Affichage de 228 résultats

Description archivistique
20 résultats avec objets numériques Afficher les résultats avec des objets numériques
Duma pro plach nevil'nykiv collection
CA BMUFA 0213 · Collection · 1980

This collection contains an analysis of the structure of a poetic form "dumy" for mood, emphasis, and rhythm on the overall effect of the poem.

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Monica Jensen Ethnographic collection
CA BMUFA 0224 · Collection · 1999-2005

The collection consists of assignments for various folklore classes at the University of Alberta including Ukrainian Material Culture (UKR-527), Ukrainian Folk Art and Performance (UKR-528), Rites of Passage (UKR-525), Ukrainian Calendar Customs (UKR-526), Ukrainian Folk Songs (UKR-522), Ukrainian Folk Prose (UKR-523), and Ukrainian Folklore in Canada (UKR-532).

The collection includes the following projects:

  • Poias for the Babies
  • Bunica's Funeral Dinner: The China
  • A Kuzhil' [Distaff] Among Flowers
  • "Yuriy Fedkowych Ukrainian Educational Society of Soda Lake" Proscenium Screen
  • Ukrainian Rites of Passage: Silence and Pregnancy
  • Iordan, Feast of the Epiphany
  • Katie and Christine: Their Kolomyiky
  • Wolves and Viagra: Katie and Metro
  • Literary Folkloristics and the Personal Narrative by Sandra Dolby Stahl: A Review of the Study
  • On Forgetting

Recollections of Ropchan (Rapchan) brothers, as well as indexes and transcripts of interviews conducted by Monica for her dissertation are also part of this collection.

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CIUS interviews
CA BMUFA 0231 · Collection · 2014

Jars Balan interviewed several people who were crucial for the development of Ukrainian studies in Canada. Oleksandr Pankieiev recorded the interview. Jars Balan on behalf of CIUS deposited a copy of the interviews to the Bohdan Medwidsky Ukrainian Folklore Archives.

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CA BMUFA 0232 · Collection · 5 December 2013

On December 5, 2013, Oleksandr Pankieiev interviewed Dr. Bohdan Medwidsky at the Kule Folklore Centre, University of Alberta. The interview covered Dr. Medwidsky's childhood in Europe, his reunion with the family at the age of 12, his "becoming" a Ukrainian, their immigration to Canada, and life and activities in various religious and community organizations, as well as the establishment of the Ukrainian Folklore program at the University of Alberta. Later, the article based on this interview was published on historians.in.ua http://www.historians.in.ua/index.php/intervyu/986-bohdan-medvidskyi-meni-i-dali-tsikavo-shcho-take-buty-ukraintsem and on Prostir http://prostir.pl/journalism/богдан-медвідський-мені-й-далі-цікав/

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CA BMUFA 0028 · Collection · 1996-2002

This project was the core fieldwork collection phase of Jason Golinowski's master thesis.

A dozen or more dance competitions are organized in western Canada which include or focus exclusively on Ukrainian dance, with an estimated total of some 8000 entries per year in recent years. The number of competitions and competitors has risen significantly in the past five years. This increase in popularity raises numerous questions regarding the functioning of "ethnic" cultural activities in this country. Various theories explaining "ethnic persistence" and "ethnic revival" have been proposed. The present project is designed to develop an empirical base of data to test aspects of these conceptual models.

The project consists of asking competition organizers for competition programs and marks through their histories, information which is quite readily available to these committees. A detailed database of the competitors, their home group, instructors, their marks and placements, adjudicators, repertoire and other information will allow an analysis of behavior trends that will shed light into the functions of the competitions and the motivations of the various categories of participants.

This project is relatively self-contained and has been proposed as a Master's thesis by Jason Golinowski in the Ukrainian Folklore Program in the Department of Modern Languages and Comparative Studies. It is also connected to a larger study conducted by Dr. Andriy Nahachewsky, dealing with "new ethnicity" and Canadian Ukrainian dance.
(from Project proposal)

CA BMUFA 0259 · Collection · 2019

This collection consists of five final papers by students in the SLAV-204 class Slavic Folklore & Mythology taught by Maria Mayerchyk, Huculak Research Fellow, in the Fall term 2019. Topics covered are Dovbush, Ukrainian wedding, Baba-Yaga, Propp, and symbolism of the rooster. This collection also contains a copy of the course outline.

