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Details

Latitude
-4.71979
Longitude
143.6055
Start Date
2018-08-15
End Date
2018-08-15

Description

This string figure represents a small knife. While metal knives were first brought to Kanjimei in the 60s and 70s by patrol officers and by Awiakay men who returned from work on plantations, traditional knives were made from bamboo. The older men report that these bamboo knives were so sharp that men could shave with them. The Awiakay term kapay remained in use for the newly-introduced small metal knives, however, it is likely that this string figure originated before contact. At a certain stage in the making of this knife, the string figure maker asks another person to hold the strings, however, this is not necessary, and skilled makers can do it by themselves. When the ‘knife’ emerges, the figure maker moves the design repeatedly, saying the knife is cutting fish. Image: 02: kapay ‘small knife’, final design

Sources

ID
tc36e2
Source
https://catalog.paradisec.org.au/repository/DKH01/016_kapay

Extended Data

ID
DKH01-016_kapay
Countries
Papua New Guinea - PG
Publisher
Darja Hoenigman
Contact
admin@paradisec.org.au
License
Open (subject to agreeing to PDSC access conditions)
Rights
Open (subject to agreeing to PDSC access conditions)