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  • Skoggard, Ian A.  (9)
  • Lowie, Robert Harry  (8)
  • Roscoe, John  (8)
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Material
Language
Years
Subjects(RVK)
  • 1
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    New York, N.Y : Macmillan Reference USA
    ISBN: 9780028660875 , 0028660870
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (exxv, 424 p) , maps
    Series Statement: Gale eBooks
    Parallel Title: Print verson Encyclopedia of world cultures
    DDC: 306.03
    Keywords: Ethnology Encyclopedias
    Abstract: This reference set lists and describes more than 1,500 global cultures. Based on research of social scientists, it is the source for historical, social, political, economic, linguistic, religious, and other information on virtually every existing culture. Its cross-cultural perspective meets high school curricular requirements for world studies and social sciences
    Note: "This volume, with one hundred new articles, supplements the award-winning 10-volume Encyclopedia of World Cultures ... organized and prepared by the Human Relations Area Files"--Pref , Includes bibliographical references and indexes
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  • 2
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Assiniboine Indians ; Assiniboin ; Assiniboin
    Abstract: The Assiniboine are a Siouan-speaking people closely related linguistically to the Sioux and Stoney. Contemporary Assiniboine live on two reservations in northern Montana and on four reserves in southern Saskatchewan. The Assinboine file consists of 20 documents, all in English, with a time span ranging from approximately 1640 to the early twentieth century. The major focus of the file, however, is on the period from the mid-nineteenth century to about 1940. The most detailed works for a general understanding of the traditional ethnography of the Assiniboine will be found in Denig, Lowie, Dusenberry, and Kennedy. Other major topics of special note in this file are: the history of the Assinboine fur trade in Ray, the Bear and Horse cults in Ewers, the Cypress Hill Massacre in Allen and Goldring, social change and acculturation in Rodnick, Assiniboine and Cree relationships in Sharrock, and Sioux-Assiniboine-Stoney linguistic relationships in Parks
    Note: A Witness to murder: the Cypress Hills Massacre and the conflict of attitudes towards native people of the Canadian and American West during the 1870's - Robert S. Allen - 1983 -- - Indian tribes of the upper Missouri - by Edwin Thompson Denig., with notes and biographical sketch by J.N.B. Hewitt - 1930 -- - Notes on the material culture of the Assiniboine Indians - Verne Dusenberry - 1960 -- - The bear cult among the Assiniboin and their neighbors of the northern Plains - John C. Ewers - 1955 -- - The Assiniboin horse medicine cult - John C. Ewers - 1956 -- - Assiniboin antelope-horn headdresses - John C. Ewers - 1982 -- - William Standing (1904-1951): versatile Assiniboin artist - John C. Ewers - 1983 -- - Of the Assiniboines - Edwin Thompson Denig - 1961 -- - The Cypress Hills massacre: a century's retrospect - P. Goldring - 1973 -- , - Recollections of an Assiniboine chief - [by] Dan Kennedy (Ochankugahe). Edited and with an introd. by James R. Stevens - [1972] -- - The Assiniboines: From the accounts of the Old Ones told to First Boy (James Larpenteur Long) - Edited and with an Introduction by Michael Stephen Kennedy ; drawings by William Standing - 1961 -- - The Assiniboine - by Robert H. Lowie - 1909 -- - A Few Assiniboine texts - Collected and translated by Robert H. Lowie - 1960 -- - Carry the Kettle: Assiniboine centenarian - [by] J. W. Grant MacEwan - 1971 -- - Indians in the fur trade: their role as trappers, hunters, and middlemen in the lands southwest of Hudson Bay, 1660-1870 - Arthur J. Ray - 1974 -- - Political structure and status among the Assiniboine Indians - By David Rodnick - 1937 -- - The Fort Belknap Assiniboine of Montana - [by] David Rodnick - 1938 -- - An Assiniboine horse-raiding expedition - By David Rodnick - 1937 -- - Crees, Cree-Assiniboines, and Assiniboines: interethnic social organization on the far northern Plains - Susan R. Sharrock - 1974 -- - Souix, Assiniboine, and Stoney dialects: a classification - Douglas R. Parks and Raymond J. DeMallie - 1992 [Published July 1994]
