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  • KOBV  (8)
  • Online Resource  (8)
  • Article
  • E-Resource
  • Human Relations Area Files, Inc  (8)
  • Adolescence  (4)
  • Icelanders  (4)
  • 1
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Gond (Indic people) ; Ethnology--India--Bastar ; Bastar (India) ; Muria (Indic people) ; Primitive societies ; Adolescence ; Dormitories ; Murder--India--Bastar ; Suicide--India--Bastar ; Bastar (India : District)--History--19th century ; Bastar (India : District)--History--20th century ; Bastar (India : District)--Ethnic relations--Political aspects ; Bharia (Indic people) ; Gond ; Gond
    Abstract: The Gond collection covers a broad range of ethnographic topics dating from approximately 1854 to 2006, with an emphasis on the Gond tribes of Bastar State. The primary document in this collection is Grigson dealing with the general ethnography of the Maria Gond, particularly the Hill and Bison Horn Maria tribal groups. Grigson's data are further supplemented by the ethnographic description of Gond cultural life in Fuchs, and in Elwin. The Grigson's, Elwin's, and Fuchs' studies, however, are limited in time depth to the early and mid-twentieth century. Other topics of ethnographic interest are: the description and analysis of the ghotul, a communal dwelling where the young people of the Gond villages live; murder and suicide among the Bison Horn Maria; genealogical studies of the Gond people in Bastar State; and sociocultural changes in Orcha village introduced by the Indian government
    Note: Culture summary: Gond - Stephen Fuchs - 2011 -- - The Maria Gonds of Bastar - by W. V. Grigson ; with an introduction by J. H. Hutton - 1949 -- - The Muria and their ghotul - Verrier Elwin - 1947 -- - Maria murder and suicide - Verrier Elwin ; with a foreword by W. V. Grigson - 1943 -- - Subalterns and sovereigns: an anthropological history of Bastar, 1854-2006 - Nandini Sundar - 2007 -- - Some aspects of change in a Hill Maria Gond village - Edward J. Jay - 1971 -- - The Gond and Bhumia of eastern Mandla - Stephen Fuchs - 1960
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  • 2
    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: Adolescence ; Bastar (India : District)--Ethnic relations--Political aspects ; Bastar (India : District)--History--19th century ; Bastar (India : District)--History--20th century ; Bastar (India) ; Bharia (Indic people) ; Dormitories ; Ethnology--India--Bastar ; Gond (Indic people) ; Murder--India--Bastar ; Muria (Indic people) ; Primitive societies ; Suicide--India--Bastar ; Gond
    Abstract: The Gond collection covers a broad range of ethnographic topics dating from approximately 1854 to 2006, with an emphasis on the Gond tribes of Bastar State. The primary document in this collection is Grigson dealing with the general ethnography of the Maria Gond, particularly the Hill and Bison Horn Maria tribal groups. Grigson's data are further supplemented by the ethnographic description of Gond cultural life in Fuchs, and in Elwin. The Grigson's, Elwin's, and Fuchs' studies, however, are limited in time depth to the early and mid-twentieth century. Other topics of ethnographic interest are: the description and analysis of the ghotul, a communal dwelling where the young people of the Gond villages live; murder and suicide among the Bison Horn Maria; genealogical studies of the Gond people in Bastar State; and sociocultural changes in Orcha village introduced by the Indian government
    Description / Table of Contents: Gond - Stephen Fuchs - 2011 -- - The Maria Gonds of Bastar - by W. V. Grigson ; with an introduction by J. H. Hutton - 1949 -- - The Muria and their ghotul - Verrier Elwin - 1947 -- - Maria murder and suicide - Verrier Elwin ; with a foreword by W. V. Grigson - 1943 -- - Subalterns and sovereigns: an anthropological history of Bastar, 1854-2006 - Nandini Sundar - 2007 -- - Some aspects of change in a Hill Maria Gond village - Edward J. Jay - 1971 -- - The Gond and Bhumia of eastern Mandla - Stephen Fuchs - 1960
    URL: Volltext  (Deutschlandweit zugänglich)
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  • 3
