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  • BSZ  (8)
  • MPI-MMG
  • Adem, Teferi Abate  (5)
  • Mead, Margaret  (3)
  • New Haven, Conn : Human Relations Area Files, Inc  (8)
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Material
Language
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Subjects(RVK)
  • 1
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Egypt--Social life and customs ; Peasantry--Egypt ; Peasants--Egypt ; Villages--Egypt--Case studies Silwa Bahari
    Abstract: The Fellahin collection covers historical, cultural and economic information mostly from the 1910s-1970s, with some dating back to the first half of the nineteenth century. Three books in the collection stand out as the basic sources on the Fellahin. The first is a book by Ammar, a native Fellahin scholar which analyzes the social and psychological aspects of education in Silwa, a Fellahin village in Aswan Province where the author grew up. The second is a detailed ethnographic account of the Upper Egyptian Fellahin as observed by a British anthropologist, Blackman, in 1920-1926. The third is a study of ethos and psychology in Lower and Middle Egypt by a Syrian Catholic priest, Ayrout, who lived among the Fellahin in Lowe and Middle Egypt in early 1930s. Together, these three sources cover a wide variety of themes including family life, community organization, class divisions, economic activities, trade, religious practices, socialization and culture change, circa 1920s-1950s. The collection also includes an account by a nineteenth century German physician, Klunzinger, which provides a rich description of religious and secular festivals and ceremonies in Upper Egypt as observed in 1863-1875. This document is the oldest document in the collection, covering useful information relating to religious processions, entertainments, costumes, dances and music. Documents by Rasoul and Hopkins focus on spirits and traditional medicinal practices with particular reference to women and spirit possession, while a document by Blackman focuses on the conception of illness. Aother document, by Bush, focuses on agrarian transformations that occurred in rural Egypt beginning from 1980s when President Mubarak, reversing Nassers brand of socialism, introduced liberalization, including laws allowing for agricultural land to be sold and bought. Bushs work especially focuses on the impact of liberalization on the land rights and security of Fellahin families
    Description / Table of Contents: Fellahin - Teferi Abate Adem - 2011 -- - Growing up in an Egyptian village: Silwa, Province of Aswan - Hamed Ammar - 1954 -- - The fella~hi~n of Upper Egypt: their social and industrial life today with special reference to survivals from ancient times - Winifred S. Blackman - 1927 -- - The Fellaheen - Henry Habib Ayrout ; Translated by Hilary Wayment ; with a foreword by M. Taher Pasha - 1945 -- - The Karin and Karineh - Winifred S. Blackman - 1926 -- - Zar in Egypt - Kawthar Abdel Rasoul - 1955 -- - Upper Egypt: its people and its products - C. B. Klunzinger ; Preface by Georg Schweinfurth - 1878 -- - Politics, power and poverty: twenty years of agricultural reform and market liberalisation in Egypt - Ray Bush - 2007 -- - Spirit mediumship in Upper Egypt - Nicholas S. Hopkins - 2007
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  • 2
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Caste--India--Dhanaura ; Country life--India ; Dhanaura, India ; Ethnology--India--Dhanaura ; India--Social life and customs ; Missions--India ; Uttar Pradesh (India)
    Abstract: The Uttar Pradesh Collection covers cultural, economic and environmental information circa 1900s to mid-1980s. A majority of the included documents are village-level studies. The basic works to consult are two documents by anthropologist Edward Morris Opler and his India co-author Rudra Datt Singh. One of these works is a comparative study of the villages of Ramapur and Madhopur with particular emphasis on similarities and differences in aspects of the economy, political organization, social structure and the caste system. The other focuses on the nature of the caste-based division of labor and village life in Senapur. The information in these documents is enriched by four follow-up studies by Opler. Coverage includes the place of religion in village life, regional and inter-village socioeconomic ties, recent changes in family structure and local political economy
    Description / Table of Contents: Uttar Pradesh - Teferi Abate Adem - 2011 -- - Behind mud walls - By Charlotte Viall Wiser and William H. Wiser - 1930 -- - Two villages of eastern Uttar Pradesh (U.P.), India: an analysis of similarities and differences - By Morris E. Opler and Rudra Datt Singh - 1952 -- - Western medicine in a village of northern India - McKim Marriott - 1955 -- - The division of labor in an Indian village - By Morris Opler and Rudra Datt Singh - 1954 -- - Recent changes in family structure in an Indian Village - Morris E. Opler - 1960 -- - Economic, political and social change in a village of north central India - Morris E. Opler and Rudra Datt Singh - 1952 -- - The economy of respect in a north Indian village - Elwyn C. Lapoint and P. C. Joshi - 1985-1986 -- - Problems of culture change in the Indian village - Mildred Stroop Luschinsky - 1963 --^
