Kathy Blacksmith interview with Hartmut Lutz at the University of California, Davis on January 29, 1980

CLASSIFICATION

Swallow ID:
6793
Partner Institution:
Simon Fraser University
Source Collection Label:
Hartmut Lutz Collection (1)
Sub Series:
Hartmut Lutz Collection (1)

ITEM DESCRIPTION

Title:
Kathy Blacksmith interview with Hartmut Lutz at the University of California, Davis on January 29, 1980
Title Source:
cassette and j-card
Language:
English
Production Context:
Documentary recording
Genre:
Interview
Identifiers:
[]

Rights

Rights:
Copyright Not Evaluated (CNE)

CREATORS

Name:
Lutz, Hartmut
Dates:
1945-
Role:
"Recordist", "Producer", "Series organizer", "Donor", "Interviewer"

Name:
Blacksmith, Kathy
Role:
"Speaker"
Notes:
A full-blooded Yankton Sioux from the Yankton Reservation

CONTRIBUTORS

MATERIAL DESCRIPTION

Image:
Image
Recording Type:
Analogue
AV Type:
Audio
Material Designation:
Cassette
Physical Composition:
Magnetic Tape
Extent:
1/8 inch
Tape Brand:
Maxell
Sound Quality:
Good
Physical Condition:
Good
Other Physical Description:
Black and white clear jewel case with J-card

DIGITAL FILE DESCRIPTION

Channel Field:
Stereo
Sample Rate:
44.1 kHz
Duration:
T00:32:08
Size:
35.8 MB
Bitrate:
32 bit
Encoding:
WAV for master files and .MP3 for online files

Channel Field:
Stereo
Sample Rate:
44.1 kHz
Duration:
T00:32:10
Size:
36.5 MB
Bitrate:
32 bit
Encoding:
WAV for master files and .MP3 for online files

Dates

Date:
1980-01-29
Type:
Production Date
Source:
Recording and J-card

LOCATION

Address:
University of California, Davis, Russell Boulevard, Davis, Yolo County, California, 95616-5270, United States
Venue:
University of California, Davis
Latitude:
38.5355
Longitude:
-121.7907

CONTENT


NOTES

Type:
General
Note:
"Interview with Kathy Blacksmith, nee Catherine Spirit Track, a full-blooded Yankton Sioux from the Yankton Reservation, South Dakota. Born 1939. Her first husband's real name was Wa'bisha (Red War Bonnet), but since his great grandparents were orphaned and adopted by a white professional blacksmith, they became known as the 'Blacksmith boys', hence the name 'Blacksmith' today."
Type:
General
Note:
Kathy Blacksmith mostly talks about her personal family and educational background; following this interview, he gets to the definition of Indian from her perspective and possible explanation what she thinks that way. She expresses her opinion regarding the support that Indian individuals could possibly receive

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