Your email was sent successfully. Check your inbox.

An error occurred while sending the email. Please try again.

Proceed reservation?

Export
Filter
  • BVB  (5)
  • HU-Berlin Edoc
  • Human Relations Area Files, Inc  (5)
  • Beduine  (3)
  • Araber  (2)
  • 1
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Bedouins ; Bedouins--Saudi Arabia--Social life and customs ; Bedouins--Kuwait--Social life and customs ; Saudi Arabia--Social life and customs ; Kuwait--Social life and customs ; Beduine ; Beduine
    Abstract: This collection of five documents and a culture summary, all in English, cover historical and cultural information from about late-1880s to early 2000s. Two documents date back to the first quarters of the 20th century when most of the area was ruled by European colonialists. One is a chapter from a handbook compiled by the intelligence division of the British Navy, the other is a book written by H. R. P. Dickson, a British political agent who worked in Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, and Iraq in 1920s-1930s. Dickson's book provides a first hand account of Bedouin culture and society including the physical environment, material culture, seasonal movements, organization of tribes and lineages, cultural norms relating to visiting and hospitality, folklore, religious beliefs and practices, warfare, and inter-community relations. The remainder of the collection consists of three articles, all by professional anthropologists. Two discuss indigenous conflict resolution practices with particular emphasis on blood feuds and cattle raiding. The remaining article explores the effects of a wide variety of external and internal factors, notably colonialism, commercialization of pastoral production, occupational change and sedentarization, on Bedouin culture and identity. The Bedouin are Arabic-speaking people who earn their living primarily from animal husbandry by natural graze and browse of sheep, goats, and camels. Traditionally, the Bedouin lived in tents, formed scattered camping units that seasonally migrated over a vast area of the Middle East and North Africa influenced by availability of pasture and water. This way of life and social organization has been significantly affected by the creation of nation-states in the 20th century and the establishment national boundaries across customary migration routes. As a consequence, the Bedouin have begun to engage in new activities including tourism, commerce and wage labor
    Note: Culture summary: Bedouin - Dawn Chatty and William Young - 2009 -- - The Arab of the desert: a glimpse into Badawin life in Kuwait and Sau'di Arabia - by H. R. P. Dickson - 1951 -- - The Bedouin tribes: chapter 3 - Compiled by the Geographical Section of the Naval Intelligence Division, Naval Staff, Admiralty - 1920 -- - Where have the Bedouin gone? - Donald P. Cole - 2003 -- - Settlement of violence in Bedouin society - Sulayman N. Khalaf - 1990 -- - Camel raiding of north Arabian Bedouin: a mechanism of ecological adaptation - Louise E. Sweet - 1965
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 2
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Bedouins--Arabian Peninsula ; Arabian Peninsula--Description and travel ; Folklore--Arabian Peninsula ; Bedouins--Saudi Arabia ; Saudi Arabia--Social life and customs ; Beduine ; Beduine
    Abstract: This collection of three documents and a culture summary, all in English, cover historical and cultural information from about late-1900s to mid-1970s. Alois Musil, a Czech historical geographer, traveled with the Rwala Bedouins between 1908 and 1915 working for the Austro-Hungarian government. His book provides first hand accounts of daily life, ethical codes, social structures and religious practices of the Rwala when they were still living in the desert as nomadic pastoralists. Carl Reinhard Raswan, a German adventurer, spent 22 years off and on among the Rwala Bedouins from 1913-1935. He presents detailed information on Rwala code of honor and ethics, drought and patterns of migration, marriage practices and duties of village Sheiks. Anthropologist William Lancaster conducted extensive ethnographic fieldwork among various Rwala groups in Syria, Jordan, and Saudi Arabia in 1972-1975. Lancaster's work explores how Rwala families, lineages and Sheiks have changed over the past several decades in response to external forces, notably the division of their traditional homeland among four newly emerged sovereign states (namely, Syria, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, and