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 Result 11

    • Collection identifier: 2020-19
    • Primary contributor: Maksymilian Dabkowski (researcher, donor)
    • Additional contributors: Shen Ignacio Aguinda Ortiz (consultant, depicted, interviewer, transcriber, translator); Ninfa Elvira Chapal Quenamá (consultant); Gabriel Rodrigo Criollo Chapal (consultant); Guillermo Sergio Criollo Chapal (consultant); Dora Filomena Criollo Chopal (consultant); Alfredo Ulisses Criollo Lucitante (consultant); Galo Orlando Criollo Quenamá (consultant); Jorge Criollo Quenamá (consultant, depicted); Jorge Patricio Criollo Quenamá (consultant, depicted); Lucy Marlene Criollo Quenamá (consultant, depicted); Mario Pablo Criollo Quenamá (consultant); Ana Dely Lucitante Humenda (consultant); Juan Carlos Lucitante Jumbo (consultant); Edison Oswaldo Lucitante Quenamá (consultant); Marcelo Lucián Lucitante Quenamá (consultant); Luciano Lucitante Umenda (consultant); Hugo Alfonso Lucitante (consultant, depicted); Morelia Nataly Mendúa Criollo (consultant); Jorge Mendúa Quenamá (consultant); Erika Mayra Narvaez Lucitante (consultant); Abraham Geovanny Quenamá Lucitante (consultant); Graciela Quenamá Lucitante (consultant, depicted); Leidy Marilu Quenamá Umenda (consultant, depicted, interviewer, transcriber, translator); Serafina Quenamá (consultant); Victor Quenamá (consultant); Raúl Gilberto Quieta Lucitante (consultant); Daniel Miguel Umenda Lucitante (consultant); Marta Gladys Umenda Quenamá (consultant); Carlos Fabián Umenda Shiguango (consultant); Rosalina Umenda Shiguango (consultant, depicted); Bautista Umenda (consultant); Juan Umenda (consultant); Ramón Umenda (consultant); Scott AnderBois (researcher); Kevin Criollo (depicted); Maksymilian Dabkowski (depicted); Rober Umenda (depicted)
    • Language: A'ingae (con)
    • Dates: 2019-
    • Historical information: A'ingae (or Cofán, ISO 639-3: con) is a severely under-documented language isolate spoken by about 1,500 Cofán people in the Ecuadorian and Colombian Amazon. The origin of the Cofán can be traced to the Eastern Andean Cordilleras, where they ranged over a large territory. A'ingae reflects the history of the Cofán migration, showing a mixture of typical Andean and Amazonian features (AnderBois et al. 2019). The language is relatively vital in Ecuador and severely endangered in Colombia. Illegal mining operations and poaching have exerted ecological and economic pressures on the Cofán, putting their way of life in danger. There is little support for the language outside of traditional communities. Despite the challenges, language attitudes surrounding A'ingae are uniformly positive. The A'ingae language is the cornerstone of the Cofán ethnic identity (Cepek 2012).
      The materials that constitute this collection were primarily developed by Maksymilian Dąbkowski (https://maksymilian-dabkowski.github.io/). In 2019, Dąbkowski graduated from Brown University with a BA in Linguistics and Logic. Since the fall of 2020, he has been enrolled in a PhD program in the Department of Linguistics at UC Berkeley.
      If you wish to cite this material or use it for additional analyses or publications, please attempt to contact Maksymilian Dąbkowski (maksymilian.michal.dabkowski at gmail.com) and a member of the Cofán community, starting with Hugo Lucitante (halucitante at gmail.com). This is not for permission, but to keep the community informed of what is being published about them.
    • Scope and content: Bundle 074 contains hand-written field notes from elicitation sessions conducted as part of a Linguistic Field Methods (CLPS 1390) course taught by Scott AnderBois in the spring of 2017 at Brown University.
      Bundles 001-073 contain materials collected during a field trip to Sinangoé, Sucumbíos, Ecuador in the summer of 2019. Bundles 001-068 contain audio and video recordings of traditional and contemporary narratives, as well as ELAN files (.eaf) with transcriptions and translations. The titles and descriptions of bundles 049 and 050 are switched. This is to say, bundle 049 is the story of the man who bought a clay pot, while 050 is the story of the competitive dear (contrary to the metadata). Bundle 069 contains recordings of consent for project participation. Bundle 073 contains the participants' written acknowledgments of completing the consent procedure. Bundle 070 contains the participants' biographical information. Bundle 072 contains audio recordings and hand-written field notes from elicitation sessions conducted during the field trip. Video recordings were made with the Zoom Q8 2.3K HD Handy Video Recorder. Audio recordings were made with the Zoom H4n Pro Handy Recorder. Bundle 071 contains photographs taken during the trip. Funding for this research came from Brown University's Royce Fellowship granted for the project "Cofán Language Preservation."
      Bundles 078-099 contain materials collected during a field trip to Sinangoé, Sucumbíos, Ecuador in the summer of 2023. Bundles 078-098 contain audio recordings of elicitation sessions and digital field notes. Audio recordings were made with the Zoom H4n Pro Handy Recorder. Bundle 099 contains photographs taken during the fieldwork trip. Funding for this research came from California Language Archive's Oswalt Endangered Language Grant for the project "Documenting the A'ingae noun phrase" (2023) and the National Science Foundation 20-538 Linguistics Program's Doctoral Dissertation Research Improvement grant #2314344 for "Doctoral Dissertation Research: Nominal and deverbal morphology in an endangered language."
      Bundles 075 and 077 contain miscellaneous (predominantly remote) elicitation materials. Bundle 075 contains audio recordings, hand-written field notes, and digital field notes from elicitation sessions conducted between 2018 and the summer of 2022. Bundle 077 contains audio recordings and digital field notes from elicitation sessions conducted between the summer of 2022 and the spring of 2023. All of the audio was recorded remotely, using the videoconferencing software Zoom or by capturing the audio of Messenger calls. Funding for this research came from California Language Archive's Oswalt Endangered Language Grants for the projects "Phonology-syntax interface in A'ingae" (2021), "A'ingae diphthongs: Diachrony and variation"/"A'ingae nominal and deverbal morphophonology" (2022), and "Documenting the A'ingae noun phrase" (2023), as well as the National Science Foundation 20-538 Linguistics Program's Doctoral Dissertation Research Improvement grant #2314344 for "Doctoral Dissertation Research: Nominal and deverbal morphology in an endangered language."
      Bundle 076 contains written consent forms signed by the consultants of elicitation sessions conducted since January 2017.
      Wherever A'ingae is used in item or bundle titles, the orthography largely follows the standards set by members of the Cofán communities (as opposed to an older orthography created by Marlytte "Bubs" Borman and Roberta "Bobbie" Borman of the Summer Institute of Linguistics).
    • Repository: Survey of California and Other Indian Languages
    • Suggested citation: Maksymilian Dabkowski. A'ingae Field Materials, 2020-19, California Language Archive, Survey of California and Other Indian Languages, University of California, Berkeley, http://dx.doi.org/doi:10.7297/X2HH6HKG.

