Jane Goodall is a primatologist, ethologist, and anthropologist. A primatologist is a scientist who studies primates. An ethologist studies animal behavior. An anthropologist studies humans. She made large contributions to science by studying chimpanzees. Jane studied chimpanzees for forty five years. She learned many things about chimpanzees during her studies. For example, Jane found a “language” that the chimps use. It contains over thirty individual sounds. Jane studied chimpanzees so she could
Dian Fossey was one of the most respected primatologists in the world before her assassination in 1985. Fossey was one of three prominent female scholars chosen by Dr. Louis Leaky to conduct a long term study primates. Fossey’s specialization was in gorillas, and in 1983 she published her book Gorillas in the Mist. The book follows Fossey’s personal story and the scientific research she conducted on mountain gorillas, at the Karisoke Research Center in Rwanda. Fossey combines her scientific research
Dian Fossey was one of the few people who have had the determination and courage to dedicate their life to studying primates. Dian spent 14 years of her life living with gorillas, and 18 years of studying them. Throughout Dian’s life, she learned and discovered many things. She established a research center for gorillas, and even escaped being captured in the civil war. Although Dian had a short life of 53, she was very successful. On January 16th, 1932, a baby girl named Dian Fossey was born in
In London, England, on February 6, 1913, Mary Douglas Leakey was born. Her original name was Mary Douglas Nicol. She had no siblings and two parents who were Erskine Nicol, a scenery painter, and Cecilia Frere Nicol. Due to her father’s work, the family moved frequently. Quite a bit of her initial adolescence was gone through voyaging abroad with her parents through mostly Europe and some parts of Africa. This made her develop a dedication both for prehistory and drawing. Mary’s powerful fondness
The world of anthropology is ever changing and each new discovery can discredit multiple other discoveries. Laetoli, Tanzania has been one site that has discovered and rediscovered multiple species of hominins, but the greatest discovery there was an ancient footprint trail left by our hominin ancestors. There have been other footprint trails discovered in other parts of the world, but none as old as the Laetoli trail. The Laetoli footprints are important because it lets us look into the species
Fundamentally, idolatry is the worship of an image or object or the excessive devotion towards a person or item. From a religious perspective, idolatry is the worship of images and representations other than the true God. Idolatry is a practice whose scope is often misunderstood, prompting the efforts by different people to demystify the practice both in the past and in the world today. Martin Luther, for instance, explores his understanding of the practice in his Large Catechism, a text meant to
As a powerful musician and the creator of one of the first big New Orleans jazz band, Oliver was the beginning of jazz in New Orleans and the start of generation of cornet players who advanced their musical style during the 1920s, including Louis Armstrong, who was Oliver's apprentice. All throughout olivers musical career he stood out through his techniques. Joseph Oliver was the first to change the history of jazz music. “King” Oliver helped spread Jazz from New Orleans to Chicago with the
brand Louis Vuitton was started in 1854 in Paris France. Before opening up his own workshop, Vuitton apprenticed Monsieur Marechal for 17 years in which he learned how to create intricate boxes. This ultimately gave him the idea to create his own business in making luxury trunks. After Louis Vuitton died in 1892, his son George took over the business. During this time he patented over 700 designs and opened up stores internationally. Shortly after, there was a merge of Moet Hennessey and Louis Vuitton
A wonderfully rich fictional account of life and music in Storyville to check out is Louis Maistros’ novel, The Sound of Building Coffins. Jazz caught and spread rapidly up the Mississippi River to Memphis, St. Louis, and ultimately, Chicago. Ships and trains carried musicians all the way up the east coast to New York, as well. New Orleans musicians left Dixie behind them, but took their Dixieland Jazz
Changeling is a 2008 film based on an old American crime story called the “Wineville Chicken Coop Murders,” directed by auteur director, Clint Eastwood. In the film, Angelina Jolie plays the main role of 1920s single mother, Christine Collins, who relentlessly pursues the search of her son, once he is discovered to be missing. Reinterpreting the true story, Eastwood takes the audience of the film on the search with Mrs. Collins, steering her to unfold the true corruption and abusive authority of
