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  • BSZ  (7)
  • Kroeber, A. L. Alfred Louis  (4)
  • Métraux, Alfred  (3)
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Material
Language
Years
Subjects(RVK)
  • 1
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Pomo Indians ; Pomo Indians ; Pomo
    Abstract: Pomo and Pomoan refer to a family of seven California Indian languages and to their speakers, often differentiated by Southwestern Pomo (Kashaya), Southern Pomo, Central Pomo, Northern Pomo, Northeastern Pomo (Salt Pomo), Eastern Pomo, and Southeastern Pomo. This file of 30 documents covers the late nineteenth century to approximately 1976
    Abstract: ^^ - Eastern Pomo and Southeastern Pomo - Sally McLendon and Michael J. Lowy - 1978 -- - Bibliography - 1978
    Description / Table of Contents: Pomo - Robert L. Oswalt and John Beierle (file evaluation and indexing notes) - 2001 -- - Pomo Indians - A. L. Kroeber - 1953 -- - Notes on Pomo ethnogeography - Omer C. Stewart - 1943 -- - Pomo folkways - by Edwin M. Loeb ... - 1926 -- - Ceremonies of the Pomo Indians - S. A. Barrett - 1917 -- - Pomo bear doctors - by S. A. Barrett - 1917 -- - Pomo Indian basketry - by S. A. Barrett - 1908 -- - Clear Lake Pomo society - by Edward Winslow Gifford ... - 1926 -- - The ethno-geography of the Pomo and neighboring Indians - S. A. Barrett - 1908 -- - The mechanics of kinship - B. W. Aginsky - 1935 -- - Population control in the Shanel (Pomo) Tribe - Burt W. Aginsky - 1939 -- - Psychopathic trends in culture - Burt W. Aginsky - 1939 -- - The socio-psychological significance of death among the Pomo Indians - B. W. Aginsky - 1940 -- - The Pomo - Stephen Powers - 1877 -- - Pomo buildings - S. A. Barrett - 1916 --^
    Description / Table of Contents: a food of the Pomo Indians - Samuel A. Barrett - 1936 -- - Pomo - Alfred L. Kroeber - 1917 -- - Pomo - by Edward Winslow Gifford - 1922 -- - Material aspects of Pomo culture - S.A. Barrett - 1952 -- - Culture contact and acculturation of the southwestern Pomo - by Mary Jean Kennedy - 1955 -- - Pomo geography - by Fred B. Kniffen - 1939 -- - The Pomo kin group and the political unit in aboriginal California - P. H. Kunkel - 1974 -- - Ethnographic and historical sketch of the Eastern Pomo and their neighbors, the Southeastern Pomo - Sally McLendon - 1977 -- - Identity crises: changes in lifestyle of the Manchester Band of the Pomo Indians - by Dorothea J. Theodoratus - 1971 -- - Pomo: introduction - Sally McLendon and Robert L. Oswalt - 1978 -- - Western Pomo and Northeastern Pomo - Lowell John Bean and Dorothea Theodoratus - 1978 --^
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  • 2
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: California--Description and travel ; Folk songs, Hupa--California--History and criticism ; Folk songs, Karok--California--History and criticism ; Folk songs, Yurok--California--History and criticism ; Hupa Indians--Music--History and criticism ; Indian children--North America ; Karok Indians--Music--History and criticism ; Klamath Indians ; Names, Geographical--California ; Yurok Indians ; Yurok Indians--Music--History and criticism ; Yurok language ; Yurok
    Abstract: The Yurok collection consists of all English language documents covering a variety of ethnographic topics. The major source of information on the Yurok is found in Heizer and Mills which is an account of a coastal village through time (ca. 1775-1952), supplemented by additional information from Kroeber, and Pilling. Two of the studies in this collection deal with the Yuroks own view of their culture, in Thompson, and Pilling. The remaining collection is rounded out by data on child training and world view in Erickson; marriage as examined through genealogical records, in Waterman and Kroeber; geography, in Waterman; law, in Kroeber; the tradition of music and songs among the Yurok, in Keeling; womens attitude toward menstruation and associated rituals in Buckley; and finally physical anthropology in Ferreira
    Description / Table of Contents: Yurok - Thomas R. Hester - 2011 -- - The four ages of Tsurai: a documentary history of the Indian village on Trinidad Bay - Robert F. Heizer and John E. Mills ; Translations of Spanish documents by Donald C. Cutter - 1952 -- - Yurok marriages - by T. T. Waterman and A. L. Kroeber - 1934 -- - Observations on the Yurok: childhood and world image - by Erik Homburger Erikson - 1943 -- - Yurok geography - T. T. Waterman - 1920 -- - Law of the Yurok Indians - A. L. Kroeber - 1928 -- - Handbook of the Indians of California - A. L. Kroeber - 1925 -- - To the American Indian - Lucy Thompson - 1916 -- - Yurok - Arnold R. Pilling - 1978 -- - Slipping through sky holes: Yurok body imagery in northern California - Mariana K. Leal Ferreira - 1998 -- - Menstruation and the power of Yurok women: methods in cultural reconstruction - Thomas Buckley - 1982 --^
