The National Museum of Ethnology (Minpaku) is a research center for ethnology and cultural anthropology.

Material Culture in Central and North Asia: Ethno-Cultural Objects at the National Museum ofEthnology

Research period : April 2018‒ March 2022 / Project for Database Establishment (project period: max. 4 years) Coordinator TERAMURA Hirofumi

Reserch Theme List

Outline

Objectives

Minpaku houses a collection of many ethno-cultural assets (artifacts and audio-visual materials) acquired from locations in Central and North Asia. In June 2016, Minpaku opened a new exhibit on Central and North Asia utilizing a selection of these assets. In the process of developing this new exhibit, studies were performed on North and Central Asian artifacts and a significant volume of new research data was accumulated. In its current form, the exhibit now open to the public represents only a small fraction of that information. This project will comprise research in cooperation with local communities and foreign research institutions on material cultures extending over a vast area from Russia's Chukotka Peninsula, Kamchatka Peninsula, and Sakhalin Islands in the east through the Russian Far East, Siberia, and Mongolia to Central Asia in the west, with a focus on the material artifacts in the Minpaku collection. The findings and accomplishments of that research will be put into a database format and disseminated by the Info-Forum Museum.

Description

For this project, the vast area outlined above will be divided into the three regions of Russia, Mongolia, and Central Asia, with the following surveys and studies to be performed. A database of information on cultural assets in Central and North Asia will then be developed based on the findings of these surveys and studies.
(1) Project leaders will draft a four-year comprehensive plan for this project. Next, we will select foreign and domestic research institutions, museums, and local communities with which we will need cooperative arrangements to implement joint research, conclude cooperative agreements as necessary, and establish frameworks for networking and research.
(2) Samples of artifacts from these regions will be selected from the existing Minpaku artifact database and data elements will be formulated for the database to be created through this project. We will verify and correct information on ethno-cultural assets relevant to the selected materials, build a basic database in Japanese and English, and augment it with accurate information in local languages.
(3) We will implement local surveys and joint research, workshops and international symposia on material culture in collaboration with foreign and domestic research institutions and local communities, and utilize their outcomes to enhance existing information on cultural assets.
(4) We will verify the content of information on cultural assets to be placed in the database, sort and classify the information for publication, and complete the development of database content.
(5) Working in collaboration with the system development expert subcommittee and editorial team, we will develop a system for the dissemination of enhanced information on cultural assets and publish database information with that system.
(6) We will host local workshops on database use to facilitate database utilization by local communities. In addition, working in collaboration with other research institutions that are engaged in the dissemination of comparable museum information, we will host international symposia that discuss or utilize the databases containing such information.
(7) We will publish in research papers, proceedings, or essays the outcomes of local surveys, joint research, workshops, international symposia, and other activities that are implemented in the process of building our database.

Expected results

Note: Results also reveal what kind of database it would be.
The information on cultural assets on public display at the Minpaku exhibit on Central and North Asia will form the core of this database. Working with that core data, we will enhance the information on material artifacts from these regions that are in the Minpaku collection and disseminate that information worldwide over the internet.
The exhibit on Central and North Asia provides a general, cross-cultural overview of several features common to Central Asia, Mongolia, Siberia, and the Far North. These include adaptation to the natural environment and forms of subsistence, daily life and religious beliefs, and experiences with socialism, while also taking their differences into account. Drawing perspective from these themes and utilizing the materials in the exhibit as a foundation, we will be able to deepen our information on cultural assets related to Central and North Asia and facilitate the advancement of future research in these regions by adding to the material artifacts stored in the Minpaku repository, as necessary.
This database may be utilized not only for university education and research of relevance to the field of cultural anthropology, the study of material culture, and area studies with a focus on Central and North Asia, but also to aid the preservation and restoration of the cultures of regional societies.

Annual Report

Outcomes from 2019
1. The state of the implementation of this year's research

The vast area of this project is divided into the three regions of Russia, Mongolia, and Central Asia, and with the information on cultural resources displayed in Minpaku’s Central and North Asia exhibit at its core, the project aims to enhance information relating to artifacts of this region housed at Minpaku and to construct a database of Central and North Asian cultural resources based on these results. The main surveys and research carried out this year are as below.

1) On September 14, 2019 (Saturday) an international workshop titled ‘Barathosi Balogh’s fieldwork (1908-1914) among the Tungusic peoples of Amur and Sakhalin and its connection to Minpaku’s collection’ was held (in seminar room 4) with 26 attendees.

2) Minpaku foreign researcher, Dr David Somfai, carried out the English-local language (Mongol) translation and annotation for Minpaku’s shamanism related artifacts focusing on the Mongolian and Northeast Asia collection. (Number of artifacts: 96 pieces. Number of records: 96x5=480 records). A section of the research results was also submitted and published in the academic journal SHAMAN.

3) In connection with the workshop above, in addition to Dr Somfai we also invited Dr Istvan Santha (Researcher, Ethnology Research Centre, Hungarian Academy of Science) and they both undertook fieldwork in Russia (in Vladivostok and Sakhlin amongst others) and presented their research results from this survey at the international workshop in 1).

4). Irina Morozova (researcher of Southeast and East European History, University of Regensburg, Germany), who was in residence from September 1 (for a period of 3 months), utilized her expert knowledge of history and oriental history to make a catalogue of related materials to the Central and North Asian exhibit around the common theme ‘The Socialist Era.’