CA BMUFA 0318 · Collection · 1917-1936

The collection consists of records of the Ukrainian Educational Association (Укр. Тов. Просьвіта ім. М. Павлика) in Vermillion, AB; and records of the Ukrainian National Society of Taras Shevchenko of Derwent, Alberta. Records include:

  • Incorporation papers of the Ukrainian National Society of Taras Shevchenko of Derwent, AB
  • Order Book of the Ukrainian National Society of Taras Shevchenko of Derwent, AB
  • Membership list of the Ukrainian National Society of Taras Shevchenko of Derwent, AB
  • Financial records of the Ukrainian National Society of Taras Shevchenko of Derwent, AB
  • Meeting minutes of the Ukrainian Educational Association (Укр. Тов. Просьвіта ім. М. Павлика) in Vermillion, AB
  • Library contents of the Ukrainian Educational Association (Укр. Тов. Просьвіта ім. М. Павлика) in Vermillion, AB
  • Financial records of the Ukrainian Educational Association (Укр. Тов. Просьвіта ім. М. Павлика) in Vermillion, AB
  • Handwritten Vertep.
CA BMUFA 0294 · Collection · 1970-1999

The collection consists of the follow publications related to multiculturalism and bilingual education:

  • Вісник Світового Конґресу Вільних Українців 1981
  • Засвоєння української. Порадник / Ukrainian Acquisition Gadres I-VI Alberta Education 1977
  • Славутич, Яр. Нова Дійсність Нове Майбутнє. XVII Конґрес Українців Канади Ukrainian Canadian Congress Headquorters 1992
  • Українська мова за зорово-слуховою методою Ukrainian Canadian Committee 1968
  • Український Учитель в Канаді Бюлетень Крайового Центру Шкільних Рад при Комітеті Українців Канади 1981-1984
  • ACCENT Newsletter of the Southern Alberta Heritage Language Association 1992
  • Alberta Modern Language Journal, the Multicultural Education Council of the Alberta Teachers' Association 1983-1996
  • Alberta Parents for Ukrainian Education Newsletter. Батьківський Комітет Сприяння Українській Освіті в Альберті 1991
  • Biculturalism?? A Multicultural Policy for Saskatchewan 1973
  • Bilash, Olenka. Why Bilingual Education? The Canadian Institute of Ukrainian Studies. The English-Ukrainian Bilingual Program ; Bilingualism 1978-1979
  • Bilingual Education in Alberta. An Information Package Prepared for Participants in the Colloquium on Bilingual Education in Alberta Alberta Education. Language Service 1986
  • Building Canada. Third National Conference on Multicultural and Intercultural Education. Building the Bridges; Alberta Association for Multicultural Education 1987
  • Bulletin Alberta Cultural Heritage Council 1975-1977
  • Bulletin Canadian Council for Multicultural and Intercultural Education 1982
  • Bulletin Canadian Ethnic Studies Association 1984
  • Bulletin: Infoaction Commissioner of official Languages 1994
  • Canadian Plains Bulletin Canadian Plains Research Center 1988-1991
  • CEESSA Bulletin Central and Eastern European Studies Society of Alberta 1986
  • Collaborator Educational Quality Indicators 1989
  • Communications Alberta Education; Communications Branch 1977-1978
  • CPF National Newsletter Canadian Parents for French 1983
  • CUE: Communications Update for Educators Access Network 1989-1990
  • Cultural Contact: Arts & Multiculturalism Newsletter Edmonton Parks and Recreation 1989-1993
  • Cultures Canada Multiculturalism Canada; Multiculturalism Directorate, Department of the Secretary of State 1985
  • Current Second Language and Bilingual (Partial Immersion) Program Activities in Alberta Alberta Education. Language Services 1987
  • Dialogue: A Newsletter of the Teaching of English and French as Second Languages Council of Ministers of Education 1983
  • EMS Members Bulletin Edmonton Multicultural Society 1996
  • Ethic Review Edmonton Multicultural Society 1985-1986
  • Ethno Canada Canadian Ethnocultural Council 1990
  • Evaluation of a Ukrainian-English Bilingual Program Edmonton Catholic School 1975-1977
  • Foundation News A Semi-Annual Newsletter for Friends and Supporters of the Canadian Foundation for Ukrainian Studies 1998
  • Good News (letter) Ukrainian Bilingual Association of Alberta 1996
  • Heritage Language Bulletin National Heritage Language Resource Unit 1985
  • Heritage Link ___ 1986
  • Images of Our Culture: Multicultural Films in Education from the National Film Board of Canada National Film Board of Canada 1981
  • Infocus Alberta Education 1988-1991
  • Information Bulletin Alberta Education 1987
  • ISLC Newletter ISLC; Intercultural and Second Languages Council 1999
  • Manitoba Parents for Ukrainian Education Inc. Newsletter . 1984-1989
  • Meta A Left Wing Discussion Journal 1979