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  • 3
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Quinault Indians ; Quinault ; Quinault
    Abstract: Historically, the Quinault were one of several tribes that lived on or near the Pacific coast in the state of Washington's Olympic Peninsula. These tribes engaged in an intertribal system of trade, marriage, feasting, and raiding, and spoke a Chinook lingua franca. Since their relocation to the Quinault Indian Reservation, the name Quinault is associated with all the Indians who live there, regardless of their historical tribal affiliations. The contemporary Quinault have a common identity based on shared residency and the collective struggle for control over their natural resources. In 1975 the Quinault reorganized their government and ratified the Constitution of the Quinault Indian Nation. The Nation includes some of the descendents of the Quinault, Queets, Hoh, Quileute, Chehalis, Chinook, and the Cowlitz tribes. There are six documents in this file. Olson's monograph based on his 1920s fieldwork and is an ethnography in the Boasian style of Quinault culture. The other major work is published by the Quinault Indian Nation and is a history of the Quinault-European relations from early contact days up to the struggle with logging companies and state government to regain control of their land and protect their fisheries. In one of the earliest accounts of Quinault way of life, Willoughby reports on several topics, including social organization, fishing practices, and religion. Farrand's work is a collection of Quinault myths and legends. Barsh provides an account of traditional and contemporary Quinault fishing practices, and compares them to those of European-Americans
    Note: Culture summary: Quinault - Ian Skoggard - 2001 -- - The Quinault Indians - by Ronald L. Olson - 1936 -- - The economics of a traditional coastal Indian salmon fishery - by Russel L. Barsh - 1982 -- - Land of the Quinault - edited by Pauline K. Capoemen ; introduction by Joe DeLaCruz ; written by Jacqueline M. Storm with David Chance ... [et al.] ; photographs by Larry Workman unless noted - 1990
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  • 4
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Ryukyuans ; Okinawa ; Bevölkerung ; Okinawa ; Okinawa ; Bevölkerung
    Abstract: The Okinawans inhabit the Ryukyu Archipelago, a chain of 146 islands, stretching from Kyushu, Japan to Taiwan. The islands to the south of make up Okinawa Prefecture and those to the north are part of Kagoshima Prefecture. This file consists of 22 documents, 5 are written in Japanese with English summaries, the rest are written in English. The Okinawa file is strong on kinship, religion and history
    Note: 'Munchuu-making' and disequilibrium distribution of knowledge in an Okinawan village - Oda Makoto - 1986 -- - Research on the Ryukyus: progress and problems - Takeshi Matsui - 1987 -- - Problems of descent in the southern Ryukyus (Sakeshima) - William Newell - 1988 -- - Culture summary: Okinawans - Ian Skoggard - 2001 -- - Studies of Okinawan village life - [by] Clarence J. Glacken - 1953 -- - Taira: an Okinawan village - [by] Thomas W. Maretzki and Hatsumi Maretski. Introduction by Beatrice B. Whiting - 1963 -- - Post-war Okinawa - [by] F.R. Pitts, William P. Lebra, and Wayne P. Suttles - 1955 -- - The Munchu: system of Kudaka Island, Okinawa: a preliminary analysis for the understanding of village cult organization in Kudaka - Akamine Masanobu - 1983 -- , - Historical development of territorial rights and fishery regulations in Okinawan inshore waters - Tomoya Akimichi and Kenneth Ruddle - 1984 -- - Territorial