    Description / Table of Contents: sacred song and speech among the Yurok, Hupa, and Karok Indians of northwestern California - Richard Keeling - 1992
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  • 3
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Yuki Indians
    Abstract: ^^ - Whatever happened to the Yuki? - Virginia P. Miller - 1975 -- - Yuki, Huchnom, and Coast Yuki - Virginia P. Miller - 1978 -- - The Yú-ki - Stephen Powers - 1976 -- - An archaeological survey of the Yuki area - by A. E. Treganza, C. E. Smith and W. D. Weymouth - 1950 -- - Tá-tu - Stephen Powers - 1976 -- - Bibliography - 1978
    Abstract: The Yuki lived in northern Mendocino County, California and spoke a language, Yukian, that has no known relationship to other languages. The Yuki include the Coast Yuki, Yuki, and Huchnom. In the 1990s there were about 100 Yukis around Round Valley, California. The Yuki used to practice hunting, gathering, and fishing and the Round Valley supported a relatively dense population on the rich wild resources. However, the Round Valley land was much desired by European-American settlers and the Yuki were displaced and killed to free up the land. There are eighteen documents in this collection. A general introduction to the three main Yuki groups can be found in Kroeber's articles from the Handbook of Californian Indians
    Description / Table of Contents: Yuki - Ian Skoggard - 2003 -- - Some plants used by the Yuki Indians of Round Valley, northern California - by L.S.M. Curtin ; historical review and photos by Margaret C. Irwin - 1957 -- - A summary of Yuki culture - by George M. Foster - 1944 -- - The Coast Yuki - by E. W. Gifford - 1965 -- - Coast Yuki myths - By E. W. Gifford - 1937 -- - War stories from two enemy tribes - By Walter Goldschmidt, George Foster, and Frank Essene - 1939 -- - The Yuki: ethnic geography - By A. L. Kroeber - 1972 -- - The Yuki: culture - By A. L. Kroeber - 1972 -- - The Yuki: religion - By A. L. Kroeber - 1972 -- - The Huchnom and Coast Yuki - By A. L. Kroeber - 1972 -- - Yuki myths - by A. L. Kroeber - 1932 -- - The changing role of the chief on a California Indian Reservation - Virginia P. Miller - 1989 -- - Ukomno'm: the Yuki Indians of northern California - by Virginia P. Miller - 1979 --^
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  • 4
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    New Haven, Conn : Human Relations Area Files, Inc
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Abipon Indians ; Paraguay--Description and travel--Early works to 1800
    Abstract: The Abipón ethnographic collection is a small collection. The primary work, and the one that provided the major source of data for this summary, is that of the Jesuit, Father Martin Dobrizhoffer, who lived among this group for eighteen years in the mid eighteenth century. Dobrizhoffer was a keen observer of Abipón behavior and customs and the information he recorded forms the basis of what little we know about this now extinct group. The Dobrizhoffer document deals primarily with various aspects of ethnography, covering such topics as territory occupied, historical origins, physical appearance and characteristics, religion, tribal divisions, leadership (chiefs, captains or caciques), food, clothing, language, marriage customs, games, diseases, shamans (jugglers), death and mortuary customs, fauna, and warfare. The study by Metraux is a brief summary of the history of the Abipón, their relations with the Spanish and other aboriginal groups, and of missionary activity among them. This document, abstracted from the Handbook of South American Indians (Bulletin 143, Vol.1), largely duplicates information already contained in Dobrizhoffer
    Description / Table of Contents: Abipón - John Beierle - 2010 -- - An account of the Abipones, an equestrian people of Paraguay: volume 2 - Martin Dobrizhoffer - 1822 -- - Ethnography of the Chaco - Alfred Metraux - 1946
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  • 5
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Yokuts Indians
