Property | Value(s) |
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acdh:hasSpatialCoverage | |
acdh:hasRightsInformation |
The ISA maintains communication with the concerned communities and seek their consent for publication. The selection and publication process adhere to the regulations outlined in the General Data Protection Regulation. Should you have justified objections regarding the Open Access of individual images, please contact us. It is possible that certain pictures were taken by other individuals accompanying Walter Dostal on his fieldwork, such as Margarete Dostal. Out of ethical, legal, and curatorial considerations, the entire collection is not available online. We are presenting a selection here. Access for researchers can be provided upon request. Kindly email us at sozialanthropologie@oeaw.ac.at.
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acdh:hasCompleteness |
This photographic collection is an excerpt from the Estate of Walter Dostal.
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acdh:hasIdentifier |
https://id.acdh.oeaw.ac.at/dostal-nachlass, https://arche.acdh.oeaw.ac.at/api/534804, https://hdl.handle.net/21.11115/0000-0012-B062-6
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acdh:hasUpdatedRole |
rmandell
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acdh:hasRelatedDiscipline | |
acdh:hasNonLinkedIdentifier |
AT-OeAW-ISA-WD
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acdh:hasRightsHolder | |
acdh:hasUpdatedDate |
2024-10-02T11:24:03.119087
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acdh:hasContributor | |
acdh:hasDescription |
Walter Dostal (1928-2011) was a prominent representative of German-speaking socio-cultural anthropology. He left behind a collection of ethnographic visuals, including photos, slides, drawings, and film materials, which document material culture, vernacular architecture, artisanal crafts, and social life in the second half of the 20th century in Arabia. His materials were dedicated to the Institute for Social Anthropology (ISA) at the Austrian Academy of Sciences after his passing. It is possible that certain pictures were taken by other individuals accompanying Walter Dostal on his fieldwork, such as Margarete Dostal.
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acdh:hasPid | |
acdh:hasSubject |
Yemen, Photographs, Dostal
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acdh:hasBinarySize |
189.63 GB
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acdh:hasOaiSet | |
acdh:hasDepositor | |
acdh:createdBy |
rmandell
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acdh:hasLicensor | |
acdh:hasArrangement |
The collection is organized in folders according to the archival box number, in which the originals are stored. The folders have subfolders according to the object numbers in a way that they don't exceed 31 GB of storage demand.
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acdh:hasTitle |
The Estate of Walter Dostal
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acdh:hasCoverageStartDate |
1960-01-01
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acdh:aclRead |
rmandell
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acdh:hasLicenseSummary |
CC BY-NC-ND 4.0: 4750
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acdh:hasNumberOfItems |
4800
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acdh:hasLanguage | |
acdh:aclWrite |
rmandell
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acdh:hasAccessRestrictionSummary |
public: 4594 / restricted: 155
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acdh:hasMetadataCreator | |
acdh:hasFunder | |
acdh:hasActor | |
acdh:hasHosting | |
acdh:hasCurator | |
acdh:hasCoverageEndDate |
1999-01-01
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acdh:hasContact | |
acdh:hasLicense | |
acdh:hasSubmissionDate |
2024-07-11
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acdh:hasNamingScheme |
The image files are named after the object number. The object numbers consist of ISA's ISIL AT-OeAW-ISA followed by the first letter of the collector's first and last name, followed by the archival box number, followed by a consecutive three digit number.
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acdh:hasOwner | |
acdh:hasCreator | |
acdh:hasPrincipalInvestigator | |
acdh:hasAvailableDate |
2024-08-28
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acdh:hasLifeCycleStatus | |
rdf:type |
Available since 28 08 2024
TopCollection
Walter Dostal (1928-2011) was a prominent representative of German-speaking socio-cultural anthropology. He left behind a collection of ethnographic visuals, including photos, slides, drawings, and film materials, which document material culture, vernacular architecture, artisanal crafts, and social life in the second half of the 20th century in Arabia. His materials were dedicated to the Institute for Social Anthropology (ISA) at the Austrian Academy of Sciences after his passing. It is possible that certain pictures were taken by other individuals accompanying Walter Dostal on his fieldwork, such as Margarete Dostal.
Walter Dostal (1928-2011) was a prominent representative of German-speaking socio-cultural anthropology. He left behind a collection of ethnographic visuals, including photos, slides, drawings, and film materials, which document material culture, vernacular architecture, artisanal crafts, and social life in the second half of the 20th century in Arabia. His materials were dedicated to the Institute for Social Anthropology (ISA) at the Austrian Academy of Sciences after his passing. It is possible that certain pictures were taken by other individuals accompanying Walter Dostal on his fieldwork, such as Margarete Dostal. Show Less
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