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 Result 11

    • Collection identifier: 2019-01
    • Primary contributors: Rosa Isela Chaparro Gardea (consultant, author); Sebastián Fuentes Holguín (consultant, author, interviewer); Bertha Fuentes Loya (consultant, author); Guillermina Fuentes Moreno (consultant, author); Giltro Fuentes Palma (consultant, author, creator, interviewer); Luz Elena León Ramírez (consultant, author); Gabriela Caballero (researcher, donor); Lucien Carroll (researcher, annotator)
    • Additional contributors: María del Rosario Cervantes Guerrero (consultant); María Guadalupe Díaz (consultant, author); Miguel Ángel Fuentes Díaz (consultant); Reyes Fuentes Guerrero (consultant, interviewer); Morales Fuentes Hernández (consultant, author); Yeni Fuentes Loya (consultant); Carlos Fuentes Moreno (consultant); Valentina Fuentes Moreno (consultant); Vicente Fuentes Moreno (consultant); Rocío Guerrero Fuentes (consultant); Teresa Guerrero Herrera (consultant); María Dolores Holguín (consultant, speaker, author); Roberto León Holguín (consultant); Jesusita Loya Guerra (consultant, author); Francisco Moreno Fuentes (consultant); Sebastián Moreno Morales (consultant); María Ignacia Valencia Nevárez (consultant); Andrés Ehécatl Aguilar (researcher); Mateo Espino (author); Cornelio Fuentes Hernández (author); José María "Chemale" Fuentes (author); Rosa Fuentes (author); Marc Garellek (researcher); Austin German (researcher, creator, annotator); Javier Holguín Fuentes (author); Vsevolod Kapatsinski (researcher); Federico León Pacheco (author); Patrick Mullen (researcher, annotator); Ana Paula Pintado Cortina (researcher); Rosesio (author); Sean Stein (researcher, annotator); Gabriela Caballero (creator, interviewer); Jorge Esteban Moreno Romero (creator)
    • Language: Rarámuri (tar)
    • Dates: 2003- (bulk 2011-)
    • Historical information: This collection contains materials created by team members participating in the ongoing Choguita Rarámuri Language Project. This project was originally developed by Gabriela Caballero, who started fieldwork in collaboration with Choguita Rarámuri speakers in 2003, completing a dissertation on the phonology and morphology of the language at the University of California, Berkeley in 2008 (see 2019-001.014 for the dissertation). In 2010, Caballero moved to UC San Diego, at which time Lucien Carroll joined the project. Together with other students, Carroll primarily carried out annotation and analysis of field data, conducting his own in-situ fieldwork in 2014 and 2018. Other UCSD researchers, both students and faculty members, have collaborated in the analysis of morphological and phonological phenomena; and several community members have collaborated as consultants, authors, and creators of documentation and analysis. Choguita Rarámuri language experts who have have had a deeper involvement with this project in multiple roles include Luz Elena León Ramírez, Sebastián Fuentes Holguín, Bertha Fuentes Loya, Guillermina Fuentes Moreno, Giltro Fuentes Palma and Rosa Isela Chaparro Gardea.
      Caballero first became involved with the study of Choguita Rarámuri as a graduate student in 2002, through contacts with researchers and community members who were interested in the language and history of the community. While the language is spoken by a relatively large number of speakers in comparison with other indigenous languages of northern Mexico, Choguita Rarámuri shows signs of increased endangerment and is undergoing rapid shift. The economic and political situation in the Sierra Tarahumara, where Choguita Rarámuri is spoken, has resulted in increased displacement of people from their communities to larger towns in the region. In these diaspora communities, transmission of the language is severely affected.
      Since its inception, work on the Choguita Rarámuri Language Project has been funded by: Endangered Languages Documentation Programme Individual Graduate Scholarship (IGS) #0042 (2006-2008) and Individual Postdoctoral Fellowship (IPF) #0138 (2008-2010); UCMEXUS (2006-2008); the Hellman Fellowship Program, University of California, San Diego (2011-2012); and National Science Foundation (NSF)/Documenting Endangered Languages (DEL) award #1160672 (2012-2018). Caballero has been the PI on all of these projects.