    Abstract: The Native American Yokuts of the San Joaquin Valley and the adjacent foothills of the Sierra Nevada in south-central California, traditionally included some forty to fifty subtribes grouped into three divisions; the Northern Valley Yokuts, the Southern Valley Yokuts, and the Foothills Yokuts. This file consists of 23 documents that discuss the Yokuts in the San Joaquin Valley and Sierra foothills of central California, in the United States. Some of these documents include a small section on the archaeology of the area, however most of the documents focus on the time period from Spanish contact to the 1970s (1770s A.D. to 1970s A.D.). Cultural summaries can be found in Latta, Kroeber, Wallace, and Spier. Brief glimpses of Yokuts culture can be found in Gayton who presents a portion of a Spanish Lieutenant's diary from 1819 and Powers who wrote about the Yokuts of the early 1870s. Other topics found include language; shamans, ceremonies, and other aspects of religion; environment; trade; names and naming; ceramics; population estimates; and music and song
    Description / Table of Contents: Yokuts - By Gerald F. Reid and Sarah Berry (file evaluation and indexing notes) - 2002 -- - Yokuts and western Mono ethnography: vol. 1, Tulare Lake, Southern Valley, and Central Foothill Yokuts - By A. H. Gayton - 1948 -- - The Yokuts - A. L. Kroeber - 1953 -- - Handbook of Yokuts Indians - by F. F. Latta - 1949 -- - Culture-environment integration - A. H. Gayton - 1946 -- - The Yokuts language of south central California: part III - By A. L. Kroeber - 1907 -- - A Lacustrine economy in California - Ralph L. Beals and Joseph A. Hester, Jr. - 1958 -- - Estudillo among the Yokuts: 1819 - by A. H. Gayton - 1936 -- - The aboriginal population of the San Joaquin Valley, California - by S. F. Cook - 1955 -- - Notes on Yokuts weather shamanism and the rattlesnake ceremony - By Francis A. Riddell - 1955 -- - Tachi Yokuts music - James Hatch - 1958 --^
    Description / Table of Contents: part 1. general considerations - A. H. Gayton and Stanley S. Newman - 1940 -- - Yokuts trade networks and native culture change in central and eastern California - Brooke S. Arkush - 1993 -- - Yokuts: introduction - Michael Silverstein - 1978 -- - The Yokuts: people of the land - William L. Preston - 1981 -- - Culture-environment integration: external references in Yokuts life - by Anna H. Gayton - 1976 -- - Bibliography - 1978 -- - Southern Valley Yokuts - William J. Wallace - 1978 -- - Northern Valley Yokuts - William J. Wallace - 1978 -- - Foothill Yokuts - Robert F. G. Spier - 1978
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  • 6
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Amazon River ; Indians of South America--Amazon River Valley ; Jivaran languages ; Jivaro Indians ; Shuar Indians ; South America--Description and travel
    Abstract: This collection includes 30 English language documents, three translated from the German and three from the French, that contain specific data on the Jivaroan-speaking groups of southeastern Ecuador and adjacent Peru, including the Jivaro (Shuar, Shuara), Achuara (Atchuara, Achual), Huambisa, Aguaruna, Mayna, and the extinct Palta and Malacata. The major time span of the works in this collection ranges from about 1863 to 2003. Karsten, Stirling, Ḿetraux, and Harner provide the most comprehensive coverage of traditional Jivaro ethnography, supplemented to a much lesser extent by the brief summaries in Simson, Farabee, Reiss, and Hermessen. War, warfare related ceremonies, including data on head-hunting and the preparation of the shrunken heads, are prominent themes in Up de Graff, Dickey, Bollert, and Bennett Ross. Other ethnographic topics of interest in this collection are: the evaluation of missionaries, their activities and other reports in Rivet, Salazar, and Harner. The influence of Western music on the traditional music of the Jivaro is discussed in Belzner. The formation and activities of the Shuar (Jivaro) Federation in lowland Ecuador are described in Salazar and Harner. Two studies of Jivaro anthropometry will be found in Meyers and Wright . The Shuar are the best known subgroup and a major focus of this collection
    Description / Table of Contents: Jivaro - Anonymous and John Beierle (synopsis and indexing notes) - 2006 -- - The head-hunters of Western Amazonas: the life and culture of the Jibaro Indians of eastern Ecuador and Peru - by Rafael Karsten - 1935 -- - Historical and ethnographical material on the Jivaro Indians - Matthew Williams Stirling - 1938 -- - Notes on the Jivaros and Canelos Indians - Alfred Simson - 1880 -- - Head hunters of the Amazon: seven years of exploration and adventure - by F.W. Up de Graff, with a foreword by Kermit Roosevelt ... - 1923 -- - Contribution to the study of the Jivaro or Suor language - Bertrand Flornoy - 1938 -- - Indian tribes of eastern Peru - by William Curtis Farabee ; introduction by Louis John de Milhau ; twenty-eight plates and twenty illustrations in the text - 1922 -- - The headshrinkers of Ecuador - Herbert Spencer Dickey - 1936 --^
