"The ', in its ancient and classical form, is analogous to the Japanese and to other like institutions throughout the South Sea Islands. It was conventionalized into a real school of dramatic art. ... A hula performance consisted in a series of dramatic dances accompanied by song, sometimes by rhythmical instruments. It was given under the patronage of a chief, often to celebrate some event, like the birthday of a son. It was dedicated to some god, generally to , the goddess of co-ordinated movement, and was bound under a strict decorum to rigid ceremonial conventions. ... The hula company might consist of several hundred persons, men and women, boys and girls, with a retinue of followers to secure and prepare the food-supply."
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Columbia University alumniWomen academics from the United StatesAnthropologists from the United StatesWomen scientists from the United StatesVassar College faculty
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Martha Warren Beckwith
(January 19, 1871 – January 28, 1959) was an American anthropologist, ethnographer, , author, and translator. In 1918 she received from a Ph.D. in anthropology under the supervision of Franz Boas. In 1920, based upon the philanthropy of , Beckwith was hired as a research professor in folklore at . She thus became the first person to hold a professorial chair in folklore at any college or university in the United States.
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