regulation in the small-scale fisheries of Itoman, Okinawa - Tomoya Akimichi - 1984 -- - The making of Imperial subjects in Okinawa - Alan S. Christy - 1993 -- - Okinawan ubung and ubung udui - by Jo Anne Combs - 1980 -- - Narrative of a voyage to Java, China, and the great Loo-Choo Island - by Captain Basil Hall - 1840 -- - Okinawan customs: yesterday and today - [by] Douglas G. Haring - 1969 -- - Structure and function of munchu: notes on folk religion of Okinawa - Mikiharu Itoh - 1979 -- - Okinawa: the history on an island people - George H. Kerr - [1958] -- - Okinawan religion: belief, ritual, and social structure - [by] William P. Lebra - [1966] -- - Shaman-client interchange in Okinawa: performative stages in shamanic therapy - William P. Lebra - 1982 -- - Age grade system in Okinawan village: a case study of Matsubara, Miyako Island - Omoto Norio - 1980 -- - A brief history of early Okinawa based on the Omoro Soshi - by Mitsugu Sakihara - 1987 -- , - Spirit possession as an indigenous religion in Japan and Okinawa - Kokan Sasaki - 1984 -- - Troubled national identity: the Ryukyuans/Okinawans - Koji Taira - 1997 -- - Kinship and descent in an Okinawan village - by Masako U. Tanaka - 1974 [1975 copy]
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  • 5
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Gisu (African people) ; Gisu ; Gisu
    Abstract: This collection of three documents about the Bagisu, all in English, covers a time span from the late nineteenth century to approximately 1989. The Bagisu or Gisu live on the western slopes of the now extinct volcano Mount Elgon in eastern Uganda. Lugisu (Masaba), the language of the Bagisu, is a Bantu language in the larger Niger-Congo group of languages. A concise summary of most major features of Bagisu ethnography from around the 1890s to 1954 can be found in LaFontaine. This is supplemented by Roscoe's earlier account of Bagisu ethnography that deals with information from the late nineteenth through the early twentieth centuries. While this latter document does contain some unique cultural data, LaFontaine questions the validity of some of Roscoe's information (e.g., the existence of cannibalism among the Bagisu). Heald's work on the Bagisu is based on the author's fieldwork in Central Bugisu from 1965-1969, and is a detailed study of the various ways in which violence is expressed in Bagisu society and the manner in which it is brought under control. This document presents data on the reputation and history of violence among the Bagisu, statistics on homicide, the association of violence with manhood and the expression of anger, the ordeal of circumcision, behavior and treatment of witches and thieves, hostility management in the community, and the establishment of vigilante groups and drinking companies to control violence
    Note: Culture summary: Bagisu - John Beierle - 2004 -- - The Gisu of Uganda - J. S. La Fontaine - 1959 -- - The Bagesu and other tribes of the Uganda Protectorate: the third part of hte report of the Mackie ethnological expedition to Central Africa - John Roscoe - 1924 -- - Controlling anger: the sociology of Gisu violence - Suzette Heald - 1989
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  • 6
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Chipewyan Indians ; Chipewyan Indians--Social life and customs ; Accultu ; Indians of North America--Saskat ; Chipewyan Indians--Hunting ; Indians of North Americ ; Chipewyan ; Chipewyan
    Abstract: The Chipewyan inhabit the central Canadian Subarctic. This file consists of 58 documents, includes a series of community studies, and provides a fairly complete picture of Chipewyan ethnology ranging in time from the prehistoric period to the 1990s. Major emphasis in the file is on the three communities of Patuanak, Black Lake and Snowdrift