    • Scope and content: The core materials of this collection are primary sound recordings made between 2011 and 2018. These materials are separated into file bundles that reflect the organization of the materials (i) as designed to either elicit specific types of data for phonological, morphological, or syntactic analysis, or (ii) as recordings of narratives in different genres and as chosen by community member collaborators. The first general category is represented by file bundles 2019-01.001 through 2019-01.014, with PDF copies of field notes in 2019-01.012 and associated published and unpublished analytical materials in 2019-01.014. These are often large bundles consisting of many digital files with abstract alphanumeric names, following project-internal file naming conventions. To interpret them, consult the master metadata spreadsheet in bundle 2019-01.076. Elicited data (bundles 2019-01.001 through 2019-01.011, and 2019-01.013) involved experimental methods to probe processing of redundant morphology and intonational patterns in the language, as well as more traditional methods to elucidate grammatical patterns for the completion of a reference grammar (in progress as of March 2019).
      The second general category is represented by bundles 2019-01.015 through 2019-01.075, a set of personal, historical, and procedural narratives, conversations, interviews, prayers, and oratory, each of which is contained in its own bundle for maximal visibility of its associated metadata. Most of these bundles contain a single .wav and single .eaf file, that is, the original sound recording and an associated annotation file. Some of these bundles contain additional sound recordings of annotation sessions, with some follow-up text-based elicitation. Although all relevant metadata for these bundles has been entered into the catalog, the same metadata is also contained in the master metadata spreadsheet for comprehensiveness.
      The master metadata spreadsheet (2019-01.076) is organized with one row per digital file, in 11 columns: Bundle Identifier, Bundle Title, File Name, Format, Date (of creation), Duration (when relevant), Language(s), Contributor(s), Creator(s), Description, Recording Circumstances. In order to determine the contributor(s) to any of the files in a particular bundle, it is necessary to search for the relevant file name in this spreadsheet, and then correlate the three-letter initials with the full names used in the catalog metadata. This is especially true of the larger file bundles described above. In general, annotation files have the same name as their associated sound recordings, and so are easy to track when browsing the digital files. Relevant relations between files are often mentioned in the Description column.
      File bundle titles are given in English and Spanish. Descriptions are given in English, and, in bundles 2019-01.015 through 2019-01.075, include relevant details extracted from the master metadata spreadsheet. The primary speaker in a monologic text, as well as the interviewee in an interview, is listed as an author. (Interviewers are interviewers.) Speakers in elicitation recordings are listed as consultants. Other roles are transparent. Date ranges in bundles are based on the earliest and latest dates of creation of primary recordings, ignoring derivative materials such as annotation files.
    • Repository: Survey of California and Other Indian Languages
    • Suggested citation: Rosa Isela Chaparro Gardea, Sebastián Fuentes Holguín, Bertha Fuentes Loya, Guillermina Fuentes Moreno, Giltro Fuentes Palma, Luz Elena León Ramírez, Gabriela Caballero, and Lucien Carroll. Materials of the Choguita Rarámuri Language Project, 2019-01, California Language Archive, Survey of California and Other Indian Languages, University of California, Berkeley, http://dx.doi.org/doi:10.7297/X2HH6H70.
    • Associated materials: Other non-overlapping materials related to this project are deposited at the Endangered Languages Archive (ELAR), SOAS, University of London, and are available online, here: https://elar.soas.ac.uk/Collection/MPI100020.

 Results 16

    • Item identifier: 2019-01.068
    • Date: 29 Oct 2011
    • Contributors: Jesusita Loya Guerra (consultant); Gabriela Caballero (researcher, creator, donor)
    • Language: Rarámuri (tar)
    • Place: Choguita, Guachochi, Chihuahua, Mexico
    • Description: Original .wav file; recorded indoors
    • Availability: Online access
    • Collection: Materials of the Choguita Rarámuri Language Project
    • Repository: Survey of California and Other Indian Languages
    • Suggested citation: Conversation about place of birth and learning Spanish/Conversación sobre el lugar de nacimiento y aprender español, 2019-01.068, in "Materials of the Choguita Rarámuri Language Project", California Language Archive, Survey of California and Other Indian Languages, University of California, Berkeley, http://cla.berkeley.edu/item/26262.