  • Mosaic éditions SOLEIL publishing inc. 1993-1995
  • Multicultural Connections Edmonton Multicultural Society 1990
  • Multicultural Education Journal the Multicultural Education Council of the Alberta Teachers' Association 1997
  • Multicultural News Grant MacEwan Community College 1986-1987
  • Multiculturalism Multiculturalism Canada; Minister Responsible for Multiculturalism 1975-1983
  • Multiculturalism Canadian Multiculturalism - Equity 1989
  • Multiculturalism (MC) Canadian Coucil for Multicultural & Intercultural Education 1983-1984
  • Multiculturalism (Profile BC) BC Multi Culturalism; Province of British Columbia; Ministry of Provincial Secretary 1991
  • Multinews Minister Reponsible for Multiculturalism 1977
  • Native Education in Alberta: Alberta Native People's View on Native Education Alberta Education 1987
  • Networks Global Education 1988-1991
  • New Challenges Ukrainian Canadian Congress Alberta Provincial Council 1993
  • New Horizons National and International Education 1994
  • Newsletter of the Alberta Teacher's Association Multicultural Education Council of the Alberta Teacher's Association 1989-1996
  • Newsletter of the Canadian Multicultural Educational Foundation CMEF; Canadian Multicultural Educational Foundation 1998
  • Newsletter Бюлетень Ukrainian Resource and Development Center 1987
  • Northern Alberta Heritage Language Association Newsletter 1993-1994
  • Ovation Alberta Education 1989-1991
  • Pacific Northwest Council on Foreign Languages (PNCFL) Newsletter/ Conference Materials PNCFL ; 1982-1994
  • Presunka, Peter. Bicultural Retreat. Planning for Nationhood Canada's Choice 1966-1967
  • Saskatoon Multicultural Council Newsletter / Outreach Inc. 1983-1984
  • Saskatchewan Organization for Heritage Languages newsletter 1988-1996
  • Secound Languages Bulletin Canadian Association of Second Language Teachers 1993
  • Speak Up, Speak Out! A Conference on Language Opportunities and Issues of National and Provincial Importance, Saskatchewan Organization for Heritage Languages Inc. 1994
  • Spectrum Alberta Multicultural Commission 1987-1989
  • Steppes Through Time Alberta Ukrainian Canadian Centennial Committee 1990-1991
  • Supplementary Resources for Instruction in Ukrainian. A Service Publication Alberta Education 1979
  • Survey of Second Language Program Enrolments Alberta Learning; Enhancing Language Learning 1999 (?)
  • Svitovyd Ukrainian Bilingual Program 1979-1983
  • Teaching in a Language Other Than English: The Immersion Approach Alberta Education. Language Service 1983
  • TEMA Saskatchewan Teachers of Ukrainian 1970?-1989
  • The Alberta Ethnic Language Teachers' Association Newsletter (Northern Branch) 1982
  • The Bilingual Family Newsletter Multilingual Maters 1985
  • The Canadian Modern Language Review The Ontario Modern Language Teachers' Association 1977
  • The Courier MLC; Modern Language Council Newsletter 1978-1996
  • The Future of Ukrainian-Canadians in Quebec. Monreal Conference The Federal Government of Canada; Ukrainian Canadian Committee, Robert Bourassa 1972
  • The JETAA No Namae Shimbun 1994
  • Together Multiculturalism and Citizenship Canada 1992
  • Trembita Ukrainian Language Program; Edmonton Catholic School 1977-1991
  • Ukrainian Bilingual Association of Alberta Newsletter 1984
  • Ukrainian Canadian Social Services Newsletter (Edmonton) 1989
  • Ukrainian Language Association Newsletter/ Вісник Асоціація вчителів української мови 1973-1974
  • Ukrainian Resource and Development Centre Centrepieces/Newsletter MacEwan Community College 1987-1999
  • Ukrainian Supplementary Materials Teaching Materials Center 1981
Sans titre
CA BMUFA 0293 · Collection · 1913-1997, predominant 1970s-1990s

Th collection contains information about the establishment of the Ukrainian Bilingual Program (UBP) in the Edmonton Catholic and Public School systems. Starting as a three-year pilot project, the UBP was finally established in 1978 and further extended in the following years. Parental groups played an essential part in the existence of bilingual programs in general, and for the UBP in particular, because they lobbied governments and actively engaged in local school boards in order to convince them to establish the bilingual program in their schools. The collection contains records documenting various parental groups’ activities, including the Ukrainian Bilingual Association (UBLA), assisting the UBP’s establishment in Edmonton Public Schools, and the Parent Advisory Committee/Society (PAC/PAS), serving the UBP’s needs in Edmonton’s Separate School System.

