THE FELT MANUFACTURE AMONG THE KAZAKH OF MONGOLIA (FIELDWORK CASES)
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THE FELT MANUFACTURE AMONG THE KAZAKH OF MONGOLIA (FIELDWORK CASES)
Annotation
PII
S0869-54150000441-8-1
Publication type
Article
Status
Published
Edition
Pages
140-157
Abstract

By examining the manufacturing of felt, which is the major component of the subsistence culture among the Kazakh of Mongolia, the author argues that the principal factor in preservation of ethnic uniqueness in a diaspora is not only and not so much the different cultural surroundings as the dominant type of economy (subsistence production, in this case) and social relationships. In the course of the labor-intensive and technologically complicated process that the felt manufacturing is, the most important social acts are performed, especially those aimed at the maintenance and strengthening of collective ties (mutual help, joint meal partaking), as well as the integration of the youth in the common productive activity. What takes place is a retranslation of the ethnic experience as a whole, which is directed at the support and reproduction of ethnicity of the Kazakh diaspora in Mongolia.

Keywords
Kazakh of Mongolia, cattle-breeding, seminomadic way of life, felt manufacture, wool handling, material culture, folk decorative art, felt craftsmanship, yurt, syrmak, diaspora
Date of publication
01.11.2011
Number of purchasers
1
Views
447
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0.0 (0 votes)
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References



Additional sources and materials

Olesen 2010 – Olesen B. Ethnic Objects in Domestic Interiors: Space, Atmosphere and the Making of Home // Home Cultures. 2010. Volume 7, № 1.
Portisch 2010 – Portisch A. Techniques as a Window onto Learning Kazakh Women’s Domestic Textile Production in Western Mongolia // Journal of Material Culture. 2009. Vol. 14, № 4.
Turan 2010 – Turan Z. Material Objects as Facilitating Environments: The Palestinian Diaspora // Home Cultures. 2010. Volume 7, № 1.

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