Iraq) and the oil boom in the region. This work also deconstructs travelers' reports and European imaginations of the Bedouin which tend to romanticize their desert life and "exotic" lineage systems. The Rwala are nomadic pastoralists who live mainly in southeastern Jordan and northern Saudi Arabia. They speak Arabic and refer to themselves as "baduw," that is, people of the "desert." All Rwala are believed to be descended from a common but unknown Arab ancestor. Their access to grazing land has been altered by the creation of nation-states in the 20th century and the establishment national boundaries across their customary migration routes. Since 1970 the Rwala have made more money from commerce and wage labor than from pastoralism
    Note: Culture summary: Rwala Bedouin - William Young - 2009 -- - Black tents of Arabia - Carl R. Raswan - 1947 -- - The manners and customs of the Rwala Bedouins - by Alois Musil ... published under the patronage of the Czech Academy of Sciences and Arts and of Charles R. Crane - 1928 -- - The Rwala Bedouin today - William Lancaster - 1981
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 3
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Arabs--Canada ; Araber ; Araber
    Abstract: Arab Canadians are first-generation Christian or Muslim Arabic-speaking immigrants and their descendants who originally came from the Arab world and have roots in Arabic culture. Arab Canadians can be found throughout Canada, although the largest communities are found in major cities, such as Montreal and Toronto. There are five documents in the Arab Canadians file. The two major works cover the immigrant history, assimilation, and acculturation of Arab Canadians in Canada and Lebanese and Syrian Canadians in Nova Scotia. Three shorter articles examine the changes in Lebanese-Canadian households and families, the persistence of traditional customs in an Edmonton, Alberta Druse community, and a Lebanese community in Lac La Biche, Alberta
    Note: Culture summary: Arab Canadians - Ian Skoggard - 1999 -- - An olive branch on the family tree: the Arabs in Canada - Baha Abu-Laban - 1980 -- - Voyagers to a rocky shore: the Lebanese and Syrians of Nova Scotia - Nancy W. Jabbra and Joseph G. Jabbra - 1984 -- - An Arab community in the Canadian northwest: a preliminary discussion of the Lebanese community in Lac La Biche Alberta - by Harold B. Barclay - 1968 -- - Household and family among Lebanese immigrants in Nova Scotia: continuity, change and adaption - Nancy W. Jabbra - 1991 -- - Reconstituting a Lebanese village society in a Canadian city - Louise E. Sweet - 1974
    URL: Volltext  (Deutschlandweit zugänglich)
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 4
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Bedouins ; Beduine ; Beduine
    Abstract: The Libyan Bedouin are Arab people of tribal and nomadic pastoralist backgrounds who have ties to the Libyan Desert. This desert comprises the western part of the Egypt, where it is known as the Western Desert, and the eastern part of Libya. This file on the Libyan Bedouin consists of 14 documents and includes ethnographies which provide rich accounts and varying perspectives of Libyan-Bedouin culture and society. These works include Evans-Pritchard's historical and sociological analysis of the Sansusi Order, Emry's study of power in Bedouin society, Behnke's study of Bedouin political ecology, and Abu-Lughod's studies of gender and poetry. Other studies discuss sociopolitical organization and customary law. Three studies examine more recent changes in Bedouin society as a result of sedentization, intrusion of the state, and economic development
    Note: Culture summary: Libyan Bedouin - Donald P. Cole - 1999 -- - Structure and authority in a Bedouin tribe: the 'Aishabit of the Western Desert of Egypt - Gerald Joseph Obermeyer - 1969 [1973] -- - The quest for order among Awlad Ali of the Western Desert of Egypt - Safia K. Mohsen - 1971 [1974] -- - The Sanusi of Cyrenaica - E. E. Evans-Pritchard - 1949 -- - The sedentarization of nomads in the Western Desert of Egypt - A. M. Abou-Zeid - 1959 -- - Bloodmoney: Western Desert - Austin Kennett - 1925 -- - The Western Bedouin (El Mugharba) - By G. W. Murray - 1935 -- - Veiled sentiments: honor and poetry in a Bedouin society - Lila Abu-Lughod - 1986 -- - Shifting politics in Bedouin love poetry - Lila Abu-Lughod - 1990 -- - Writing women's worlds: Bedouin stories - Lila Abu-Lughod - 1993 -- , - The Herders of Cyrenaica: ecology, economy and kinship among the Bedouin of Eastern Libya - Roy H. Behnke, Jr. - 1980 -- - Libyan politics: tribe and revolution : an account of the Zuwaya and their government - John Davis - 1988 -- - Western Desert law - G. W. Murray - 1935 -- - The Bedouin of Cyrenaica: studies in personal and corporate power - Emrys L. Peters ; edited by Jack Goody and Emanuel Marx - 1990 -- - Investors and workers in the western desert of Egypt: an exploratory survey - Naiem A. Sherbiny, Donald P. Cole, Nadia Makary Girgis - 1992