    Description / Table of Contents: an anthropological case study of the tribes in Dhanaura Village in Mirzapur District of Uttar Pradesh - L. M. Sankhdher - 1974
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  • 3
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Acculturation--Great Plains ; Indian women--Great Plains ; Indians of North America--Great Plains--Social conditions ; Indians of North America--Secret societies ; Omaha Indians
    Abstract: The Omaha collection covers a variety of cultural, historical and environmental information on different sections of Omaha society from pre-contact times to early 2000s. The work of Alice Fletcher, an anthropologist who lived with the Omaha for thirty years in 1875-1905, and Francis La Flesche, a native Omaha, is the basic and most comprehensive document in the collection. The collection also includes two works by a missionary/anthropologist, James Dorsey, who worked among the Omaha in 1878-1980. Together, these works provide the earliest systematic attempts at understanding and reconstructing pre-reservation Omaha society and culture. The remaining documents describe and examine more specific aspects of Omaha culture including acculturation with particular reference to women, religious life and organization of secret societies, and recent dynamics of ethnicity and identity especially among current generation Omaha peoples in Nebraska
    Description / Table of Contents: Omaha - Mark Awakuni-Swetland - 2011 -- - The Omaha tribe - by Alice C. Fletcher and Francis La Flesche, a member of the Omaha tribe - 1911 -- - Omaha sociology - Rev. J. Owen Dorsey - 1884 -- - The changing culture of an Indian tribe - Margaret Mead ; foreword by Clark Wissler - 1932 -- - Omaha dwelling, furniture, and implements - James Owen Dorsey - 1896 -- - Omaha secret societies - by R. F. Fortune - 1932 -- - Omaha - Margot P. Liberty, W. Raymond Wood, and Lee Irwin - 2001 -- - All old spirits have come back to greet him: realizing the Sacred Pole of the Omaha tribe - Robin Ridington - 1997
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  • 4
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Adolescence ; Children--Samoan Islands ; Developing countries-Economic conditions ; Ethnology--Samoa--Sala'ilua ; Ethnology--Samoan Islands ; Girls--Samoan Islands ; Rural development-Samoa ; Sala'ilua (Samoa)--Social life and customs ; Samoa ; Samoan Islands ; Samoan Islands--Social life and customs ; Samoans ; Samoans-Economic conditions ; Samoans-Social conditions ; Tubuai (French Polynesia) ; Western Samoa ; Women, Samoan--Social life and customs
    Abstract: This collection about the Samoans consists of 15 documents and a culture summary, covering a wide variety of cultural and historical information from the1830s to the 1990s. The Samoans are Polynesian people who live on a group of small islands in the Central Pacific which constitute the territories of American Samoa and (since 1962) the independent state of Western Samoa. The earliest descriptions of Samoan culture and history were compiled by the missionaries John B. Stair and George Turner, who lived in different parts of the island from 1838-1945 and 1840-1880, respectively. Five documents are ethnographic accounts and essays by Margaret Mead who, in 1925-1928, lived among Samoans villagers mostly in the Manuan group of islands in American Samoa. One document revisits some of the major arguments advanced in Mead's works, notably her portrayal of adolescent Samoan girls as sexually permissive. The remaining seven documents in the collection further enrich the historical and cultural information on Samoa with additional themes and in-depth analysis including plant resources and indigenous botanical knowledge, traditional material culture, a socio-political analysis of the modern history of American and Western Samoa, post-war reconstruction of Western Samoa, material culture and social change, structures and processes in the Western Samoan Sala'ilua village, and recent changes in the economic options of households and individuals in Vaega and Neiafu villages in Western Samoa
    Description / Table of Contents: its government and changing life - by Felix M. Keesing ... - 1934 -- - Ethnobotany of the Samoans - William Albert Setchell - 1924 -- - Culture summary: Samoans - Thomas Bargatzky - 2009 -- - Social organization of Manua - Margaret Mead - 1930 -- - Coming of age in Samoa: a psychological study of primitive youth for western civilisation - by Margaret Mead ... foreword by Franz Boas ... - 1928 -- - Western Samoa - W. E. H. Stanner - 1953 -- - The role of the individual in Samaon culture - Margaret Mead - 1928 -- - Samoan children at work and play - Margaret Mead - 1928 -- - Americanization in Samoa - Margaret Mead - 1929 --^
