mount Hagen township. Europeans paid for vegetables with handfuls of these shells, and men say what hard work it was to accumulate enough shells for a mat. Mat B (c. 8 1/2" x 24") has about 2200 shells in it; the other mats are; A: 9 3/4" x 21"; C: 8" x 22"; D: 10 1/2" x 24". They are all made with bark backing, A having some European brown paper incorporated, while C has some native silk (cf.1967.5). A and C show how the bark has been beaten from a single piece, as the ends are left un-beaten. In some dances women used to wear pela oi tied to their aprons so that these flapped as they moved and bent their knees in the dance. Like the cowrie ropes (1967.63) the 'mats' may be ficticiously divided in the centre, hence the special patterning of the shells." From Buk, Mount Hagen Area. Donated by A.M. and A.J. Strathern, 1967. [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:267399

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