    Note: Culture summary: Chipewyans - Henry S. Sharp and John Beierle (file evaluation and indexing notes) - 2001 -- - Chipewyan - [by] James G. E. Smith - 1981 -- - The economy of a frontier community: a preliminary statement - [by] James W. VanStone - 1961 -- - The Snowdrift Chipewyan - [by] James W. VanStone - 1963 -- - Chipewyan ecology: group structure and caribou hunting system - [by] Takashi Irimoto - 1981 -- - Chipewyan texts - [by] Fang Kuei Li and Ronald Scollon - 1976 -- - The transformation of Bigfoot: maleness, power, and belief among the Chipewyan - [by] Henry S. Sharp - 1988 -- - Chipewyan semantics: form and meaning in the language and culture of an Athapaskan-speaking people of Canada - [by] Robin Michael Carter - 1975 [1989 copy] -- , - Giant fish, giant otters, and dinosaurs: 'apparently irrational beliefs' in a Chipewyan community - [by] Henry Stephen Sharp - 1987 -- - Introducing the sororate to a northern Saskatchewan Chipewyan village - [by] Henry Stephen Sharp - 1975 -- - Shared experience and magical death: Chipewyan explanations of a prophet's decline - [by] Henry Stephen Sharp - 1986 -- - The changing culture of the Snowdrift Chipewyan - [by] James W. VanStone - 1965 -- - Contributions to Chipewyan ethnology - [by] Kaj Birket-Smith - 1930 -- - Chipewyan drift fences and shooting-blinds in the central Barren Grounds - [by] David Morrison - 1981 -- - Territorial expansion of the Chipewyan in the 18th century - [by] Beryl C. Gillespie - 1975 -- - The ecological basis of Chipewyan socio-territorial organization - [by] James G. E. Smith - 1975 -- - The trappers of Patuanak: toward a spatial ecology of modern hunters - [by] Robert Jarvenpa - 1980 -- - Woman the hunter: ethnoarchaeological lessons from Chipewyan life-cycle dynamics - Hetty Jo Brumbach and Robert Jarvenpa - 1997 -- , - Ethnoarchaeology of subsistence space and gender: a subarctic Dene case - Hetty Jo Brumbach and Robert Jarvenpa - 1997 -- - 'Always with them either a feast or a famine': living off the land with Chipewyan Indians, 1791-1792 - June Helm - 1993 -- - Surviving marriage and marriage as survival in Chipewyan society: perspectives from northern hunters - Robert Jarvenpa - 1999 -- - Ethnoarchaeology and gender: Chipewyan women as hunters - Robert Jarvenpa and Hetty Jo Brumbach - 1995 -- - Memory, meaning, and imaginary time: the construction of knowledge in White and Chipewyan cultures - Henry S. Sharp - 1991 -- - Inverted sacrifice - Henry S. Sharp - 1994 -- - The power of weakness - Henry S. Sharp - 1994 -- - The dynamics of a Dene struggle for self-determination - David M. Smith - 1992 -- - Death of a patriarch - David M. Smith - 1995 -- - An Athapaskan way of knowing: Chipweyan ontology - David M. Smith - 1998 -- - An ethnoarchaeological approach to Chipewyan adaptations in the late fur trade period - Hetty Jo Brumbach, Robert Jarvenpa, and Clifford Buell - 1982 -- , - Muskox and man in the central Canadian Subarctic 1689-1974 - Ernest S. Burch, Jr. - 1977 -- - Changes in territory and technology of the Chipewyan - Beryl C. Gillespie - 1976 -- - More on the herd-following hypothesis - Bryan C. Gordon - 1990 -- - A journey from Prince of Wales's fort in Hudson's Bay to the Northern Ocean, 1769, 1770, 1771, 1772 - by Samuel Hearne ; edited with an introd. by Richard Glover - 1958 -- - The ubiquitous bushman: Chipewyan-White trapper relations of the 1930's - Robert Jarvenpa - 1977 -- - Subarctic Indian trappers and band society: the economics of male mobility - Robert Jarvenpa - 1977 -- - Recent ethnographic research: Upper Churchill River drainage, Saskatchewan, Canada - Robert Jarvenpa - 1979 -- - Symbolism and inter-ethnic relations among hunter-gatherers: Chipewyan conflict lore - Robert Jarvenpa - 1982 -- - The development of pilgrimage in an inter-cultural frontier - Robert Jarvenpa - 1990 -- , - The microeconomics of southern Chipewyan fur trade history - Robert Jarvenpa and Hetty Jo Brumbach - 1984 -- - Socio-spatial organization and decision-making processes: observations from the Chipewyan - Robert Jarvenpa and Hetty Jo Brumbach - 1988 -- - Conceptual negativism in Chipewyan ethnology - William W. Koolage, Jr. - 1975 -- - Chipewyan tales - By Robert H. Lowie - 1912 -- - Windigo, a Chipewyan story - Robert H. Lowie - 1925 -- - Man : wolf : woman : dog - Henry S. Sharp - 1976 -- - The Caribou-eater Chipewyan: bilaterality, strategies of Caribou hunting, and fur trade - Henry S. Sharp - 1977 -- - The null case: the Chipewyan - Henry S. Sharp - 1981 -- - Dry meat and gender: the absence of Chipewyan ritual for the regulation of hunting and animal numbers - Henry S. Sharp - 1991 -- - Local band organization of the Caribou-eater Chipewyan - James G. E. Smith - 1976 -- - The emergence of the micro-urban village among the Caribou-eater Chipewyan - James G. E. Smith - 1978 -- - Moose-Deer island house people: a history of the native people of Fort Resolution - David M. Smith - 1982 -- , - Big stone foundations: manifest meaning in Chipewyan myths - David M. Smith - 1985 -- - The Chipewyan medicine fight in cultural and ecological perspective - David M. Smith - 1990 -- - Chipewyan and Inuit in the central Canadian subarctic, 1613-1977 - James G. E. Smith ; Ernest S. Burch, Jr. - 1979 -- - References cited - 1977 -- - Chipewyan prehistory - Bryan C. Gordon - 1977 -- - Temporal, archaeological and pedological separation of the Barrenland Arctic Small Tool and Taltheilei Traditions - Bryan C. Gordon - 1977 -- - The Chipewyan hunting unit - Henry S. Sharp - 1977 -- - Bibliography - 1981
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  • 7
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Rwandans ; Ethnology Rwanda ; Social structure--Rwanda--History ; Patronage, Political--Rwanda--History ; Patron and client--Rwanda--History ; Political anthropology--Rwanda--History ; Rwanda--Politics and government ; Rwanda--Ethnic relations ; Tutsi (African people) ; Hutu (African people) ; Tutsi ; Tutsi
    Abstract: This collection of fifteen documents covers historical, cultural, and economic information on the Rwandans, circa 1895 to 2004. The Rwandan culture has its roots in the precolonial kingdom of Rwanda and encompasses both the population of the modern state of Rwanda and speakers of the Kinyarwanda language in the neighboring Congo and Uganda. The basic and most comprehensive sources in the collection were compiled by the Belgian ethnologist Jacques Maquet in 1949-1957. Maquet discusses the processes and rules that structured Rwandan society into a caste-like political system consisting of cattle owning ruling elites, Tutsi, a farming majority, Hutu, and a forest dwelling hunting minority, Twa. However, his arguments are strongly challenged by the works of three scholars, Mamdani, Catharine Newbury, and David Newbury, who do not view ethnicity as a primordial identity. The collection also includes four documents which, together, provide the earliest available firsthand information on the Rwandans: Czekanowski, who, in 1907-1909, collected a wide variety of information relating to history, language, and arts in the Mpororo region; the now classic work of John Roscoe, a European clergy who traveled extensively in central Africa; and van Hove, a Belgian colonial administrator and lawyer. Two documents from Christopher Taylor deal with ethnomedicine and diet, and the remaining three deal with the nature of the violence that swept Rwanda in 1994. The Rwandans encompass groups presently known as the Hutu, Tutsi, and Twa
    Note: Culture summary: Rwandans - Timothy Longman - 2009 -- - Essay on the common law of Ruanda - J. Vanhove - 1941 -- - The kingdom of Ruanda - Jacques J. Maquet - 1954 -- - A Hamitic kingdom in the center of Africa: in Ruanda on the shores of Lake Kivu (Belgian Congo) - G. Pagés - 1933 -- - Investigations in the area between the Nile and the Congo: First volume: ethnography, the interlacustrine region of Mporo and Ruanda - Jan Czkanowski ; musical appendix by E. M. Hornbostel - 1917 -- - The Bagesu and other tribes of the Uganda Protectorate: the third part of the report of the Mackie ethnological expedition to central Africa - John Roscoe - 1924 -- - The premise of inequality in Ruanda:: a study of political relations in a central