Center for Khmer Studies Library

ប្រវត្តិ នាងពៅ ៖ ទេវកថា មកពីតំបន់ព្រៃឈើ.

Contributor(s): Material type: Computer fileComputer fileSeries: The Prey Lang Potent Landscapes Series : Exploring Kuy Intangible Heritage = កម្រងទេសភាពដ៏មានសក្តានុពលរបស់ព្រៃឡង់Publication details: Intangible Heritage and Engaged Research at a Culture Frontier: Transitions to History at the Edge of the Forest , April 18, 2023.Description: illustrations, map, picutresUniform titles:
  • The Story of Niang Pov : A myth from the forest.
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 306.409596 IHE
Online resources:
Contents:
1- ប្រាសាទត្រពាំងប្រើស 2- បន្ទាយសៀមកាត់សក់ 3- កំណប់នាងពៅ 4- ប្រាសាទស្រីគ្រប់លក្ខណ៍ 5- ភ្នំជី 6- វត្តសសរ១០០ ស្រុកសំបូរ ខេត្តក្រចេះ
Summary: For millions of years, the potent forests and fields born of water and stone have supported multiple ebbing and flowing tides of biological flourishing. Each species taps the potency of the earth in particular ways, and builds empires through collaborative exploitation. This series explores empire building in the Prey Lang Forest in north central Cambodia, where termites, tigers, kings, and crocodiles are all implicated in the creation of society. The ethnographic and GIS data that informs this series was gathered from the year 2000 to the present and continues to be updated. Through this collection, readers can explore Kuy oral traditions and learn about history from the ground up.
Holdings
Item type Current library Shelving location Call number URL Status Date due Barcode
Electronic Resources Electronic Resources Center for Khmer Studies Electronic Resources 306.409596 IHE (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Link to resource Available CKS23090007

Funded by: East-West center, ministry of sciences and technology (MOST), Taiwan

1- ប្រាសាទត្រពាំងប្រើស
2- បន្ទាយសៀមកាត់សក់
3- កំណប់នាងពៅ
4- ប្រាសាទស្រីគ្រប់លក្ខណ៍
5- ភ្នំជី
6- វត្តសសរ១០០ ស្រុកសំបូរ ខេត្តក្រចេះ

For millions of years, the potent forests and fields born of water and stone have supported multiple ebbing and flowing tides of biological flourishing. Each species taps the potency of the earth in particular ways, and builds empires through collaborative exploitation. This series explores empire building in the Prey Lang Forest in north central Cambodia, where termites, tigers, kings, and crocodiles are all implicated in the creation of society. The ethnographic and GIS data that informs this series was gathered from the year 2000 to the present and continues to be updated. Through this collection, readers can explore Kuy oral traditions and learn about history from the ground up.

Khmer