Item details
Item ID
HSS01-20161018_NF46S_part2
Title Samoan audio from 2016 - 46-year-old woman in Neiafu-Tai part 2
Description Interview in samoan about samoan language and society in 2016 in the village of Neiafu-Tai on Savai'i in Samoa (formerly Western Samoa). Contains reading of minimal pairs wordlist for vowels (see wordlist-file in collection). Recording includes informant reading “Frog where are you?” by Mercer from 1969. Contains significant portions of other stories or longer general conversation. Recording includes biographical details about birthplace, siblings, education etc. See Skirgård’s PhD thesis from 2021 and supplementary material H1 for sociolinguistic-questionnaire. Local assistant present (Melenesa). Entire recording session is divided into separate items in this collection. ELAN file contains segments for utterances, but not transcription.
Origination date 2016-10-18
Origination date free form
Archive link https://catalog.paradisec.org.au/repository/HSS01/20161018_NF46S_part2
URL
Collector
Hedvig Skirgård
Countries To view related information on a country, click its name
Language as given Sāmoan
Subject language(s) To view related information on a language, click its name
Content language(s) To view related information on a language, click its name
Dialect Savai’i
Region / village Oceania, Remote Oceania, Polynesia, Samoa, Neiafu-Tai
Originating university Australian National University
Operator Tina Gregor
Data Categories typological analysis
Data Types Sound
Discourse type formulaic_discourse
Roles Hedvig Skirgård : interviewer
Melenesa Lutelu : participant
NF46S : consultant
DOI 10.26278/PHJN-K908
Cite as Hedvig Skirgård (collector), Hedvig Skirgård (interviewer), Melenesa Lutelu (participant), NF46S (consultant), 2016. Samoan audio from 2016 - 46-year-old woman in Neiafu-Tai part 2. EAF+XML/MPEG/VND.WAV. HSS01-20161018_NF46S_part2 at catalog.paradisec.org.au. https://dx.doi.org/10.26278/PHJN-K908
Content Files (5)
Filename Type File size Duration File access
HSS01-20161018_NF46S_part2-01.eaf application/eaf+xml 1.6 KB
HSS01-20161018_NF46S_part2-Tlr.mp3 audio/mpeg 2.14 MB 00:02:20.415
HSS01-20161018_NF46S_part2-Tlr.wav audio/vnd.wav 77.4 MB 00:02:20.396
HSS01-20161018_NF46S_part2-Tr1.mp3 audio/mpeg 2.14 MB 00:02:20.415
HSS01-20161018_NF46S_part2-Tr1.wav audio/vnd.wav 77.4 MB 00:02:20.396
5 files -- 159 MB -- --

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Collection Information
Collection ID HSS01
Collection title Samoan sociolinguistic interviews, wordlists and conversation
Description Recordings of Samoan informants on the island of Savai'i, collected in 2015 & 2016. Sociolinguistic interviews about family, education and community, wordlists, frog stories and some casual conversation based on open questions. Recorded by Hedvig Skirgård with the help of Samoan speaking assistants Melenesa Lutelu, Sega Momoemausu Esau and Saveve Ugapo Sai'o. Data collected for PhD thesis and the Wellsprings of Linguistic Diversity project.

The Wellsprings of Linguistic Diversity was a five year Laureate project awarded by the Australian Research Council to Professor Nicholas Evans within the School of Culture, History and Language in the College of Asia and the Pacific, at the Australian National University. The project ran from 2014 to 2019.

The project sought to address fundamental questions of linguistic diversity and disparity through an analysis of linguistic variation and change. The project addressed a crucial missing step in existing linguistic research by addressing the question of what drives linguistic diversification so much faster in some societies than in others. It did so by undertaking intensive, matched case studies of speech communities across Australia and the Pacific, allowing researchers to detect variations in languages as they occur and compare the amounts and types of variation found in different sorts of settings, with a particular focus on small-scale multilingual speech communities. It aimed to generate an integrated model of language variation and change, building in interactions between social and linguistic processes. The research findings offered insights into the enormous diversity of human experience, vital for fields as diverse as cognitive science, human evolutionary biology, anthropology and archaeology.
Countries To view related information on a country, click its name
Languages To view related information on a language, click its name
Access Information
Edit access Tina Gregor
View/Download access
Data access conditions Open (subject to agreeing to PDSC access conditions)
Data access narrative
Metadata
RO-Crate Metadata
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