    Description / Table of Contents: geographic, historical and ethnographic research - Paul Rivet - 1907 -- - The Jivaro Indians: geographic, historical and ethnographic research - Paul Rivet - 1908 -- - The Jibaro anthropometry - Harry Meyers - 1937 -- - Jivaro dance regalia - William C. Orchard - 1925 -- - A journey on the Rio Zamora, Ecuador - J. L. Hermessen - 1917 -- - The Jivaro - Alfred Métraux - 1948 -- - On the trail of the unknown in the wilds of Ecuador and the Amazon - George Miller Dyott - [1926] -- - A frequent variation of the maxillary central incisors, with some observations on dental caries among the Jivaro (Shuara) Indians of Ecuador - Harry Bernard Wright - 1942 -- - Travelling in the Aguaruna Region - Hans H. Brüning - 1928 -- - On the idol head of the Jivaro Indians of Ecuador: with an account of the Jivaro Indians - William Bollaert - 1863 -- - The Indians of northeastern Peru - Günter Tessmann - 1930 --^
    Description / Table of Contents: a study in sociometric anthropology - Bengt Danielson - 1949 -- - Jivaro souls - Michael J. Harner - 1962 -- - A Visit among the Jivaro Indians - W. Reiss - 1880 -- - The Jívaro: people of the sacred waterfalls - Michael J. Harner - 1973 -- - Music, modernization, and westernization among the Macuma Shuar - William Belzner - 1981 -- - The Federación Shuar and the colonization frontier - Ernesto Salazar - 1981 -- - Preface to the 1984 edition - Michael J. Harner - 1984 -- - Effects of contact on revenge hostilities among the Achuará Jívaro - Jane Bennett Ross - 1984 -- - Blood feud and table manners: a neo-Hobbesian approach to Jivaroan warfare - James S. Boster - 2003 -- - ARUTAM and culture change - James S. Boster - 2003 -- - 'Requiem for the omniscient informant': there's life in the old girl yet - James Shilts Boster - 1985
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  • 7
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Tupinamba Indians
    Abstract: Tupinamba was a collective term applied to a number of Tuṕi-Guarani speaking tribes in addition to the Tupinamba proper. Information on the Tupinamba is available from the sixteenth century until the mid-18th century, at which time they appear to have become extinct. The Tupinamba were widely dispersed along the Atlantic coast from southern Sao Paulo to the mouth of the Amazon River. Subsistence was based primarily on agriculture. This collection contains 27 documents and has a time focus from about 1550 to 1700 A.D.
    Description / Table of Contents: Tupinamba - John Beierle - 2003 -- - Hans Staden: the true story of his captivity, 1557 - Hans Staden ; translated and edited by Malcolm Letts, with an introduction and notes - 1928 -- - The peculiarities of French Antarctica, otherwise called (French) America: the islands discovered in our times - [by] André Thevet - 1878 -- - The universal cosmography - [by] André Thevet - 1575 -- - History of a voyage to Brazil - Jean de Léry - 1880 -- - Extracts out of the Historie of John Lerius a Frenchman who lived in Brazil with mons. Villagagnon, ann. 1557- and 58 - Jean de Léry - 1906 -- - History of the mission of the Capuchin Fathers on the Isle of Maragnan and the surrounding lands - Claude d'Abbeville - 1614 -- - Journey made in the north of Brazil during the years 1613 and 1614 - Yves d'évreux - 1864 --^
    Description / Table of Contents: containing all the particulars of Father Christopher d'Acugna's voyage, made at the command of the King of Spain. Taken from the Spanish original of the said Chr. d'Acugna, Jesuit - Cristóbal de Cristóbal de - 1698 -- - The Tupinamba - Alfred Métraux - 1948 -- - Tupi in the national geography - Theodoro Fernandes Sampaio - 1928 -- - The story of André Thevet Angoumoisin, cosmographer to the King, concerning two journeys made by him the the South and West Indies, etc. - [by] André Thevet - 1928 -- - Tupinambá chiefdoms? - William C. Sturtevant - 1998
    Description / Table of Contents: volume 5 - Carlos Drumond - 1944 -- - Historical migrations of the Tupi Guarani - Alfred Métraux - 1927 --^
    Description / Table of Contents: or a narrative epistle of a trip and a Jesuit mission - Fernão Cardim - 1939 -- - Letter of Pedro Vaz de Caminha to King Manuel written from Porto Seguro of Vera Cruz the first of May 1500 - Pedro Vaz de Caminha ; translated by William Brooks Greenlee - 1938 -- - History of the Province of Santa Cruz - Pero de Magalhães, now translated for the first time and annotated by John B. Stetson, Jr., with a facsimile of the Portuguese original, 1576 - 1922 -- - Treatise on the land of Brazil - Pero de Magalhães, now translated for the first time and annotated by John B. Stetson, Jr., with a facsimile of the Portuguese original, 1576 - 1922 --^
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