African kingdom - Jacques J. Maquet - 1961 -- - The cohesion of oppression: clientship and ethnicity in Rwanda, 1860-1960 - Catharine Newbury - 1988 -- , - The origins of Hutu and Tutsi - Mahmood Mamdani - 2001 -- - The clans of Rwanda: an historical hypothesis - David S. Newbury - 1980 -- - The harp that plays by itself - Christopher C. Taylor - 1992 -- - Loose women, virtuous wives, and timid virgins: gender and the control of resources in Rwanda - Villia Jefremovas - 1991 -- - Mutton, mud, and runny noses - Christopher C. Taylor - 2005 -- - Rwanda: the rationality of genocide - René Lemarchand - 1995 -- - Background to genocide: Rwanda - Catharine Newbury - 1995 -- - Genocide and socio-political change: massacres in two Rwandan villages - Timothy Longman - 1995
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  • 8
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Ethnology Rwanda ; Hutu (African people) ; Patron and client--Rwanda--History ; Patronage, Political--Rwanda--History ; Political anthropology--Rwanda--History ; Rwanda--Ethnic relations ; Rwanda--Politics and government ; Rwandans ; Social structure--Rwanda--History ; Tutsi (African people)
    Abstract: This collection of fifteen documents covers historical, cultural, and economic information on the Rwandans, circa 1895 to 2004. The Rwandan culture has its roots in the precolonial kingdom of Rwanda and encompasses both the population of the modern state of Rwanda and speakers of the Kinyarwanda language in the neighboring Congo and Uganda. The basic and most comprehensive sources in the collection were compiled by the Belgian ethnologist Jacques Maquet in 1949-1957. Maquet discusses the processes and rules that structured Rwandan society into a caste-like political system consisting of cattle owning ruling elites, Tutsi, a farming majority, Hutu, and a forest dwelling hunting minority, Twa. However, his arguments are strongly challenged by the works of three scholars, Mamdani, Catharine Newbury, and David Newbury, who do not view ethnicity as a primordial identity. The collection also includes four documents which, together, provide the earliest available firsthand information on the Rwandans: Czekanowski, who, in 1907-1909, collected a wide variety of information relating to history, language, and arts in the Mpororo region; the now classic work of John Roscoe, a European clergy who traveled extensively in central Africa; and van Hove, a Belgian colonial administrator and lawyer. Two documents from Christopher Taylor deal with ethnomedicine and diet, and the remaining three deal with the nature of the violence that swept Rwanda in 1994. The Rwandans encompass groups presently known as the Hutu, Tutsi, and Twa
    Description / Table of Contents: Rwandans - Timothy Longman - 2009 -- - Essay on the common law of Ruanda - J. Vanhove - 1941 -- - The kingdom of Ruanda - Jacques J. Maquet - 1954 -- - A Hamitic kingdom in the center of Africa: in Ruanda on the shores of Lake Kivu (Belgian Congo) - G. Pagés - 1933 -- - Investigations in the area between the Nile and the Congo: First volume: ethnography, the interlacustrine region of Mporo and Ruanda - Jan Czkanowski ; musical appendix by E. M. Hornbostel - 1917 -- - The Bagesu and other tribes of the Uganda Protectorate: the third part of the report of the Mackie ethnological expedition to central Africa - John Roscoe - 1924 -- - The premise of inequality in Ruanda:: a study of political relations in a central African kingdom - Jacques J. Maquet - 1961 -- - The cohesion of oppression: clientship and ethnicity in Rwanda, 1860-1960 - Catharine Newbury - 1988 --^
    Description / Table of Contents: an historical hypothesis - David S. Newbury - 1980 -- - The harp that plays by itself - Christopher C. Taylor - 1992 -- - Loose women, virtuous wives, and timid virgins: gender and the control of resources in Rwanda - Villia Jefremovas - 1991 -- - Mutton, mud, and runny noses - Christopher C. Taylor - 2005 -- - Rwanda: the rationality of genocide - René Lemarchand - 1995 -- - Background to genocide: Rwanda - Catharine Newbury - 1995 -- - Genocide and socio-political change: massacres in two Rwandan villages - Timothy Longman - 1995
