Interview with Luo Meiyu
-
Download
- Rights
- Files (1)
- MP4
- Please be patient with media downloads. They are often large files.
-
Documents
- Document
- LUO Meiyu_blog_cn.docx
- Document
- LUO Meiyu_transcript_cn.docx
- Document
- LUO Meiyu_transcript_cn_01.docx
- Document
- LUO Meiyu_transcript_en.docx
-
Share
Embed CodePermalink
- Skip to Item Info
Loading the media player...
Item Info
- Title:
- Interview with Luo Meiyu
- Date:
- June 9, 2011
- Interviewer:
- Interviewee:
- Description:
-
Luo Meiyu (b. 1927) is a resident of Zhaixia Village, Pengzhai Town, Heping County, Heyuan City, Guangdong Province. Luo talked briefly about her life: She was born in Chaozhou, married three times, gave birth to 11 children, sold 3 sons because there were no enough food to feed them. She also talked about the hard labor in the field.
罗美玉(1923年生)是广东省河源市和平县彭寨镇寨下村村民。罗老人大致讲了自己一生的经历:出生在潮州,嫁过三次,生了11个小孩,卖了3个儿子,因为粮食不够没法养。老人谈到在地里犁地耕地,非常辛苦。
Transcripts for this interview and more may be available under the ‘Documents’ link above. 采访抄录和相关内容,请点击查看上面的’Documents’链接。
- Location:
- Subject:
- Format:
- interviews
- Language:
- Chinese
- Digital Collection:
- The Memory Project
- Source Collection:
- The Memory Project Oral History collection | 民间记忆计划口述史, 2009-2016
- Rights:
- Limited Re-UseCC BY-NC-SA 4.0
- Rights Note:
- Rights in these materials are owned by their creators and are licensed for reuse under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 License (English: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0. Chinese: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/deed.zh). For reuses beyond the scope of that license or for other questions about rights, please see: https://library.duke.edu/rubenstein/research/citations-and-permissions.
- Identifier:
-
- RL10171mpg0269
- 009127403
- 431fec17bedcd5d77ed4b7de1a179027
- memoryproject
- luomeiyu
- ark:/87924/r4cf9r54n
- 30ab0d05-da33-4f6e-8fd0-20c3f3b2a501
- Permalink:
- https://idn.duke.edu/ark:/87924/r4cf9r54n
- Sponsor:
- Sponsor this Digital Collection
The preservation of the Duke University Libraries Digital Collections and the Duke Digital Repository programs are supported in part by the Lowell and Eileen Aptman Digital Preservation Fund