5). With a focus on Uzbekistan artifacts, we progressed the organization of extracted detailed data from the artifact database and went to the local area (Samarkand, Uzbekistan), carrying out surveys and meetings in order to create local networks with partner institutions and the source community. The English and Russian translations were also moved forward with the help of cooperating researchers there. (Number of artifacts number: 762 pieces; number of records: 762x5=3810).

Further, in relation to the above, using as our subject the ‘Traditional kitchen of a Tashkent house’ and ‘House in Tashkent (hovli)’ exhibit which is displayed in the Central and North Asia exhibit hall as a practice test of the forum with the local community, we negotiated with the house’s owner in order to record the house as it is today. As we were able to gain the owner’s agreement, as well as an interview with the residents of the house, we recorded the traditional house in its current state on film.

2. Overview of the research results (achievements of the research objects)

During this year and based on our project plan, we held an international workshop where 26 Russian and Japanese participants engaged in active discussion and exchange of opinions. We also carried out local fieldwork surveys in Russia connected to presentations at this workshop, enhancing the data on Shaminism related artifacts in Minpaku’s Mongolian and North Asian collection and progressing the “multilingualization” of the database. These fieldwork surveys led to a presentation of results from Dr Somfai and Dr Santha at the international workshop and Dr Somfai’s review submission and publication in the academic journal SHAMAN (Vol 27, No. 1&2, Spring and Autumn 2019), a significant result for the project. Further,Dr Somfai’s translation and annotation work into English and the local language (Mongolian) resulted in, though a small number of materials (number of artifacts: 96; number of records: 96x5=480), these will be reflected in the database being constructed in this project in the future.

Dr Morozova’s cataloging and annotation of artifacts in the Central and North Asia exhibit related to ‘The Socialist Era’ are also a connected result to the enhancement of information relating to Minpaku’s cultural resources. After thorough examination of Minpaku’s stored and exhibited artifacts, and based on research of each of those artifacts, Dr Morozova, summarised from a material cultural perspective, the localized culture of socialism under the universal political influence of socialism in an academic paper. That paper, titled ‘’Normativity against uniformity in late- and post-socialist Central Asia and Mongolia,’ is scheduled to be submitted to Bulletin of the National Museum of Ethnology.

In the local surveys carried out in Uzbekistan, with the permission of the house’s owner and directly relating to Minpaku’s ‘House in Tashkent’ exhibit, we filmed and took 360 degree images of the traditional house. In doing so, we were able to obtain precious information connecting a Minpaku held artifact, the actual object in the local area (the traditional house itself) and the way in which it is being used (material culture). In addition to interviewing the informant (the house owner) who knew of the situation 30 years ago when the replica of the house was built, capturing the house (and the people living in it) on film 30 years on, as it is today, is a real example and important result relating to one of the main objectives of an info-forum—of encouraging the two-way flow of information. It was uncovered in the interview, that in the midst of the city’s development, it is possible that the residents will be evicted and the traditional house will be destroyed. We are examining how this film and exhibit materials can be used in the info-forum database, as they are precious materials which show life 30 years ago in the area and again what it is like today.

Though the data organization of the Mongolian and Central Asia artifacts has been progressed, how the data organization and research on the Siberia and far northern artifacts will be implemented remains a topic for future investigation.

3. Records disclosing achievements (publications, public symposia, sectional meetings of academic conferences, electronic media, etc.)

 

Outcomes from 2018
1. The state of the implementation of this year's research

This project divides a vast area into the three regions of Russia, Mongolia, and Central Asia, and aims to build a database on ethno-cultural assets in Central and North Asia based on the sophisticated information about material artifacts collected from the region to be housed by Minpaku focusing on ethno-cultural assets displayed in the Central and North Asia Exhibition Hall. The following studies and researches were conducted mainly during this fiscal year.
1) After selecting mainly Mongolian material artifact items from the existing Minpaku’s material artifact database, graduate students at SOKENDAI, who are skilled at local languages, were involved in data organization work as RAs. Concretely, they cross-checked Japanese material titles with those written in local languages, and input them in these languages.
2) Simultaneously with 1, basic data organization work was started for the Japanese and English languages.
3) Detailed information mainly on Uzbekistani artifacts was selected from the material artifact database for organization, while visiting Samarkand, in the Republic of Uzbekistan to conduct studies and hold meetings for building a network with partner institutions and local communities.

2. Overview of the research results (achievements of the research objects)

As this fiscal year is the first year of this project, we mainly selected and organized material artifact data, as well as made preparations for creating a network with partner institutions and local communities. During such a working process, we could have a meeting with an Uzbekistani informant (who is fluent in Russian, Tajik and Japanese in addition to Uzbekistani) for joint research to be conducted while requesting cooperation in research. This achievement is significant in promoting “multilingualization” for artifact information required under the Info-Forum Museum Project.
Additionally, during the fieldwork, we recorded videos for “The life ways in Oasis cities,” a subsection in the Central and North Asia Exhibition Hall and shot a 360°VR video in the local bazaar. We could consider their utilization as a bridge between the material artifacts owned by Minpaku and how objects are actually used there (material culture).
Regarding Mongolian artifacts, we proceeded with data organization; however, regarding Siberian and far northern artifacts, the issues to be considered from now on are how to organize the data and how to implement joint research.

3. Records disclosing achievements (publications, public symposia, sectional meetings of academic conferences, electronic media, etc.)

No particular achievement has resulted, since the project started only this year.