    URL: Volltext  (Deutschlandweit zugänglich)
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  • 9
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Accultu ; Chipewyan Indians ; Chipewyan Indians--Hunting ; Chipewyan Indians--Social life and customs ; Indians of North Americ ; Indians of North America--Saskat
    Abstract: The Chipewyan inhabit the central Canadian Subarctic. This file consists of 58 documents, includes a series of community studies, and provides a fairly complete picture of Chipewyan ethnology ranging in time from the prehistoric period to the 1990s. Major emphasis in the file is on the three communities of Patuanak, Black Lake and Snowdrift
    Description / Table of Contents: Chipewyans - Henry S. Sharp and John Beierle (file evaluation and indexing notes) - 2001 -- - Chipewyan - [by] James G. E. Smith - 1981 -- - The economy of a frontier community: a preliminary statement - [by] James W. VanStone - 1961 -- - The Snowdrift Chipewyan - [by] James W. VanStone - 1963 -- - Chipewyan ecology: group structure and caribou hunting system - [by] Takashi Irimoto - 1981 -- - Chipewyan texts - [by] Fang Kuei Li and Ronald Scollon - 1976 -- - The transformation of Bigfoot: maleness, power, and belief among the Chipewyan - [by] Henry S. Sharp - 1988 -- - Chipewyan semantics: form and meaning in the language and culture of an Athapaskan-speaking people of Canada - [by] Robin Michael Carter - 1975 [1989 copy] --^
    Description / Table of Contents: manifest meaning in Chipewyan myths - David M. Smith - 1985 -- - The Chipewyan medicine fight in cultural and ecological perspective - David M. Smith - 1990 -- - Chipewyan and Inuit in the central Canadian subarctic, 1613-1977 - James G. E. Smith ; Ernest S. Burch, Jr. - 1979 -- - References cited - 1977 -- - Chipewyan prehistory - Bryan C. Gordon - 1977 -- - Temporal, archaeological and pedological separation of the Barrenland Arctic Small Tool and Taltheilei Traditions - Bryan C. Gordon - 1977 -- - The Chipewyan hunting unit - Henry S. Sharp - 1977 -- - Bibliography - 1981
    Description / Table of Contents: a subarctic Dene case - Hetty Jo Brumbach and Robert Jarvenpa - 1997 -- - 'Always with them either a feast or a famine': living off the land with Chipewyan Indians, 1791-1792 - June Helm - 1993 -- - Surviving marriage and marriage as survival in Chipewyan society: perspectives from northern hunters - Robert Jarvenpa - 1999 -- - Ethnoarchaeology and gender: Chipewyan women as hunters - Robert Jarvenpa and Hetty Jo Brumbach - 1995 -- - Memory, meaning, and imaginary time: the construction of knowledge in White and Chipewyan cultures - Henry S. Sharp - 1991 -- - Inverted sacrifice - Henry S. Sharp - 1994 -- - The power of weakness - Henry S. Sharp - 1994 -- - The dynamics of a Dene struggle for self-determination - David M. Smith - 1992 -- - Death of a patriarch - David M. Smith - 1995 -- - An Athapaskan way of knowing: Chipweyan ontology - David M. Smith - 1998 -- - An ethnoarchaeological approach to Chipewyan adaptations in the late fur trade period - Hetty Jo Brumbach, Robert Jarvenpa, and Clifford Buell - 1982 --^
    Description / Table of Contents: 'apparently irrational beliefs' in a Chipewyan community - [by] Henry Stephen Sharp - 1987 -- - Introducing the sororate to a northern Saskatchewan Chipewyan village - [by] Henry Stephen Sharp - 1975 -- - Shared experience and magical death: Chipewyan explanations of a prophet's decline - [by] Henry Stephen Sharp - 1986 -- - The changing culture of the Snowdrift Chipewyan - [by] James W. VanStone - 1965 -- - Contributions to Chipewyan ethnology - [by] Kaj Birket-Smith - 1930 -- - Chipewyan drift fences and shooting-blinds in the central Barren Grounds - [by] David Morrison - 1981 -- - Territorial expansion of the Chipewyan in the 18th century - [by] Beryl C. Gillespie - 1975 -- - The ecological basis of Chipewyan socio-territorial organization - [by] James G. E. Smith - 1975 -- - The trappers of Patuanak: toward a spatial ecology of modern hunters - [by] Robert Jarvenpa - 1980 -- - Woman the hunter: ethnoarchaeological lessons from Chipewyan life-cycle dynamics - Hetty Jo Brumbach and Robert Jarvenpa - 1997 --^