The collection contains documents concerning the Alberta Parents for Ukrainian Education Society (APUE), an umbrella organization for the existing parental groups founded to coordinate support, promotion, and expansion of Ukrainian language education in Alberta schools, covering their events and activities from 1984 to 1994. There are also records of related organizations such as the Ukrainian Community Development Committee - Alberta section; Alberta Ukrainian Dance Association and others. There is also information about parental organizations in other provinces, and in particular the Manitoba Parents for Ukrainian Education (MPUE). The documents include correspondence, incorporation materials, statutes, financial statements, reports, applications, publications, booklets, etc.

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Peter John Lazarowich collection
CA BMUFA 0282 · Collection · 1928-1993, predominant 1932-1980

The collection comprises personal and official documents collected by Peter Lazarowich during his career as a student of the Charles University and the Ukrainian Free University in Prague, Canadian lawyer and Ukrainian community leader. It includes correspondence, newspaper clippings, the creator's diaries and passports, minutes of organizations, photographs, etc.

Sans titre
Lubomyr Romankiw Plast collection
CA BMUFA 0018 · Collection · May 30, 2015

The collection consist of a photograph and audio recording of the talk Lubomyr Romankiw gave for the Edmonton Plast parents during annual Sviato Vesny (Spring Celebration) organized by Edmonton Plast at the Elk Island National Park in East Central Alberta on May 30, 2015. Dr. Romankiw speaks about Plast, its creation, and activities in the past and today in Ukraine and diaspora communities around the world.

Sans titre
CIUS oral history project
CA BMUFA 0021 · Collection · 1982-1984

Oral History Project was implemented by the Canadian Institute of Ukrainian Studies in 1982-1984. During that period of time two researchers -- Lubomyr Luciuk and Zenon Zwarycz -- interviewed more than 135 members of the Ukrainian community all over Canada, both immigrants and those already born in Canada. The interviews were digitized in 2014-2016 producing a database of over 400 sound files. The interviews focus on the Ukrainian organizational life both in the Old Country and Canada, as well as political and/or social activities of the interviewees. They also encompass childhood and formative years of each interviewee, their education, family stories, participation in the Ukrainian War of Independence, WWI, routes of emigration to Canada, patterns of settlement within Canada, relations with a broader Canadian society; WWII, DPs, Ukrainian-Canadian institutions, prominent personalities, as well as the religious and political mosaic inside the Ukrainian community in Canada.

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Ukrainian paganism field project
CA BMUFA 0025 · Collection · 2006-2011

The collection consists of field research materials collected by Mariya Lesiv as part of her research during doctorate studies at the Ukrainian Folklore Program, University of Alberta, and a copy of her dissertation entitled "Modern Paganism between east and west: construction of an alternative national identity in Ukraine and the Ukrainian diaspora." 15 mini-DVs contain field video, 10 CDs - photographs, documenting rituals and interviews with Pagans in both Ukraine and North America.

Dissertation abstract:

Modern Ukrainian Paganism is a new religious movement that draws upon beliefs and practices from over a thousand years ago. It represents a mode of resistance to both the political oppression of Ukraine and the dominant position of Christianity in that country. Paganism spread among the urban Ukrainian intelligentsia in the North American diaspora after World War II, and developed actively in Ukraine after the collapse of the Soviet Union. Today, while experiencing a great decline in the diaspora, it is rapidly growing in Ukraine, involving many different Pagan communities and thousands of believers.

Pagans draw on a variety of sources including both historical chronicles containing information about old Slavic mythology and contemporary rural folklore that is believed to maintain remnants of the old pagan worldview. Although many folkloric forms have been appropriated by the Christian church, contemporary Pagans consider these elements to have originated in pre-Christian times and reclaim them for their own needs.

This work is the first extended study of Ukrainian Paganism in its post-Soviet East European context and in the North American diaspora, simultaneously comparing it with Western Paganism. It is based on ethnographic fieldwork, including participant observation of rituals and interviews with Pagans in both Ukraine and North America, as well as on archival and published materials.

While focusing predominantly on the revival of pagan folklore within this movement, this thesis demonstrates how the imagined past has become important for constructing an alternative national identity in modern contexts of socio-political turmoil. The thesis suggests that this cultural revival often has little to do with historical reality, since there is limited primary information available. Like other revivals, it involves the construction of new cultural forms through creative interpretations of the ancestral past. Moreover, the obscurity of the past allows individualistic interpretations that result in many variations of similar forms. These forms are examined in their relationship to the concepts of nationalism, gender, charisma and power, religious syncretism, and aesthetics. This work is multidisciplinary in nature as it draws upon theoretical frameworks developed in fields of folkloristics, anthropology, sociology, cultural studies and art criticism. It contributes to the understanding of modern cultural processes that shape the national consciousness of people in various parts of the world.