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Ethnology--Samoan Islands ; Samoa ; Samoan Islands ; Samoans ; Tubuai (French Polynesia) ; Girls--Samoan Islands ; Children--Samoan Islands ; Women, Samoan--Social life and customs ; Adolescence ; Samoan Islands--Social life and customs ; Western Samoa ; Ethnology--Samoa--Sala'ilua ; Sala'ilua (Samoa)--Social life and customs ; Samoans-Social conditions ; Samoans-Economic conditions ; Rural development-Samoa ; Developing countries-Economic conditions ; Samoaner ; Samoaner
    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
    Note: Samoan material culture - by Te Rangi Hiroa (P. H. Buck) - 1930 -- - Modern Samoa: 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 -- , - Samoa, a hundred years ago and long before: 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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  • 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
    URL: Volltext  (Deutschlandweit zugänglich)
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  • 5
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Icelanders ; Isländer ; Isländer
    Abstract: These 22 documents are about the inhabitants of Iceland. The time span ranges from about the middle of the nineteenth century to the late twentieth, with a particular focus on the period of the l940s to the 1980s. Most of the works are widely diversified in subject coverage, although there is emphasis on the economy, especially in regard to the marine fisheries and whaling. The status of women and women's movements in Iceland are the topics of the works by Kristmundsdóttir, Skakptadóttir, and Björnsdóttir. Gurdin's is a study of domestic violence in Iceland. Other topics covered by other authors include ethnolinguistics, zooarchaeology, kinship, literacy and literacy practice, and an analysis of the Icelandic sagas as works of fiction or historical fact
    Note: Literacy identity and literacy practice - Beverly A. Sizemore and Christopher H. Walker - 1996 -- - The wandering semioticians: tourism and the image of modern Iceland - Magnús Einarsson - 1996 -- - History and the sagas: the effects of nationalism - Jesse L. Byock - 1992 -- - Culture summary: Icelanders - Bolender, Douglas James - 2004 -- - Coastal economies, cultural accounts: human ecology and Icelandic discourse - Gísli Pálsson - 1991 -- - Forms of production and fishing expertise - E. Paul Durrenberger and Gísli Pálsson - 1989 -- - The idea of mystical power in modern Iceland - Daryl Wieland - 1989 -- - The hunter and the animal - Haraldur ólafsson - 1989 -- - Problems and prospects in the study of Icelandic kinship - George W. Rich - 1989 -- - Outside, muted, and different: Icelandic women's movements and their notions of authority and cultural separateness - Sigríður Dúna Kristmundsdóttir - 1989 -- , - Public view and private voices - Inga Dóra Björnsdóttir - 1989 -- - Language and society: the ethnolinguistics of Icelanders - Gísli Pálsson - 1989 -- - Work and identity of the poor: work load, work discipline, and self-respect - Finnur Magnússon - 1989 -- - Contributions to the zooarchaeology of Iceland: some preliminary notes - Thomas Amorosi - 1989 -- - References - edited by Gísli Pálsson and E. Paul Durrenberger - 1996 -- - Whale sitting: spatiality in Icelandic nationalism - Anne Brydon - 1996 -- - A Sea of images: fishers, whalers, and environmentalists - Níels Einarsson - 1996 -- - The politics of production: enclosure, equity, and efficiency - Gísli Pálsson and Agnar Helgason - 1996 -- - Housework and wage work: gender in Icelandic fishing communities - Unnur Dís Skaptadóttir - 1996 -- - The mountain woman and the presidency - Inga Dóra Björnsdóttir - 1996 -- - Motherhood, patriarchy, and the nation: domestic violence in Iceland - Julie E. Gurdin - 1996 -- - Premodern and modern constructions of population regimes - Daniel E. Vasey - 1996 -- - Every Icelander a special case - E. Paul Durrenberger - 1996
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  • 6
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Icelanders