    Description / Table of Contents: Chipewyan-White trapper relations of the 1930's - Robert Jarvenpa - 1977 -- - Subarctic Indian trappers and band society: the economics of male mobility - Robert Jarvenpa - 1977 -- - Recent ethnographic research: Upper Churchill River drainage, Saskatchewan, Canada - Robert Jarvenpa - 1979 -- - Symbolism and inter-ethnic relations among hunter-gatherers: Chipewyan conflict lore - Robert Jarvenpa - 1982 -- - The development of pilgrimage in an inter-cultural frontier - Robert Jarvenpa - 1990 --^
    Description / Table of Contents: observations from the Chipewyan - Robert Jarvenpa and Hetty Jo Brumbach - 1988 -- - Conceptual negativism in Chipewyan ethnology - William W. Koolage, Jr. - 1975 -- - Chipewyan tales - By Robert H. Lowie - 1912 -- - Windigo, a Chipewyan story - Robert H. Lowie - 1925 -- - Man : wolf : woman : dog - Henry S. Sharp - 1976 -- - The Caribou-eater Chipewyan: bilaterality, strategies of Caribou hunting, and fur trade - Henry S. Sharp - 1977 -- - The null case: the Chipewyan - Henry S. Sharp - 1981 -- - Dry meat and gender: the absence of Chipewyan ritual for the regulation of hunting and animal numbers - Henry S. Sharp - 1991 -- - Local band organization of the Caribou-eater Chipewyan - James G. E. Smith - 1976 -- - The emergence of the micro-urban village among the Caribou-eater Chipewyan - James G. E. Smith - 1978 -- - Moose-Deer island house people: a history of the native people of Fort Resolution - David M. Smith - 1982 --^
    URL: Volltext  (Deutschlandweit zugänglich)
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  • 10
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Okinawa ; Ryukyuans ; Okinawa ; Bevölkerung
    Abstract: The Okinawans inhabit the Ryukyu Archipelago, a chain of 146 islands, stretching from Kyushu, Japan to Taiwan. The islands to the south of make up Okinawa Prefecture and those to the north are part of Kagoshima Prefecture. This file consists of 22 documents, 5 are written in Japanese with English summaries, the rest are written in English. The Okinawa file is strong on kinship, religion and history
    Description / Table of Contents: progress and problems - Takeshi Matsui - 1987 -- - Problems of descent in the southern Ryukyus (Sakeshima) - William Newell - 1988 -- - Culture summary: Okinawans - Ian Skoggard - 2001 -- - Studies of Okinawan village life - [by] Clarence J. Glacken - 1953 -- - Taira: an Okinawan village - [by] Thomas W. Maretzki and Hatsumi Maretski. Introduction by Beatrice B. Whiting - 1963 -- - Post-war Okinawa - [by] F.R. Pitts, William P. Lebra, and Wayne P. Suttles - 1955 -- - The Munchu: system of Kudaka Island, Okinawa: a preliminary analysis for the understanding of village cult organization in Kudaka - Akamine Masanobu - 1983 --^
    Description / Table of Contents: yesterday and today - [by] Douglas G. Haring - 1969 -- - Structure and function of munchu: notes on folk religion of Okinawa - Mikiharu Itoh - 1979 -- - Okinawa: the history on an island people - George H. Kerr - [1958] -- - Okinawan religion: belief, ritual, and social structure - [by] William P. Lebra - [1966] -- - Shaman-client interchange in Okinawa: performative stages in shamanic therapy - William P. Lebra - 1982 -- - Age grade system in Okinawan village: a case study of Matsubara, Miyako Island - Omoto Norio - 1980 -- - A brief history of early Okinawa based on the Omoro Soshi - by Mitsugu Sakihara - 1987 --^
    Description / Table of Contents: the Ryukyuans/Okinawans - Koji Taira - 1997 -- - Kinship and descent in an Okinawan village - by Masako U. Tanaka - 1974 [1975 copy]
    URL: Volltext  (Deutschlandweit zugänglich)
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