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 5
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Arab Americans ; Araber ; Araber
    Abstract: Americans of Arab ancestry are a heterogeneous amalgam of national and religious subgroups with a common cultural and linguistic heritage. This file consists of 31 documents and the ethnographic coverage runs from 1890 to 1990. Most of the works focus on the Syrian-Lebanese populations and their concentrations in large urban areas in Massachusetts, Illinois, and Michigan. Others deal with the Palestinian population in Chicago, Yemeni settlements in Detroit and Dearborn, and unspecified Arab American groups in various urban regions of the United States
    Note: Culture summary: Arab Americans - Nabeel Abraham and John Beierle (file evaluation and indexing notes) - 1999 -- - The Arab Moslems in the United States: religion and assimilation - by Abdo A. Elkholy - 1966 -- - The Syrian-Lebanese in America: a study in religion and assimilation - by Philip M. Kayal and Joseph M. Kayal, foreword by Michael Novak - 1975 -- - Emigration from Syria and the Syrian-Lebanese community of Worcester, MA - Najib E. Saliba - 1992 -- - Becoming American: the early Arab immigrant experience - Alixa Naff - 1985 -- - Belief in the evil eye among the Chriatian Syrian-Lebanese in America - Alixa Naff - 1965 -- - Arab Muslims and Islamic institutions in America: adaption and reform - by Yvonne Haddad - 1983 -- - Detroit's Arab-American community: a survery of diversity and commonality - by Sameer Y. Abraham - 1983 -- , - The Yemeni immigrant community of Detroit: background, emigration, and community life - by Nabeel Abraham - 1983 -- - The Lebanese Maronites: patterns of continuity and change - by May Ahdab-Yehia - 1983 -- - The Southend: an Arab working-class community - by Sameer Y. Abraham, Nabeel Abraham, and Barbara Aswad - 1983 -- - Attitudes of immigrant women and men in the Dearborn area toward women's employment and welfare - Barbara Aswad - 1994 -- - The Shi'a mosques and their congregations in Dearborn - Linda S. Walbridge - 1994 -- - The background and causes of Lebanese/Syrian immigration to the United States before World War I - Samir Khalaf - 1987 -- - 'Colored' and Catholic: the Lebanese in Birmingham, Alabama - Nancy Faires Conklin and Nora Faires - 1987 -- - From the Near East to Down East - Eric J. Hooglund - 1987 -- - Good works, good times: the Syrian Ladies' Aide Society of Boston, 1917-1932 - Evelyn Shakir - 1987 -- - Arab-Americans and the political process - Michael W. Suleiman - 1994 -- , - Maintaining the faith of the fathers: dilemmas of religious identity in the Christian and Muslim Arab-American communities - Yvonne Yazbeck Haddad - 1994 -- - Palestinian women in American society - Louise Cainkar - 1994 -- - Anti-Arab racism and violence in the United States - Nabeel Abraham - 1994 -- - Bilingual patterns of an Arabic-English speech community - Ghazi Shorrab - 1986 -- - The southeast Dearborn Arab community struggles for survival against urban 'renewal' - Barbara C. Aswad - 1974 -- - An Islamic-Lebanese community in U.S.A.: a study in cultural anthropology - Atif A. Wasfi - 1971 -- - The woman's role in socialization of Syrian-American in Chicago - Safia F. Haddad - 1969 -- - The institutional development of the Arab-American community of Boston: a sketch - Elaine C. Hagopian - 1969 -- - The Arab-American community of Springfield, Massachusetts - Naseer H. Aruri - 1969 -- - Yemeni and Lebanese Muslim immigrant women in southeast Dearborn, Michigan - Barbara C. Aswad - 1991 -- - Palestinian-American Muslim women: living on the margins of two worlds - Louise Cainkar - 1991 -- , - Care of the elderly within Muslim families - Mary C. Sengstock - 1996 -- - Challenges to the Arab-American family and ACCEss - Barbara C. Aswad and Nancy Adadow Gray - 1996 -- - Immigrant Palestinian women evaluate their lives - Louise Cainkar - 1996
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
Close ⊗
This website uses cookies and the analysis tool Matomo. More information can be found here...