including selling coal and working at a tailor’s shop on South Rampart Street that is still seen today. Armstrong was even arrested for firing a gun as a dare from his friend. It would be during his sentence that he would begin learning the cornet. Louis Armstrong’s first cornet was given to him by Joe “King” Oliver, a bandleader, who was Armstrong’s idol and mentor. Armstrong began performing in musical clubs of “Black Storyville” in New Orleans with the likes of King Oliver and trombonist Kid Ory
Within the generic label of autoethnography there are a number of different sub genres which various theorists have conceived upon analysis of the patterns emerging in autoethnographical writing. Scholars chart out the presence of two main approaches of autoethnography in literature - ‘analytic’ and ‘evocative’. Evocative autoethnography engages the reader in the understanding of the narrative and analytic autoethnography not only calls for a personal understanding of the text but also makes visible
Music Essay Aaliya Shafi 7B Jazz Rock 21/1/2017 Jazz-rock may be known as the loudest, wildest bands from jazz camp. This is also known as Jazz-fusion as a musical genre, which was developed, in the late 19’60s and the early 19’70s. This was when artists merged different characteristics of Jazz harmony, and improvisation with styles such as: rock, funk, blues and Latin Jazz. Different artists started experimenting and trying out electrical
The Santa Fe Evening of Jazz was a great concert featuring the Rhythm and Blues, Jazz Combo, and Big Band from Santa Fe College with special guest Professor Scott Wilson from the University of Florida Jazz Studies. This Evening of Jazz was the ninth one to be held and was superbly done; getting a ticket was quick and simple, finding a seat was as easy, and leaving was not hard. The whole performance was led by Doctor Steven Lee Bingham who also played with all the bands on the alto saxophone along
that destroyed a big part of the city, demand for houses boomed, resulting in a significant rise in the need for architectural work. He first began working for Lyman Silsbee, and shortly after that he then met the “father of skyscrapers”, architect Louis Sullivan. Sullivan was a leading American architect and considered to be the founder of modernism. Along with famous architects Henri Richardson and Dankmar Adler, he was a member of The Chicago School, which was a group of architects
The Impact of Jazz on Canada in the 20th Century Though not an entirely Canadian concept, jazz had a significant impact in Canada in the years 1918-1950. Early jazz music in Canada was dependent on touring artists from American cities, who would occasionally perform in cities near the border.n Canada, jazz music was still in its infancy, whereas jazz was “born” in 1895 in the US. Jelly Roll Morton was one of the first Americans to tour in Canada, performing in Vancouver cabarets from 1919-1921
influential figures during the Harlem Renaissance, which was a time when African Americans were finding their role in American Society. During this era some of the best jazz musicians to this day such as Count Basie, Miles Davis, Duke Ellington and Louis Armstrong heavily influenced this movement. One of Langston Hughes poems, “Trumpet Player” portrayed how these musicians used jazz to express themselves and escape from the racial inequality at the time. Part I: Scansion and Analysis Trumpet Player
What kind of music could represent New York? Could it be the Broadway musical that bloomed on the heart of Manhattan? Or could it be the Hip Hop that hid in the shadow of the Bronx? To me, Broadway was more like a pretentious extravaganza, and Hip Hop carried too much burden. The true New York was perhaps just like a Jazz, indulging in its own success. In the November 13, I went to a Jazz concert that held in Carnegie Hall. It was my first Jazz concert ever. The concert was epic. As soon as the concert
“During the 1930s and early 1940s the predominant jazz style was swing. Swing, a dance-oriented style, typically was played in ballrooms by big bands of fourteen or more musicians.” (Thomas, pg.4) The role played by African Americans within the system during this era was revolutionary. The American public had become familiar and happy with big-band swing. Swing rhythm sections delivered a solid, basic accompaniment, built largely of long quarter-note strings exaggerated by the high-hat pattern. Often
Clarinet, etc. and still to this day is played in a many different places with differentiating styles, two of all the manners of playing Jazz are Bebop and Cubop. There is huge number of individuals who have had a large impact on Jazz, including: Louis Armstrong, Cab Calloway, Ella Fitzgerald, Duke Ellington, and Roy Eldridge, but one figure especially had an enormous impact on Jazz; John “Dizzy” Gillespie. This man was key in the development in both Jazz styles mentioned earlier, Bebop and Cubop