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alvanthro
เข้าร่วมเมื่อ 31 ต.ค. 2012
The name may sound a bit complex, but what we do is very simple. We're a high-end production studio and educational program that makes documentary films. Not just any documentary films, but ones that truly represent the people and places that are in them. We believe that the only way for the public to gain a respect for amazing places and amazing people is to tell their stories in a way that is interactive, truthful, and easy to understand.
Using RED Scarlet and RED One cameras, we shoot almost everything we do at 4K RAW which means that our films are meant to last. We also have an excellent crew ofM students and professionals at CSU, Chico to shoot, edit, and direct our films. If you're interested in making a film with ALVA or in learning more about what we do, feel free to e-mail us or go to our website at www.csuchico.edu/alva
Using RED Scarlet and RED One cameras, we shoot almost everything we do at 4K RAW which means that our films are meant to last. We also have an excellent crew ofM students and professionals at CSU, Chico to shoot, edit, and direct our films. If you're interested in making a film with ALVA or in learning more about what we do, feel free to e-mail us or go to our website at www.csuchico.edu/alva
วีดีโอ
A Man Called Ishi
มุมมอง 17K3 ปีที่แล้ว
Ishi survived attacks on his people and lived in the remote wilderness of northern California for 40 years. His story reminds us that Native Americans are neither gone nor forgotten. Directed by Magdalena Roberts and produced at the Advanced Laboratory for Visual Anthropology at CSU, Chico. www.csuchico.edu/alva
The Beginning of the End
มุมมอง 5653 ปีที่แล้ว
In 1872 a small group of Modoc men, women and children refused to be confined to a reservation and sought refuge in the area now known as the Lava Beds National Monument. After keeping the US Army at bay all winter, in the Spring of 1873 the Modoc's leader, Captain Jack, shot and killed General Edward Canby, the only US General killed in the so-called Indian Wars. This film tells the epic story...
Bound to Tradition
มุมมอง 4653 ปีที่แล้ว
Susan Campbell, a Mountain Maidu Native American is making a cradleboard for her first grandchild. Along the way she discovers just how difficult it can be the balance her traditional ways with modern society. Directed by Anna Rushton and produced at the Advanced Laboratory for Visual Anthropology at CSU, Chico. www.csuchico.edu/alva
Impact of the Frolic: A Shipwreck that Transcended the World
มุมมอง 7223 ปีที่แล้ว
In the summer of 1984, archaeologist Thomas Layton unearthed some unexpected Chinese artifacts at a Native American site in Mendocino County. Driven to discover their origins, Dr. Layton set out on a quest to solve the riddle of the mysterious potsherds. What he eventually uncovered was a story of vast cultural connections and a shipwreck that impacted California forever. Winner of a Northern C...
Torn: Saving California's Cultural Resources
มุมมอง 1813 ปีที่แล้ว
For thousands of years stunning petroglyphs on the volcanic tablelands near Bishop, California shimmered in the starlight, but then a menace struck. Looters with rock saws and chisels destroyed this ancient site leaving everyone with one question...why? Directed by Jake Martin and produced at the Advanced Laboratory for Visual Anthropology at CSU, Chico. www.csuchico.edu/alva
Traditional Ecological Knowledge
มุมมอง 7393 ปีที่แล้ว
The voices of Native Americans, academics, and community members are woven together to create a dynamic conversation about native resources, environmental stewardship, the connection between Tribal members, their land, their history, and their culture, as well as the challenges faced by those who wish to practice traditional ecological knowledge today. The poignant dialogue coupled with stunnin...
Someone You Know
มุมมอง 593 ปีที่แล้ว
Across our colleges and universities, women are being sexually assaulted and then blamed for it. Their stories have been silent for too long. This film brings them out into the open. Directed by Dr. Jesse Dizard and produced at the Advanced Laboratory for Visual Anthropology at CSU, Chico. www.csuchico.edu/alva
California Indian Voices
มุมมอง 3493 ปีที่แล้ว
Native People from all over California came together to discuss issues of cultural sustainability, tradition, the environment, substance abuse and what it means to be an Indian in the 21st century. These are their stories. Directed by Dr. Jesse Dizard and produced at the Advanced Laboratory for Visual Anthropology at CSU, Chico. www.csuchico.edu/alva
A Walk Through Time
มุมมอง 1K3 ปีที่แล้ว
With its majestic landscapes, diverse wildlife, and a history spanning 14,000 years, Anderson Marsh State Historic Park is one of the most unique places in all of California. It is also the home of the Koi people who were the first humans to colonize the area and who are still there to this day. Their deep cultural heritage prompted the extraordinary events that led to the park's creation and r...
Stories In Thread: A Tapestry of Hmong Identity
มุมมอง 4813 ปีที่แล้ว
Stories in Thread focuses on Hmong Pa Dau. The traditionally hand-made textiles are integral to what it means to be Hmong in America. From the history-laden story cloths (elaborately embroidered scenes of Hmong life that depict the devastation of the "Secret War") to New Year clothes (intricate and time-consuming works of dedication that express one's clan affiliation and pride), the crucial im...
