CMDI Maker by CLASS - Cologne Language Archive Services 2015-10-29 https://hdl.handle.net/1839/5c841e83-6131-420a-b690-86faa5828262 clarin.eu:cr1:p_1407745712035 DoBeS archive : Akie Resource https://hdl.handle.net/1839/00-0000-0000-0021-7551-8 Resource https://hdl.handle.net/1839/00-0000-0000-0021-6E35-C LandingPage https://archive.mpi.nl/islandora/object/tla%3A1839_00_0000_0000_0021_7671_3#?pid=hdl%3A1839%2F5c841e83-6131-420a-b690-86faa5828262 NAME:imdi2cmdi.xslt DATE:2016-09-09T16:20:26.468+02:00. Hunting5 Hunting5 - Hunting calls1 2013-02-18 Hunting calls Africa Tanzania Maasai Stepp Gitu Akie Akie in Tanzania – documenting a critically endangered language AZ 86405 Karsten Legère Institut für Afrikawissenschaften, Unversität Wien, Spitalgasse 2-4, Hof 5 A - 1090 Wien karsten.legere@african.gu.se Johann Wolfgang Goethe Universität Frankfurt Akie in Tanzania – documenting a critically endangered language The Akie of Tanzania are a traditional hunter-gatherer society whose language is seriously endangered. The language, presumably a member of the Kalenjin branch of the Southern Nilotic languages, is still actively spoken in three villages of northeastern Tanzania, but the majority language and culture in the Akie-speaking area is Maa (speaking the Maasai dialect), which belongs to the Eastern Nilotic branch of the Nilotic family. The total number of Akie people is estimated at roughly 2500 people, but the number of people still speaking the language is presumably below 200. The massive impact of Maa language, culture, and life style plus the increasing influence of Bantu languages, including Swahili, the national language of Tanzania, contribute to a rapid erosion of the linguistic and ethnic identity of the Akie, as the people themselves are well aware. The present project aims at documenting the Akie language, which is virtually unknown. The project will involve two core researchers, the principal applicant (PA) being Karsten Legère, Universität Wien, and the co-applicant (CA) Christa König, Universität Frankfurt. Both have extensive experience of language documentation in East Africa, and both have contributed to the documentation of endangered African languages in Kenya, Tanzania and Namibia. Whereas the PA has contributed mainly to the documentation of Tanzanian Bantu languages, the PA has contributed to the description of the Maa language (which was the topic of her M.A. and Ph.D. dissertations). In addition, the project will involve intensive cooperation with and participation of colleagues in East Africa, mostly of the University of Dar es Salaam, Tanzania. This participation will involve such domains as linguistics, history, sociology, and musicology. Finally, the project will also involve a Ph.D. student of the University of Dar es Salaam, and a number of Tanzanian field assistants, most of them being Akie people. At the center of documentation work will be the (manual, audio, and video) recording of texts of different genres, conversations, folktales, fables, songs, oral traditions, proverbs, riddles, etc..A second component of field research will be devoted to lexical documentation of semantic fields, in particular of kinship terms, body parts, material culture and artifacts, traditional economy (hunting and gathering), toponyms, greetings, etc. Various special documentation studies within the project will deal with the intimate interaction of Akie people as hunter-gatherers with nature (bees and gathering honey, plant names and uses), gender based issues (food and its preparation, child care and traditional medicine, initiation rites). Furthermore, the project will aim at devising a practical orthography of the Akie language and at preparing a bilingual Akie – Maa dictionary. The original Akie texts to be collected will be edited and translated into the national language Swahili. The project is designed for a three-years’ period. In the first and the second year, both the PA and the CA will be carrying out field research in the Akie-speaking area, while field work is restricted to a shorter research visit to Tanzania. Discourse Procedural hunting calls non-interactive spontaneous non-elicited Public Monologue Unspecified ISO639-3:oki Akie Unspecified Unspecified Unspecified Papalai performs hunting calls used by the Akie at the side of the successful hunted animal performing hunting calls Speaker/Signer Nkoiseyyo Nkoiseyyo Kalisya Father Akie Unspecified Male 7 years of schooling false 60 Nkoiseyyo Gitu none One of two Akie who went to school. Successful family faher, many children, successful hunter and honey collector, knows how to read and write Akie ISO639-3:oki Akie true true ISO639-3:mas Maasai false false ISO639-3:swa Swahili false false ISO639-3:ngp Ngulu false false Researcher Christa Christa König Researcher German 1962-02-08 Female Unspecified false 50 Christa König Christa.Koenig@uni-koeln.de Goethe Universität Frankfurt a.M. audio audio/x-wav 39 MB Unspecified Unspecified Unspecified Unspecified video video/x-mpeg1 141 MB Unspecified Unspecified Unspecified Unspecified