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  • 1
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Guana Indians ; Terena Indians ; Caduveo Indians ; Acculturation ; Terena ; Terena
    Abstract: The Terena collection consists of several documents from English, German, and Portuguese Oberg is a study of culture change in Terena society resulting from contact and interaction with the Caduveo, the Mbayá, and Brazilian culture in general. The theme of culture change is continued in Oliveira, which attempts to record and interpret the processes of social interaction between Terena and Brazilian society with the goal of determining the operative socio-cultural mechanism affecting the more specific process of assimilation. Baldus is a study of the succession to chieftainship within a Terena group living near the city of Miranda in the southern part of the Brazilian Mato Grosso. This study also contains some incidental information on such aspects of Terena ethnography as names and naming, eschatology, conception and pregnancy, marriage regulations and arrangements, and kinship terminology and relationships. The second work included by Oliveira is a structural analysis of the Terena marriage and social stratification system
    Note: The Terena and the Caduveo of Southern Mato Grosso, Brazil - Kalervo Oberg ; prepared in cooperation with the U. S. Dept. of State as a project of the Interdepartmental Committee on Scientific and Cultural Cooperation - 1949 -- - The process of assimilation of the Terena - Roberto Cardoso de Oliveira ; preface by Darcy Ribeiro - 1960 -- - The succession of the chiefs among the Terena - Herbert Baldus - 1944 -- - Culture summary: Terena - Fernando Carvalho and Rodolpho Telarolli Junior - 2011 -- - Marriage and Terena tribal solidarity: an essay in structural analysis - Roberto Cardoso de Oliveira ; translated by Dale W. Kietzman - 1961
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  • 2
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Tapirapé Indians ; Tapirapé ; Tapirapé
    Abstract: The Tapirapé collection consists of nine documents, three of which are translations from the Portuguese, and the other six in English. Major contributions to the collection are the works of Baldus, and Wagley, which together form a comprehensive overview of traditional Tapirapé ethnography from 1935 to 1965. Other topics in this collection deal with culture change and acculturation; shamanism; religion, mythology, and ideas about animals and man; puberty rites; feasting and eating groups, and cultural revitalization processes
    Note: Culture summary: Tapirapé - Nancy M. Flowers, John Beierle - 2010 -- - The Tapirapé: a Tupí tribe of central Brazil - Herbert Baldus - 1970 -- - Tapirapé social and culture change, 1940-1953 - Charles Wagley - 1955 -- - Tapirapé shamanism - Charles Wagley - 19430 -- - The eating groups and work groups among the Tapirapé - Herbert Baldus - 1937 -- - World view of the Tapirapé Indians - Charles Wagley - 1940 -- - A Tapirapé comes of age - Charles Wagley - 1945 -- - Ceremonial redistribution in Tapirapé society - Judith Shapiro - 1968 -- - The Tapirapé during the era of reconstruction - Judith Shapiro - 1979 -- - Welcome of tears: the Tapirapé Indians of central Brazil - Charles Wagley ; [maps and diagrs. drawn by David Lindroth] - 1977
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  • 3
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Bororo Indians ; Bororo ; Bororo
    Abstract: The Bororo are Ge speakers, numbered about 700 in 1987, and live in central Mato Grosso, Brazil, in three clusters of nine villages. This file consists of 10 documents that span the time period from 1900 to 1983
    Note: Culture summary: Bororo - Anonymous - 1996 -- - Contribution to the study of the social organization of the Bororo Indians - by Claude Lévi-Strauss - 1938 -- - The Bororo - by Robert H. Lowie - 1946 -- - Primitive peoples of Matto Grosso Brazil - by Vincent M. Petrullo - 1932 -- - Kinship system and social structure of the Bororo of Pobojari - by Zarko David Levak - 1973 [1974 copy] -- - The social position of the woman among the Eastern Bororo - by Herbert Baldus - 1937 -- - Ritual of a Bororo funeral - by Vladimír Kozák - 1963 -- - The Bororó Indians of Matto Grosso, Brazil - by William Azel Cook - 1907 -- - Through the wilderness of Brazil by horse, canoe and float - by William Azel Cook - 1909 -- - The eastern Bororo Orarimogodogue of the eastern plateau of Mato Grosso - by P. Antonio Colbacchini and P. Cesar Albisetti, Salesian Missionaries - 1942 -- - Space-time of the Bororo of Brazil - Stephen Michael Fabian - 1992
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