Sans titre
Andriy Nahachewsky Brazil collection
CA BMUFA 0045 · Collection · 2009-2010

This collection contains the results of two ethnographic trips to the Ukrainian communities in Brazil by Andriy Nahachewsky. The first trip took place from 4 May to 26 May 2009, and included Andriy Nahachewsky, Serge Cipko, John C. Lehr, and Maryna Hrymych. This was the first trip to Brazil for each of the participants, though they each had strong credentials in their disciplines and in fieldwork more generally. Thus the project goal was to cast a wide net for general orientation into the historical and contemporary life of the Ukrainian communities there. Each researcher also had specific personal goals. The trip included visits to Curitiba, Prudentópolis and several rural communities nearby, Craveiro in Santa Catarina, São Paulo, Brasília, and Foz do Iguaçu. The agenda included visits to an agricultural cooperative, meetings with diplomats and organizational representatives, and diverse individuals who could speak about life in their communities. Photographs by Hrymych, Lehr, and Cipko are also accessioned into the BMUFA and located in their own respective collections.

The second trip was undertaken by Andriy Nahachewsky, for 6 months from 14 November 2009 to 13 May 2010. The goal of the project was to continue the first exploratory fieldtrip, intensifying and expanding it. The project had a strong diachronic focus, documenting change in cultural traditions, to understand better how Ukrainian cultural content, rooted in 19th century rural traditions in western Ukraine, became transplanted, disappeared, adapted, and sometimes newly created in its diaspora setting in the Brazilian context. The intent was to be able to compare these processes with similar ones known from the Ukrainian Canadian context, as well as culture in western Ukraine itself, which also changed significantly over the 20th century: One cultural root, and three branches evolving on three continents over 120 years.

Another aspect of the fieldtrip was connected with Nahachewsky’s earlier “Local Culture and Diversity on the Prairies” project, which strove to provide documentation about regional differences in traditional Ukrainian culture in the Canadian setting. This аspect of the project was to try trace local differences in Brazilian culture in a similar way. Some of these regional differences were probably most clear in past decades. A third aspect was more synchronic, aimed to document contemporary life. Connected with this, the Brazil trip involved travelling to some 65 communities in the states of Paraná, Santa Catarina, Rio de Janeiro, and São Paulo, the main Ukrainian settlement areas in Brazil. The project involved recording some 300 audio interviews, 53 hours of video recordings of contemporary events, 14,000 photographs, and gathering many publications and manuscripts (in hard copy and reproduced digitally), as well as diverse artifacts. The overall focus in subject matter was broad, including material culture (farming practices, folk arts), customs (calendar holidays, weddings, funerals, etc) and performing arts (music, dance). Special foci developed for dance materials, religious images, church architecture, cemeteries, music, and weddings, because of Nahachewsky’s research background, opportunities, and experiences as the fieldwork proceeded. The trips were both funded by the Huculak Chair and the Kule Folklore Centre (for the first trip: Nahachewsky, Hrymych, and various shared expenses). During both trips, the hosts in the home base in Prudentópolis, as well as other locations in Brazil, were very warm and hospitable, open, and generous. A copy of the digital photo, audio, and video fieldwork materials was deposited in the Museu do Milênio in Prudentópolis.

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Ivan Stadnyk collection
CA BMUFA 0052 · Collection · 1960s-1980s

The collection contains ephemera collected from various Ukrainian Canadian community events in Edmonton, area, and other location across Canada, publications, and art cards.

Slawa Basarab ethnographic collection
CA BMUFA 0057 · Collection · 1977

The collection consists of field materials collected by Slawa Basarab as part of her assignments for the folklore courses she took at the University of Alberta, and include collected proverbs and beliefs about folk medicine, and folk sayings relating to health.

Sans titre
CA BMUFA 0060 · Collection · 2001-2005

The collection consists of fieldwork materials collected by Natalie Kononeko during her trips to numerous villages in Central Ukraine in 2001-2005. Interviews cover a wide range of folklore topics including ritual and belief, births, weddings, funerals, songs and stories, and more.

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Sharak family collection
Collection · 1891-1976

The collection consist of personal documents (birth certificates from Audtro-Hungarian Empire, marriage certificate, military ticket from inter-war Poland), immigration documents (passports with visas, ship cards) and other personal documents of Andrew and Polly Sharak. Both Polish passports have their photographs.

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