    Abstract: This collection of 23 documents is about the Early Icelanders and covers the time span from the first Norse settlement in Iceland around 874 A.D. to Iceland's incorporation into the kingdom of Norway in approximately 1262 A.D. The major focus is on the Commonwealth Period from 930 to 1262 A.D. Much of the cultural data gathered for this period comes from the analysis and interpretation of a number of Icelandic sagas written primarily in the thirteenth century. The most comprehensive study of the social, economic, and political changes taking place in Medieval Iceland over a four hundred year period is The dynamics of medieval Iceland by Durrenberger. This study begins with the first Norse settlement in Iceland around 874 A.D. and ends with the incorporation of Iceland into the kingdom of Norway in 1264 A.D. Fourteen of these documents were originally published in: From sagas to society, edited by Gísli Pálsson
    Note: Culture summary: Early Icelanders - Douglas James Bolender and John Beierle (file evaluation and indexing notes) - 2004 -- - The dynamics of medieval Iceland: political economy and literature - by E. Paul Durrenberger - 1992 -- - Economic representation and narrative structure in Hnsa-þóris saga - E. Paul Durrenberger, Dorothy Durrenberger, ástráður Eysteinsson - 1988 -- - Stratification without a state: the collapse of the Icelandic Commonwealth - E. Paul Durrenberger - 1988 -- - Law and literature in medieval Iceland - E. Paul Durrenberger - 1992 -- - Bibliography - edited by Ross Samson - 1991 -- - The Icelandic family sagas as totemic artefacts - E. Paul Durrenberger - 1991 -- - The name of the witch: sagas, sorcery and social content - Gísli Pálsson - 1991 -- - Regional archaeological research in Iceland: potentials and possibilities - Kevin P. Smith and Jeffrey R. Parsons - 1989 -- , - Anthropological perspectives on the commonwealth period - E. Paul Durrenberger - 1989 -- - References - edited by Gísli Pálsson - 1992 -- - Introduction: Text, life, and saga - =Gísli Pálsson - 1992 -- - From sagas to society: the case of HEIMSKRINGLA - Sverre Bagge - 1992 -- - Emotions and the sagas - William Ian Miller - 1992 -- - Humor as a guide to social change: BANDAMANNA SAGA and heroic values - E. Paul Durrenberger and Jonathan Wilcox - 1992 -- - þógunna's testament: a myth for moral contemplation and social apathy - Knut Odner - 1992 -- - Inheritance, ideology, and literature: HERVARAR SAGA OK HEIðREKS - Torfi H. Tulinius - 1992 -- - GOðAR: democrats of despots? - Ross Samson - 1992 -- - The medieval Icelandic outlaw: lifestyle, saga, and legend - Frederic Amory - 1992 -- - Friendship in the Icelandic Commonwealth - Jón Vidðar Sigurðsson - 1992 -- - Spinning goods and tales: market, subsistence and literary productions - Jón Haukur Ingimundarson - 1992 -- , - Social ideals and the concept of profit in thirteenth-century Iceland - Helgi þorláksson ; [translated by Bernard Schudder] - 1992 -- - The theft of blood, the birth of men: cultural constructions of gender in medieval Iceland - Uli Linke - 1992 -- - Servitude and sexuality in medieval Iceland - Ruth Mazo Karras - 1992
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  • 7
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Icelanders
    Abstract: These 22 documents are about the inhabitants of Iceland. The time span ranges from about the middle of the nineteenth century to the late twentieth, with a particular focus on the period of the l940s to the 1980s. Most of the works are widely diversified in subject coverage, although there is emphasis on the economy, especially in regard to the marine fisheries and whaling. The status of women and women's movements in Iceland are the topics of the works by Kristmundsd́ottir, Skakptad́ottir, and Bj͏̈ornsd́ottir. Gurdin's is a study of domestic violence in Iceland. Other topics covered by other authors include ethnolinguistics, zooarchaeology, kinship, literacy and literacy practice, and an analysis of the Icelandic sagas as works of fiction or historical fact
    Description / Table of Contents: tourism and the image of modern Iceland - Magnús Einarsson - 1996 -- - History and the sagas: the effects of nationalism - Jesse L. Byock - 1992 -- - Culture summary: Icelanders - Bolender, Douglas James - 2004 -- - Coastal economies, cultural accounts: human ecology and Icelandic discourse - Gísli Pálsson - 1991 -- - Forms of production and fishing expertise - E. Paul Durrenberger and Gísli Pálsson - 1989 -- - The idea of mystical power in modern Iceland - Daryl Wieland - 1989 -- - The hunter and the animal - Haraldur ólafsson - 1989 -- - Problems and prospects in the study of Icelandic kinship - George W. Rich - 1989 -- - Outside, muted, and different: Icelandic women's movements and their notions of authority and cultural separateness - Sigríður Dúna Kristmundsdóttir - 1989 --^