    Description / Table of Contents: together with notes on the cults and customs of twenty-three other islands in the Pacific - George Turner - 1884 -- - Old Samoa: or flotsam and jetsam from the Pacific Ocean - by the Rev. John B. Stair ; with an introd. by the Bishop of Ballarat - 1897 -- - Sala'ilua: a Samoan mystery - Bradd Shore - 1982 -- - Samoan planters: tradition and economic development in Polynesia - J. Tim O'Meara - 1990 -- - Ta'u: stability and change in a Samoan village - Lowell D. Holmes - 1958 -- - The history of Samoan sexual conduct and the Mead-Freeman controversy - Paul Shankman - 1996
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  • 5
    Language: English
    Pages: Online-Ressource
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Bambara (African people)
    Abstract: This collection of 12 documents is about the Bambara, a Mande-speaking people located primarily in Mali, West Africa. It covers information from two time periods: 1910-1950s and 1988-2003. Materials on the first period consist of four books translated from French. The earliest of these books are by a French Roman Catholic missionary, Henry, and a colonial administrator, Monteil, who lived among the Bambara from around 1900 to 1923. Henry discusses Bambara psychology and religion through broader explorations into their ideas on human life, taboos, animism, cults, sacrifices, and ceremonials relating to circumcision, marriage and funerals, while Monteil focuses on history and administrative practices with particular emphasis on functions of age-groups, religious cults, secret societies and territorial lineages. Both authors occasionally characterize the Bambara using strongly negative stereotypes that seem highly colored by their own respective religious and political views. Comprehensive ethnographic information on Bambara culture and society can be found in the remaining two books, Dieterlen and Paques. Both authors are professional French ethnographers with extensive field work experience in the region. Materials on the second period focus on Bambara economy and household dynamics. Toulmin and Becker (1996) discuss the constraints and opportunities different household heads encounter in attempting to enhance their access to key productive resources (land, labor and capital in the form of cattle and cash). Wooten, Becker (2000) and Grosz Ngate examine the impacts of increasing commoditization of rural economy on household food security, gender and intra-household relations
    Note: - Monetization of bridewealth and the abandonment of 'kin roads' to marriage in Sana, Mali - Maria Grosz-Ngaté - 1988 -- - Cattle, women, and wells: managing household survival in the Sahel - Camilla Toulmin - 1992 , Culture summary: Bambara - Teferi Abate Adem - 2009 -- - An essay on the religion of the Bambara - Germaine Dieterlen ; préf. de Marcel Griaule - 1951 -- - The Bambara of Ségou and Kaarta: an historical, ethnographical and literary study of a people of the French Sudan - Charles Monteil - 1924 -- - The Bambara - Viviana Paques - 1954 -- - The Soul of an African people: The Bambara: their psychic, ethical, religious and social life - Joseph Henry - 1910 -- - Women, men, and market gardens: gender relations and income generation in rural Mali - Stephen Wooten - 2003 -- - Access to laobr in rural Mali - Laurence C. Becker - 1996 -- - Garden money buys grain: food procurement patterns in a Malian village - Laurence C. Becker - 2000 -- - Hidden meanings: explorations into a Bamanan construction of gender - Maria Grosz-Ngaté - 1989 --
    URL: Volltext  (Deutschlandweit zugänglich)
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  • 6
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Indians of South America--Costume ; Patagonia--Description and travel ; Tehuelche Indians ; Tehuelche Indians--Folklore ; Tehuelche mythology ; Tzoneca language--Glossaries, vocabularies, etc ; ndians of South America--Patagonia (Argentina and Chile)
    Abstract: This collection about the Tehuelche consists of ten documents; eight in English and two in Spanish. The documents can be broadly categorized into three groups by time period and the information they cover. The first group consists of documents by a colonial administrator and a European explorer of Patagonia, and provide a first-hand account of Tehuelche society and culture, with particular emphasis on hunting methods, diet, warfare, social organization, inter-ethnic relations, religion, important ceremonies and the natural environment, prior to their forced encampment in reserves in the 1880s. The second group consists of documents by professional anthropologists who sought to recreate a picture of pre-conquest Tehuelche society by building on information by earlier writers. Topics covered by these documents include aspects of culture, territoriality and social structure, folklore, and mythology. The third group consists of just one book, but fills a critical gap by documenting the political and cultural processes that led to the gradual extinction of the Tehuelche beginning from their first contact with Europeans in 1520 to their final forced encampment in reserves in the 1880s. The Tehuelche were primarily hunter-gatherers living mostly in Patagonia, Argentina, and southern Chile