Mr Tanimotos Journey
มุมมอง 3233 ปีที่แล้ว
After the Japanese bombing of Pearl Harbor in 1941, 120,000 American citizens of Japanese descent were wrongfully imprisoned at internment camps across the country. Jim Tanimoto, born in California, is the last living member of a group of men known as Block 42, who bravely protested the loss of their constitutional rights. This is his story. Directed by Jesse Dizard at the California State Univ...
Potter's Field
มุมมอง 1833 ปีที่แล้ว
In 2012, officials at the Santa Clara Valley Medical Center got more than they bargained for while preparing the construction of a new hospital wing. Buried for decades underneath a parking lot, they uncovered a pauper's cemetery once associated with the hospital in the late 19th century. Now, anthropologists at California State University, Chico study the collection and its significance in the...
We Are The Land: The Struggle Between Renewable Energy and Indigenous Values
มุมมอง 1.2K3 ปีที่แล้ว
We Are The Land: The Struggle Between Renewable Energy and Indigenous Values
Saving the Sacred: A Community and its Tribes Unite to Save their Past
มุมมอง 1393 ปีที่แล้ว
Saving the Sacred: A Community and its Tribes Unite to Save their Past
We Are The Land: The Struggle Between Renewable Energy and Indigenous Values Trailer
มุมมอง 2835 ปีที่แล้ว
We Are The Land: The Struggle Between Renewable Energy and Indigenous Values Trailer
Saving the Sacred: A Community and its Tribes Unite to Save their Past Trailer
มุมมอง 6575 ปีที่แล้ว
Saving the Sacred: A Community and its Tribes Unite to Save their Past Trailer
A Walk Through Time: The Story of Anderson Marsh Trailer
มุมมอง 3556 ปีที่แล้ว
A Walk Through Time: The Story of Anderson Marsh Trailer
I grew up right next to the Ishi monument marking the place where the slaughter house was that he was found in. I deer hunted all around tehama and butte county. I have a deep love for ishi and his story in my heart.
I love petroglyphs and pictographs. I'm fascinated by them and the history. Destruction of them is so disgusting. I feel like where I live in Oregon had alot more but the area has been so developed. I have seen them here but it's like 1 and far out somewhere. It's such a precious piece of history. Love it.😊
❤
Love this. The takers will just take take take and leave you for dead basically. I love how the guy said that people are like a cancer growing to much in one spot while killing the rest basically. This is unbelievable that they can justify such an imbalance. And most people really don't think about it. It's good to know that some do. Good luck 🙂✌️
Wow you guy's really got it going on there. Wish Oregon cared more or had more understanding on this. People have already touched and altered every spot heere it feels like. They don't make it easy to get cultural knowledge here but they sure know how to lie and say they do. You can visit a museum if you can get there. Wow how transparent.
Thank you so much for this video. You are so spot on .I'm in Oregon but I feel the same way here to.❤🙂
And enough with the baby boomer self loathing...yes, you guys are horrible, but not because of the color of your skin, it's because of your incessant need to virtue signal. Go away and stop making idols just because you want to relive the disgusting 60's and 70's. You guys were horric parents and are suspended in a truma cycle which caused you to shut down any sort of critical thinking skills.
Who is Ishi....Ishi is a narrative set along with the most ridiculous monument I have ever seen. Why the graven images and false idols? It will be hilarious when everyone turns on Ishi someday a says he was like a monster who lived in the wild and ate children and they made the monument to appease the great and powerful ISHI!!
This is perfect for my daughter's report. Thank you so much for having this!
He was a good looking man.
In my home city there is a monument to my people raised by our colonisers to remember us because they thought they had exterminated us.
Really nice documentary, understanding how the drum hung and played by people and what it meant to them. Also, it is interesting to see how drum culture trades/ spread to other places.
Why isn’t this made into a movie??
Great Documentary! Yet I would love to have seen mention of the man Ishi called "Popey," Saxton T. Pope (who my grand-mother, Mary Lee Pope, his sister, told me about when I was just a boy in the early 1960's), who was Ishi's doctor that became one of his best friends and greatly influenced modern archery and took it to it's "next level!" Probably after the (sad) "brain removal incident"... "On May 25, 1916 Ishi succumbed to tuberculosis and passed on to a higher hunting ground. Dr. Pope wrote in 'Yahi Archery' (1918) that, 'When he died and was cremated according to the custom of his people, we placed by his side some tobacco, ten pieces of dentalium shell, a little acorn meal, a bit of jerky, his fire sticks, a quiver full of arrows, and his bow." Their "Spirit Lives On" www.archeryhalloffame.com/Pope.html
Heartbreaking and heartwarming at the same time. I'm sorry for all that lost loved ones.
ชื่อเรื่อง - ตีกลองทอง
"Woganupa Mutetna" (Grizzly bears hiding place).