    Description / Table of Contents: the ethnolinguistics of Icelanders - Gísli Pálsson - 1989 -- - Work and identity of the poor: work load, work discipline, and self-respect - Finnur Magnússon - 1989 -- - Contributions to the zooarchaeology of Iceland: some preliminary notes - Thomas Amorosi - 1989 -- - References - edited by Gísli Pálsson and E. Paul Durrenberger - 1996 -- - Whale sitting: spatiality in Icelandic nationalism - Anne Brydon - 1996 -- - A Sea of images: fishers, whalers, and environmentalists - Níels Einarsson - 1996 -- - The politics of production: enclosure, equity, and efficiency - Gísli Pálsson and Agnar Helgason - 1996 -- - Housework and wage work: gender in Icelandic fishing communities - Unnur Dís Skaptadóttir - 1996 -- - The mountain woman and the presidency - Inga Dóra Björnsdóttir - 1996 -- - Motherhood, patriarchy, and the nation: domestic violence in Iceland - Julie E. Gurdin - 1996 -- - Premodern and modern constructions of population regimes - Daniel E. Vasey - 1996 -- - Every Icelander a special case - E. Paul Durrenberger - 1996
    URL: Volltext  (Deutschlandweit zugänglich)
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  • 8
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Icelanders
    Abstract: This collection of 23 documents is about the Early Icelanders and covers the time span from the first Norse settlement in Iceland around 874 A.D. to Iceland's incorporation into the kingdom of Norway in approximately 1262 A.D. The major focus is on the Commonwealth Period from 930 to 1262 A.D. Much of the cultural data gathered for this period comes from the analysis and interpretation of a number of Icelandic sagas written primarily in the thirteenth century. The most comprehensive study of the social, economic, and political changes taking place in Medieval Iceland over a four hundred year period is The dynamics of medieval Iceland by Durrenberger. This study begins with the first Norse settlement in Iceland around 874 A.D. and ends with the incorporation of Iceland into the kingdom of Norway in 1264 A.D. Fourteen of these documents were originally published in: From sagas to society, edited by Ǵisli Ṕalsson
    Description / Table of Contents: Early Icelanders - Douglas James Bolender and John Beierle (file evaluation and indexing notes) - 2004 -- - The dynamics of medieval Iceland: political economy and literature - by E. Paul Durrenberger - 1992 -- - Economic representation and narrative structure in Hnsa-þóris saga - E. Paul Durrenberger, Dorothy Durrenberger, ástráður Eysteinsson - 1988 -- - Stratification without a state: the collapse of the Icelandic Commonwealth - E. Paul Durrenberger - 1988 -- - Law and literature in medieval Iceland - E. Paul Durrenberger - 1992 -- - Bibliography - edited by Ross Samson - 1991 -- - The Icelandic family sagas as totemic artefacts - E. Paul Durrenberger - 1991 -- - The name of the witch: sagas, sorcery and social content - Gísli Pálsson - 1991 -- - Regional archaeological research in Iceland: potentials and possibilities - Kevin P. Smith and Jeffrey R. Parsons - 1989 --^
    Description / Table of Contents: Text, life, and saga - =Gísli Pálsson - 1992 -- - From sagas to society: the case of HEIMSKRINGLA - Sverre Bagge - 1992 -- - Emotions and the sagas - William Ian Miller - 1992 -- - Humor as a guide to social change: BANDAMANNA SAGA and heroic values - E. Paul Durrenberger and Jonathan Wilcox - 1992 -- - þógunna's testament: a myth for moral contemplation and social apathy - Knut Odner - 1992 -- - Inheritance, ideology, and literature: HERVARAR SAGA OK HEIðREKS - Torfi H. Tulinius - 1992 -- - GOðAR: democrats of despots? - Ross Samson - 1992 -- - The medieval Icelandic outlaw: lifestyle, saga, and legend - Frederic Amory - 1992 -- - Friendship in the Icelandic Commonwealth - Jón Vidðar Sigurðsson - 1992 -- - Spinning goods and tales: market, subsistence and literary productions - Jón Haukur Ingimundarson - 1992 --^
    Description / Table of Contents: cultural constructions of gender in medieval Iceland - Uli Linke - 1992 -- - Servitude and sexuality in medieval Iceland - Ruth Mazo Karras - 1992
    URL: Volltext  (Deutschlandweit zugänglich)
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
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