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Culture in Everyday Life
University of Aberdeen
9 episodes
1 month ago
This series features lectures from the Elphinstone Institute Archives delivered by scholars working in the fields of Ethnology, Ethnomusicology, and Folklore. Rooted in the study of vernacular culture, they explore an incredible variety of topics from community building, legends, rituals, traditional music and dance, to language, memorialisation, digital culture, customs, and much more.
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Documentary
Society & Culture,
Science,
Social Sciences
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All content for Culture in Everyday Life is the property of University of Aberdeen and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
This series features lectures from the Elphinstone Institute Archives delivered by scholars working in the fields of Ethnology, Ethnomusicology, and Folklore. Rooted in the study of vernacular culture, they explore an incredible variety of topics from community building, legends, rituals, traditional music and dance, to language, memorialisation, digital culture, customs, and much more.
Show more...
Documentary
Society & Culture,
Science,
Social Sciences
Episodes (9/9)
Culture in Everyday Life
Being an African: The Burden of Proof in Being in a Space by Bertha Yakubu, MBE

This recording is of a talk that Bertha Yakubu, MBE. gave as part of the Elphinstone Institute Public Lecture Series on 6 March 2023. She described the talk by writing: ‘I am speaking as an African Diaspora woman living outside Africa sharing my experience and that of my kind. As I move around, I feel this weight on my shoulder. I want to get rid of it but it is impossible to put down. Emotionally I am hunched. My soul is restless and my joy is short lived. My soul, why are you cast down? Why are you so disturbed and restless within me? Why can’t I get rid of this unseen weight? Is it only me that feels this way or do other Africans feel this way too? I ask my friends, read and watch local and international events, and to my surprise the feeling is mutual, almost universal. The question is why is this so? As I think about this I see a pattern emerging; it has to do with the burden of proof that is expected from me and my kind. Proof is to show, demonstrate, verify, and provide evidence, or substantiate or corroborate my presence in a space. In this talk, I will explore some of the issues that weigh us down’.

 

Bertha Yakubu founded African Women Scotland in Aberdeen in 1994, with the objective of providing space for African Women to meet and break the isolation and loneliness they experience. Since then the group has become a voice and face of Africans in Aberdeenshire and Scotland working in partnership with other African groups in the UK. The group continues to do work in the wider community in the areas of immigration, employment, retraining, job placement, business, health, children, community marginalisation, and political participation. The group acts as an advocacy group for many issues and shares information with and supports those in need and distress.

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3 months ago
1 hour 14 minutes

Culture in Everyday Life
'A Blond Wig for Maid Marion': Aberdeen and Scotland's Folk Dramas by Donald Smith

From Mystery Plays to the Robin Hood revels at May Day, Aberdeen played a full role in Scotland’s popular dramas. Donald Smith explores some older forms of live entertainment, and their present day revival. Should we still go ‘A-Maying’? What does Robin Hood have to do with the Granite City? And does climate change mean we should move theatre back outdoors? 

In 2019, Donald Smith, the then Director of Traditional Arts and Culture Scotland, gave a public talk as part of the Elphinstone Institute’s Public Lecture Series entitled 'A Blond Wig for Maid Marion': Aberdeen and Scotland's Folk Dramas.


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2 years ago
56 minutes

Culture in Everyday Life
Singing Time and Singing Place
This presentation, which was recorded at the Elphinstone Institute’s 2017 symposium dedicated to memory of Bill Nicolaisen, by Elphinstone Institute Director, Dr Thomas A McKean, looks at performed and sung ballad texts in the light of Bill Nicolaisen’s ideas of time – performance, narrative, and historical – and place, beyond the beyond. Ballads and their performance express and encapsulate, ignore and elide time and place in dynamic, sometimes illogical ways, pulling and stretching realities to maximise impact. Using North-East ballads, Dr McKean explores some of the ways singers and composers use and are affected by these concepts. For more information about Dr McKean’s work, please visit: (abdn.ac.uk)https://www.abdn.ac.uk/people/t.a.mckean/
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3 years ago
48 minutes

Culture in Everyday Life
Building Community Self-Esteem: Advocating for Culture
Hear about a folklorist’s journey from scholar to activist to facilitator of change, and back again. Through narratives of migration, motherhood, courage, and food, Skillman uses the transformative power of story to create agency and resilience among refugee and immigrant women in the USA. These stories and more illustrate our responsibility as cultural advocates to help build and foster community self-esteem and well-being.
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3 years ago
42 minutes

Culture in Everyday Life
Words for Tunes: Robert Burns as a Lyric-Writer by Adam McNaughtan
Adam McNaughtan delivers an illustrated talk with Gordeanna McCulloch entitled ‘Words for Tunes: Robert Burns as a Lyric-Writer’ at the Cullerie Singing Weekend in 2009.
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3 years ago
1 hour 4 minutes

Culture in Everyday Life
Music and the Memory Spectrum by Michael Pickering
In this episode, Emeritus Professor Michael Pickering maps out the major ways in which music figures in registering and referencing the past, both in autobiographical memory and in vernacular memory.
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3 years ago
1 hour 1 minute

Culture in Everyday Life
Leonard Primiano on Catholic Kitsch
The late Leonard Primiano discusses his research on Catholic kitsch in this guest lecture given at the Elphinstone Institute, University of Aberdeen.
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4 years ago
45 minutes

Culture in Everyday Life
Copyrighting Tradition in the Internet Age: Creativity, Authorship and Folklore
Through discussion of Icelandic folk tunes, internet mashups and remixes, folktales, and more, this lecture explores the entanglements between creativity, authorship, digital culture, and copyright law.
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4 years ago
1 hour 24 minutes

Culture in Everyday Life
Recycled Stories: Health Legends, Epidemics and the Politics of Risk
As part of community discourse about the nature of disease, legends provide powerful information about cultural understandings of disease and illness. Though fascinating, intriguing, and often frightening, health legends do more than merely entertain. They warn and inform, articulate notions of risk, provide political commentary on public health actions, and offer insight into the relationship between cultural and health truths.
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4 years ago
1 hour 14 minutes

Culture in Everyday Life
This series features lectures from the Elphinstone Institute Archives delivered by scholars working in the fields of Ethnology, Ethnomusicology, and Folklore. Rooted in the study of vernacular culture, they explore an incredible variety of topics from community building, legends, rituals, traditional music and dance, to language, memorialisation, digital culture, customs, and much more.