    Description / Table of Contents: Tehuelche - Teferi Abate Adem - 2009 -- - The Patagonian and Pampean hunters - By John M. Cooper - 1946 -- - At home with the Patagonians - By George Chaworth Musters - 1873 -- - On the races of Patagonia - By George Chaworth Musters - 1872 -- - Polychrome Guanaco cloaks of Patagonia - by S.K. Lothrop - 1929 -- - Description of Patagonia - by Antonio De Viedma - 1837 -- - Folk literature of the Tehuelche Indians - Johannes Wilbert and Karin Simoneau, editors ; contributing authors, Maggiorino Borgatello ... [et al.] - 1984 -- - An ecological perspective of socioterritorial organization among the Teheulche in the ninteenth century - E. Glynn Williams - 1979 -- - extincion de un pueblo indigena de la Patagonia Argentina: los Tehuelches - Ana Fernández Garay - 1995 -- - Algunos personajes de la mitologia Tehuelche meridional - Alejandra Siffredi - 1968
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  • 7
    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: Baseri tribe
    Abstract: In addition to a culture summary, the Basseri collection consists of two anthropological studies by Fredrik Barth. The first, published in 1961, is based on ethnographic materials collected in the period from December 1957 to July 1958 while the author was living with the Danbar tribal section of Basseri. The book describes and analyses Basseri social and economic organization in terms of a general ecological perspective. The focus is on the processes through which the Basseri organize nomadic herding and relate to one another as members of different households, herding units, camps, lineages (oulad) and tribal sections (tira). The second document, published in 1964, discusses the nature of Basseri pastoral economy and its implications for social structure. Together, these documents provide a first-hand account and analysis of Basseri economy and social organization, but contain little information on arts, language, medicine, death and afterlife. The Basseri are a pastoral nomadic people living around Shiraz, capital of the Iranian province of Fars, in land that stretches between deserts in the south to high mountain ranges in the north
    Description / Table of Contents: Basseri - Teferi Abate Adem - 2009 -- - Nomads of South-Persia: the Basseri tribe of the Khamseh Confederacy - Frederik Barth - 1961 -- - Capital, investment and the social structure of a pastoral nomad group in south Persia - By Frederik Barth - 1969
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  • 8
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Manus (Papua New Guinea people)
    Abstract: This collection of 14 documents describes the Manus people during the period from 1870 to 1992, with a concentration on the 1920s. The Manus are residents of the Papua New Guinea province of Manus. The American anthropologist Margaret Mead (1901-1978) conducted fieldwork on the island from 1928-1929 and again in 1953. This collection contains several her works, including her main monographs on personality development and a follow-up study, 25 years later, on the same subject. The other works by Mead in this collection focus on kinship, animism and children's thought, trade and exchange, and a general introduction to Manus culture and society. Fortune wrote on the Manus religion. Carrier and Schwartz wrote on the Manus economy. Gustafsson wrote his doctoral dissertation on Manus leadership. Otto examines the life of one particular leader, Paliau Maloat, and the history of the movement he led. Romanucci-Ross examines Manus medical treatment
    Description / Table of Contents: Manus - James G. Carrier - 2005 -- - Growing up in New Guinea: a comparative study of primitive education - by Margaret Mead - 1930 -- - New lives for old: cultural transformation--Manus, 1928-1953 - Margaret Mead - 1956 -- - Manus religion: an ethnological study of the Manus natives of the Admiralty Islands - by R.F. Fortune - 1935 -- - Kinship in the Admiralty Islands - by Margaret Mead - 1934 -- - An investigation of the thought of primitive children with special reference to animism - Margaret Mead - 1932 -- - The Manus of the Admiralty Islands - by Margaret Mead - 1937 -- - Melanesian middlemen - Margaret Mead - 1930 -- - Structure and process in a Melanesian society: Ponam's progress in the twentieth century - Achsah H. Carrier, James G. Carrier - 1991 --^
    Description / Table of Contents: a Manus society in the modern state - James G. Carrier and Achsah H. Carrier - 1989 -- - Houses and ancestors: continuities and discontinuities in in leadership among the Manus - Berit Gustafsson - 1992 -- - Systems of areal integration: some considerations based on the Admiralty Islands of northern Melanesia - Theodore Schwartz - 1963 -- - Local narratives of a great transformation: conversion to Christianity in Manus, Papua New Guinea - Ton Otto - 1998 -- - The Paliau movement in Manus and the objectification of tradition - Ton Otto - 1992 -- - The heirarchy of resort in curative practices: the Admiralty Islands, Melanesia - Lola Romanucci Schwartz - 1969
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