 Results 18

    • Item identifier: 2020-19.008
    • Date: 05 Jun 2019
    • Contributors: Bautista Umenda (consultant); Maksymilian Dabkowski (researcher, donor); Leidy Marilu Quenamá Umenda (interviewer)
    • Language: A'ingae (con)
    • Place: Sinangoé, Sucumbíos, Ecuador
    • Description: The Feast of the Palm Shoot (la Fiesta de la Chonta), a traditional Cofán ceremony during which one drinks chicha.
    • Availability: Online access
    • Collection: A'ingae Field Materials
    • Repository: Survey of California and Other Indian Languages
    • Suggested citation: Text: Fiesta de la Chonta, 2020-19.008, in "A'ingae Field Materials", California Language Archive, Survey of California and Other Indian Languages, University of California, Berkeley, http://dx.doi.org/doi:10.7297/X2GH9GGJ.
    • Item identifier: 2020-19.009
    • Date: 05 Jun 2019
    • Contributors: Bautista Umenda (consultant); Maksymilian Dabkowski (researcher, donor); Leidy Marilu Quenamá Umenda (interviewer)
    • Language: A'ingae (con)
    • Place: Sinangoé, Sucumbíos, Ecuador
    • Description: There used to be a lot of gold in Sinangoé, because the ancestors took care of it, while nowadays there is little gold because of the mestizos who came to the community.
    • Availability: Online access
    • Collection: A'ingae Field Materials
    • Repository: Survey of California and Other Indian Languages
    • Suggested citation: Text: Gold, 2020-19.009, in "A'ingae Field Materials", California Language Archive, Survey of California and Other Indian Languages, University of California, Berkeley, http://dx.doi.org/doi:10.7297/X2BR8QPX.
    • Item identifier: 2020-19.005
    • Date: 05 Jun 2019
    • Contributors: Bautista Umenda (consultant); Maksymilian Dabkowski (researcher, donor); Leidy Marilu Quenamá Umenda (interviewer)
    • Language: A'ingae (con)
    • Place: Sinangoé, Sucumbíos, Ecuador
    • Description: The history of the Sinangoé community and why it is called Sinangoé.
    • Availability: Online access
    • Collection: A'ingae Field Materials
    • Repository: Survey of California and Other Indian Languages
    • Suggested citation: Text: History of Sinangoé, 2020-19.005, in "A'ingae Field Materials", California Language Archive, Survey of California and Other Indian Languages, University of California, Berkeley, http://dx.doi.org/doi:10.7297/X2VQ316S.
    • Item identifier: 2020-19.010
    • Date: 05 Jun 2019
    • Contributors: Bautista Umenda (consultant); Maksymilian Dabkowski (researcher, donor); Leidy Marilu Quenamá Umenda (interviewer)
    • Language: A'ingae (con)
    • Place: Sinangoé, Sucumbíos, Ecuador
    • Description: The ancestors used to hunt with blowguns and spears, and fish with fishing nets, while nowadays people hunt and fish with other implements, such as rifles, dynamite, and poison. In the past there were fish aplenty, but it is no longer so.
    • Availability: Online access
    • Collection: A'ingae Field Materials
    • Repository: Survey of California and Other Indian Languages
    • Suggested citation: Text: Hunting and fishing, 2020-19.010, in "A'ingae Field Materials", California Language Archive, Survey of California and Other Indian Languages, University of California, Berkeley, http://dx.doi.org/doi:10.7297/X2707ZX2.