Descripción del título
Part 1: Full summer, and the tundra is bare; skin tents are up and it is time to attend to the fishing as the fish move upstream. The men are in the river, lifting stones and placing them to form enclosures to trap the fish. A woman skins a duck and then braids her hair in the old way, stiffly around sticks. From a bladder she makes a balloon for the child. The men are fishing with the three-pronged leisters, spearing the fish and stringing them on a thong, until it is as much as a man can do to drag his catch from the water. The woman works quickly, cleaning the fish, and then all enjoy bits of the fresh raw fish. -- Part 2: There are many men fishing now and even the children on shore imitate the motions of the men. Rain sweeps over the tundra but the work goes on, the men splashing through the weir, furs hitched high, seemingly little affected by the cold water
Material Proyectable
material_proyectable Rebiun28335730 https://catalogo.rebiun.org/rebiun/record/Rebiun28335730 m o c vz |zazu| 140312s1967 mau058 g o vueng d 906225331 1058112330 1085140733 AU@ 000053435380 NLGGC 390958719 NZ1 15570382 ALSTP eng pn ALSTP OCLCO COO OCLCO OCLCA OCLCQ OCLCF CUS VLB EUW OCLCO OCL OCLCO OCLCQ OCLCO U3G OCLCO CUS OCLCO OCLCQ OCLCO EZ9 IGB INT OCLCQ WYU YOU TKN OCLCQ n-cn-nt n-cn-nu Fishing at the stone weir written by Asen Balikci and Quentin Brown ; directed and produced by Quentin Brown Watertown, MA Documentary Educational Resources (DER) 1967 Watertown, MA Watertown, MA Documentary Educational Resources (DER) 1 online resource (2 online resources (video files (58 min.))) sound, color 1 online resource (2 online resources (video files (58 min.))) 005748 Two-dimensional Moving Image tdi rdacontent computer c rdamedia online resource cr rdacarrier digital rda streaming video file rda Netsilik Eskimo Title from resource description page (viewed Mar. 12, 2014) Part 1: Full summer, and the tundra is bare; skin tents are up and it is time to attend to the fishing as the fish move upstream. The men are in the river, lifting stones and placing them to form enclosures to trap the fish. A woman skins a duck and then braids her hair in the old way, stiffly around sticks. From a bladder she makes a balloon for the child. The men are fishing with the three-pronged leisters, spearing the fish and stringing them on a thong, until it is as much as a man can do to drag his catch from the water. The woman works quickly, cleaning the fish, and then all enjoy bits of the fresh raw fish. -- Part 2: There are many men fishing now and even the children on shore imitate the motions of the men. Rain sweeps over the tundra but the work goes on, the men splashing through the weir, furs hitched high, seemingly little affected by the cold water This edition in English Eskimos- Fishing Eskimos- Social life and customs Eskimos- Northwest Territories Netsilik Eskimos- Nunavut- Kugaaruk- Social life and customs Eskimos. Eskimos- Fishing. Eskimos- Social life and customs. Netsilik Eskimos- Social life and customs. Northwest Territories. Nunavut- Kugaaruk. Documentary films. Nonfiction films. Documentary films. Nonfiction films. Online media Mary-Rousselière, Guy contributor Balikci, Asen 1929-) screenwriter. aus Brown, Quentin director producer screenwriter. aus. drt. pro Documentary Educational Resources (DER) production company Original version Fishing at the stone weir. Watertown, MA : Documentary Educational Resources (DER), 1967 (OCoLC)42062821