Representation of Polynesian Linguacultures in Maritime Folklore
- Autores: Galaktionov S.S.1
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Afiliações:
- Institute of Scientific Information for Social Sciences, Russian Academy of Sciences
- Edição: Nº 5(873) (2023)
- Páginas: 30-35
- Seção: Linguistics
- URL: https://journals.rcsi.science/2542-2197/article/view/351341
- ID: 351341
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Resumo
The article deals with the phenomenon of sea shanties and their intercultural features in the context of European-Polynesian interactions. The history of the emergence of this genre of maritime folk music, as well as the main functions that sea shanties served, are described. A general functional classification of shanties is also provided. The integration of Polynesian linguacultures into the texts of sea songs and the consequences of such integration are given particular attention.
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Sobre autores
Semyon Galaktionov
Institute of Scientific Information for Social Sciences, Russian Academy of Sciences
Autor responsável pela correspondência
Email: semengal98@mail.ru
Junior Research Fellow of Linguistic Department
RússiaBibliografia
- Schreffler, G. (2018). Boxing the compass: a century and a half of discourse about sailor’s chanties. Portland: Loomis House Press.
- Doerflinger, W. M. (1990). Songs of the sailor and lumberman. Glenwood: Meyerbooks.
- Kelby, R. (2013). Nostalgia and imagination in nineteenth-century sea shanties. The Mariner’s Mirror, 98(2), 147–160.
- Harlow, F. P. (1962). Chanteying aboard American ships (maritime). Mystic: Mystic Seaport Museum.
- Hugill, S. (1961). Shanties from the seven seas: shipboard work-songs and songs used as work-songs from the great days of sail. London: Routledge.
- Risko, S. M. (2015). 19th century sea shanties: from the capstan to the classroom. ETD Archive, 658. https://engagedscholarship.csuohio.edu/etdarchive/658
- Carr, J. R. (2014). Hawaiian music in motion: mariners, missionaries, and minstrels. Champagne: University of Illinois Press.
- Medeiros, M. (2018). Western-constructed narratives of Hawai’i. History in the Making, 11, 214–246.
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