Thank you, this is a well made video with compelling views on TEK in our modern world. We are on time and not alone in this, glad to have learned from your offerings of guidance and wisdom. Love and Gratitude ❤️🔥 🙏 🤙🕊
Kayan american drum
I've done volunteer habitat/Holy Place restoration for one of severl PNW nations who ARE in fact, very good at stewardship.
The usa commited genocide on all native american tribes.rhey did pretty dam well at covering their tracks and making people not care
Anthropology was brutal.
I can’t believe these videos don’t have more views they’re very good
Great video! The cradle boards are absolutely beautiful and they were interesting to learn about :0
White people or Whitemen they like to lie. White God, White lies! White people are all going to HELL!
I read " Ishi" while cycling the entire trail of tears. Being immersed in the story and trail gave me the encouragement to pull off the 1300 mile journey and took away any right to complain I might've felt after imagining what all the natives must've gone through .
What language does the word "Ishi" come from? Anyone know?
That question was answered in first of video. Did you watch?
@@robertafrender3935 Can you point to the minute marker? I must have missed it.
Read a book about him over 30 yrs ago. Very intriguing, very horrifying the story of Genocide in US and in particular in CA
Are those purple urchins edible?
Lets replace all of the father Serra statues with an Ishi Statue To represent all California Indians..
Man’s inhumanity to man. He came in willingly I’m sure he was frightened and looking for help and he was put in jail how inhuman
He came in to steal meat from the slaughter house. He had been raiding people's gardens and store houses. These things were reported and documented at the time
I am very glad and relieved that the remains of Ishi have finally been reunited and respectfully buried in the sacred space where Ishi belonged. I read the story of Ishi many decades ago and was greatly moved by it. Ishi lived his remaining years as an employee of Kroger's museum, even paid a [rather low, but it came with room-and-board] salary, he was said to be "a true gentleman" [that characterization stuck with me], and interacted with children who came to the museum, teaching them his Native crafts. This is a heartbreaking image for me, as he had no children of his own surviving, or even of his tribe or relations.
@13:43 total liar and purveyor of standard BS. And btw, it's now open season on whites so, congratulations, enjoy the downward spiral.
Let me guess your white? Got the default skin?
A good looking man with a regal profile. I’ll bet those genes are passed down to others in that area-and beyond.
King David's father was called Jesse, that name translates to MY Man".Ishi"
Ishi in Hebrew means " MY Man "
I AND MY SPIRIT TRAVELED TO THE HOMELAND OF ISHI AS I WATCHED THE VIDEO OF ISHI HE AND HIS PEOPLE WERE DONE A GRAVE INJUSTICE BY THE THUGS OF THE AREA WHERE HE LIVED. AT LEAST HIS REMAINS AND HIS SPIRIT IS AT REST IN HIS HOMELAND!!!!
Thank you for this Great Knowledge.
🪶
HE DIED FROM YOUR DISEASES
Alot of people died from the deliberately infected diseases but about 64 million were still alive after.
I listened to the book on audible … my heart broke for him thinking he was the last of his tribe … certainly he was the last of his family … What a wise man he was ❤ now listening to “An American Genocide.”
Omg god imagine the loneliness and horrors that poor man went through.So sad
"Known as the last known surviving wild American Indian alive..." Almost. But factually incorrect. In mid 1920's a band of renegade Apache's were still raiding and killing people in southern Arizona, and then crossing over the border into Mexico to elude pursuing law enforcement posse.
🌿🕊🟡⚫️⚪️🔴🌿
So sad.
Hello Beverly,this is Marshall and I wanted you to know that I think of you often and the true spiritual aura you harbor for Ishi. I can recall the time at Black Rock during one of Richards seminars when you simply stepped out on to the dirt road and found a relic remnant of an obsidian arrow point. I wish I could have been there with you upon the monument reveal. Ishi is near and dear to my heart,but I sincerely believe that you are a special soul among those people who have embraced the heart of Ishi and the Yahi tribe. Forgive me for losing contact ,I lost many things but I could never lose the memories of California Ishi, your son Fred or especially you and the sincere care you employ in every aspect toward Ishi and the life which he lived. You are much more than an educator or advocate. I thank you.
Pp
Check out the movie ' The last of his tribe " Graham Green.
The pre planned extermination ' the genocide of the first nations ' not indian " has never been taught in schools or education period it was all swept under the rug just like what the Nazi's did but 1000 times over of millions and millions ! One of the most horrific ways were that they were given blankets infected with small pox and what a horrific way to die! Many of them even after they surrendered on reservations! They were starved to death 💀 winter time many died by freezing to death along with starvation. Every time treaties were made they were broken by the government! On the reservations they were tortured and many beaten to death for drunken fun by anyone ! Today look at what this government is doing as it is turning on its own destroying cities one after another ! And they claimed to be civilized
Well done. Thank you. Walk in Spirit.
Sad