Tuesday, October 4, 2011
Tales of Town, this Wednesday night at The Rooms
HFNL and The Rooms kick off the Tales of Town series this Wednesday night, at 7pm. I'll be sitting down with three engaging locals: businesswoman Margaret Dunn, music shop owner Gordon O'Brien, and author Lisa Moore. We'll be sharing memories and stories about growing up in St. John's, and hope you will join us!
The Rooms, Wednesday, October 5th
7pm
Tickets $5, free for members
Friday, September 30, 2011
Resource Links: Museums and Social Media 101
I'm teaching an introductory workshop today for the Museum Association of Newfoundland and Labrador on social media and museums. As a resource for workshop participants, and for those of you out there with an interest in museums and how social media can be, or is being, used, here are links to some of the materials I'll be talking about today:
Video Introductions:
- Social Media Important Tool for Holocaust Museum
- Social Media in Plain English
- Social Media Revolution 2011
- Museum uses email, social media to drive interaction
- Ask a Curator reviewed
- Ask a Curator website
- Social Media Case Study: Brooklyn Museum
- Social Media and Museums: Royal BC Museum Blog
- Museums Pursue Engagement with Social Media: NY Times article
- Social Media Handouts: National Museums Scotland
- @ICH_NL on Twitter
- Intangible Cultural Heritage Newfoundland Labrador (Facebook)
- Tweetdeck
- Twitterfall
Thursday, September 29, 2011
Folklore students on fire, hookers, townies, and the #sjtweetup
In this edition of the Intangible Cultural Heritage Update for Newfoundland and Labrador, a group of folklore students under the direction of Dr. Jillian Gould is on fire; we celebrate Culture Days in St. John's with a tweetup and panel on social media and culture; Melissa Squarey talks rug hooking with Betty White; and we launch a new public oral history interview program, Tales of Town, in partnership with The Rooms.
Download the pdf here.
Panelists bios for the Sept 30th #sjtweetup
On Friday, September 30th, the Heritage Foundation of Newfoundland and Labrador, and the Newfoundland Historic Trust, will be hosting a St. John’s Tweetup event at the Newman Wine Vaults Provincial Historic Site on Water Street as part of Culture Days. It is a chance for anyone to learn more about how social media is being used in the arts and culture sector in St. John’s, and to meet those people face-to-face that you’ve only ever talked to in 140 character tweets. As part of the event, folklorist Dale Jarvis will moderate a panel discussion with people in the cultural sector on the role of social media in local arts, how it is working, and where it is going.
The Tweetup doors open at 6:30pm, with the panel discussion starting at 7pm.
Who are the panelists?
Jennifer Barnable (@JennaOfAvalon) is a writer, photographer and communications professional from Ferryland, Newfoundland who now resides in downtown St. John's. With degrees in cultural anthropology and public relations, Jennifer has spent most of her career working in the arts and cultural industries.
John Gushue (@JohnGushue) is an online editor with CBC News in St. John's, and contributes regularly to radio and television programming. He writes a weekly column on digital culture for the St. John's Telegram, and publishes a blog called Dot Dot Dot.
Elling Lien (@thescopeNL) is editor of The Scope, a weekly, independent alternative newspaper which focuses on local arts, culture, and current affairs in the St. John's region, and which provides live tweets of St. John's City Council meetings.
You can RSVP for the event here.
Who are the panelists?

John Gushue (@JohnGushue) is an online editor with CBC News in St. John's, and contributes regularly to radio and television programming. He writes a weekly column on digital culture for the St. John's Telegram, and publishes a blog called Dot Dot Dot.
Elling Lien (@thescopeNL) is editor of The Scope, a weekly, independent alternative newspaper which focuses on local arts, culture, and current affairs in the St. John's region, and which provides live tweets of St. John's City Council meetings.
You can RSVP for the event here.
Tuesday, September 27, 2011
Tuesday's Folklore Photo: Knot Tying
This week's photo is of Captain Jan Negrijn tying knots at the Twine Loft, Trinity, as part of Doors Open in 2007.
Knot tying is one of the topics that comes up from time to time as I do workshops in communities about skills and traditions they are worried about losing. At one time, every sailor and fisherman knew dozens of knots, a huge body of specialized knowledge that is not as widespread today as it once was.
Along with that, there were all kinds of folk beliefs about knots, such as knots in a piece of string, which, when buried, could be a cure for warts.
If you've got memories or thoughts on knots and knot tying in Newfoundland and Labrador culture, drop me a line, so to speak.
If a piece of string of any kind is placed outside the house on the eve of St. Brigid, the good saint will walk on it, and that a piece of the cord worn about the leg or foot will be a talisman against all injury from falls and accidents due to stumbling.
-PJ Kinsella, Some Superstitions and Traditions of Newfoundland
Friday, September 23, 2011
A few quick pics of Henry Vokey's schooner, Trinity, Newfoundland
I'm here in Trinity for the Wooden Boat Museum of NL conference and AGM. It's been a while since I was in Trinity, so it is great to see the fantastic progress Mr. Henry Vokey, master boatbuilder, has made on his schooner. Last time I was out this way, it looked like this.
Now, she looks gorgeous. A few quick pictures below.
Here is an interview with Mr Vokey one year ago.
Now, she looks gorgeous. A few quick pictures below.
Here is an interview with Mr Vokey one year ago.
Thursday, September 22, 2011
Recitations on the air! CBC radio hosts folk poetry phone in
The show will be broadcast 12:35-1:30 in Newfoundland / 12:05-1 in most of Labrador.
The Voices of Nurses: Clothilda Benson
As part of a partnership between our office, the School of Nursing, and Memorial University's Digital Archive Initiative, we've been putting a series of interviews with nurses online. One of those recently-added interviews is one conducted by Marilyn Marsh with former nurse Clothilda Benson, recorded in 1987, when Ms Benson was in a nursing home with Parkinsons disease.
In this recording Ms. Benson recalls her nursing career; early memories at Cook St.; nursing training at the Grace; the 3 year nursing program; Margaret Canning; her days as a nursing student; her active life before she was a senior; working 12 hour shifts; nursing teachers; doctor lectures; nursing curfews; social activities of a nursing student; discipline; 12o' clock late leave; changes in the career; the Grace in the past and present; manual labour; patient care; family; nursing standards; and treatments for childbirth.
In this recording Ms. Benson recalls her nursing career; early memories at Cook St.; nursing training at the Grace; the 3 year nursing program; Margaret Canning; her days as a nursing student; her active life before she was a senior; working 12 hour shifts; nursing teachers; doctor lectures; nursing curfews; social activities of a nursing student; discipline; 12o' clock late leave; changes in the career; the Grace in the past and present; manual labour; patient care; family; nursing standards; and treatments for childbirth.
Tuesday, September 20, 2011
Tuesday's Folklore Photo: Folk Art, Compliments of Vic
I'm not sure exactly how old this photo is, but I know I snapped it, on slide film, in Bay de Verde, possibly about 2001. I love how much is crammed into this little display: fishing boats, dorries, part of what looks like an old make-and-break engine.
If you know anything about Vic, or about the objects in the photo, email me at ich@heritagefoundation.ca.
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