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  • 1
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    New Haven, Conn : Human Relations Area Files, Inc
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Ojibwa Indians ; Ojibwa ; Ojibwa
    Abstract: The collection of documents about the Ojibwa consists of 56 documents and has been divided into four major geographical and temporal periods: the Central Ojibwa: traditional to ca. 1850; the Central Ojibwa: 1850-1950; the Northern Ojibwa: 1780-1950; and the Twentieth Century Ojibwa of the period from 1950 to the 1990s
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  • 2
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Bahia (Brazil : State) ; Bevölkerung ; Salvador ; Salvador Region ; Bevölkerung
    Abstract: The Bahia Brazilians file is concerned with the culture and inhabitants of the city of Salvador, the capital of the state of Bahia in eastern Brazil, and with the surrounding Recôncavo, a semicircle of land bordering the Baia de Todos os Santos (Bay of All Saints). In overall coverage this file contains a great deal of information on race and social status, agriculture and history, with great historical depth, and contrast between rural and urban life
    Note: Culture summary: Bahia Brazilians - John Beierle - 1999 -- - An agricultural geography of the Recôncavo of Bahia - Edward Cooper Haskins - 1956 [1967 copy] -- - Village and plantation life in northeastern Brazil - Harry William Hutchinson - 1957 -- - Negroes in Brazil - Donald Pierson ; foreword by Herman R. Lantz - 1967 -- - The colored elite in a Brazilian city - Thales de Alzevedo ; photographs by Pierre Verger - 1953 -- - The family in Bahia, Brazil, 1870-1945 - Dain Borges - 1994 -- - Afro-Bahian carnival: a stage for protest - by Christopher Dunn - 1992 -- - Untimely gods and French perfume: ritual, rules and deviance in the Brazilian Candomble - Inger Sjorslev - 1987 -- - Resisting Brazil: perspectives on local nationalisms in Salvador da Bahia - Cecilia McCallum - 1996 -- - Sugar plantations in the formation of Brazilian society: Bahia, 1550-1835 - Stuart B. Schwartz - 1985
    URL: Volltext  (Deutschlandweit zugänglich)
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  • 3
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    New Haven, Conn : Human Relations Area Files, Inc
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Dogons (African people) ; Dogon ; Dogon
    Abstract: The Dogon are a group of people who live primarily in the districts of Bandiagara and Douentza in the western African nation of Mali. Some Dogon reside in Burkina Faso. This file consists of 30 documents, two are in the original French. Most focus geographically on the Mopti Region of Mali from ca. 1935 through 1970. General ethnographic information on the Dogon can be found in Paulme and Griaule for the 1930s, Paulu Marti up to the mid-1950s, and Bouju, ca. 1980s. Nearly half of the works focus on Dogon religion and art. Griaule wrote the classic works on Dogon religious thought and myth, which have been critiqued and defended. Griaule and Dieterlen also carried out a sociological analysis of Dogon religion. More specific religious studies are Dieterlen's studies of the Dogon concept of the soul and the symbolism of Dogon sacrifices. Van Beek has written on witchcraft, religious statues and religious ceremonies. Imperato writes on masked dances, as does Griaule in his general ethnography. Analyses of Dogon art are found in Laude, Flam, and Segy. Verboven provides a sophisticated analysis of Dogon ritual movement and dance. Culture and personality studies are found in Parin et al. and Ganay. Other topics included in the file are games, ethnolinguistics, ethnobotany, food patterns, and marriage patterns
    Note: Culture summary: Dogon - John Beierle and Ian Skoggard - 2000 -- - The Dogon - Monserrat Palau Martí - 1957 -- - Social organization of the Dogon (French Sudan) - Denise Paulme - 1940 -- - Conversation with Ogotemmêli - Marcel Griaule - 1965 -- - The Dogon - Marcel Griaule and Germaine Dieterlen - 1954 -- - Dogon culture: profane and arcane - Mary Douglas - 1968 -- - Classification of plants among the Dogon - Germaine Dieterlen - 1952 -- - Dogon alimentation - Germaine Dieterlen and Geneviève Calame-Griaule - 1960 -- - Dogon masks - Marcel Griaule - 1938 -- - The Whites think too much: psychoanalytic investigations among the Dogon in West Africa - By Paul Parin, Fritz Morgenthaler and Goldy Parin-Matthey - 1963 -- - Words and the Dogon world - Geneviève Calame-Griaule ; translated from the French by Deirdre LaPin - 1986 -- , - The souls of the Dogons - Germaine Dieterlen - 1941 [i.e. 1942] -- - African art of the Dogon: the myths of the cliff dwellers - Jean Laude [Translation by Joachim Neugroschel] Foreword by Lester Wunderman - [1973] -- - Dogon games - By M. Griaule - 1938 -- - Dogon mottoes - Solange de Ganay - 1941 [i. e. 1942] -- - Contemporary adapted dances among the Dogon - Pascal James Imperato - 1971 -- - Notes on the Dogon sculpture - Ladislas Segy - 1975 -- - Graphic symbolism in the Dogon granary: grains, time, and the notion of history - Jack D. Flam - 1976 -- - Graine de l'homme, enfant du mil - Jacky Bouju - 1984 -- - The pale fox - Marcel Griaule and Germaine Dieterlen ; translated from the French by Stephen C. Infantino - 1986 -- - The innocent sorcerer: coping with evil in two African societies (Kapsiki & Dogon) - Walter E. A. van Beek - 1994 -- - Functions of sculpture in Dogon religion - Walter E. A. van Beek - 1988 -- - Becoming human in Dogon, Mali - Walter E. A. van Beek - 1992 -- , - Harmony versus autonomy: models of agricultural fertility among the Dogon and the Kapsiki - Walter E. A. van Beek - 1990 -- - Processes and limitations of Dogon agricultural knowledge - Walter E. A. van Beek - 1993 -- - Dogon restudied: a field evaluation of the work of Marcel Griaule - Walter E. A. van Beek - 1991 -- - On the Dogon restudied - Geneviève Calame-Griaule - 1991 -- - Mating structure in the Dogon population in the Tabi Massif - M. H. Cazes and A. Jacquard - 1981 -- - Space, time and bodiliness in Dogon funerals: a praxiological view - Dirk Verboven - 1991 -- - Endogamy among the Dogon of Boni, Mali - M. H. Cazes - 1990 -- - Sacrifice et traitement des victimes chez les Dogon - Germaine Dieterlen - 1985
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  • 4
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Tukano Indians ; Tucano Indians ; Tucano ; Tucano
    Abstract: The Tukano are a group of tribes that occupy the tropical forest areas of the Comisaría del Vaupés within southeastern Colombia and northwestern Brazil. This file consists of 17 documents covering the time period from 1939 to 1980. Silva's ethnographic account is the most comprehensive. The three Fulop publications, used in conjunction with those by Sorensen and Reichel-Dolmatoff provide supplemental data on kinship terminology, folktales and myths, cosmology, shamanism, agriculture, and multilingualism and tribal exogamy. The remaining documents relate to the Cubeo, Bará, Makuna, Desana, Barasana, and Wanano
    Note: Culture summary: Tukano - John Beierle - 1998 -- - Notes on the terms and the kinship system of the Tucano - Marcos Fulop - 1955 -- - Aspects of Tucano culture: mythology--part I - Marcos Fulop - 1956 -- - Aspects of Tucano culture: cosmogony - Marcos Fulop - 1954 -- - The indigenous civilization of the Uaupés - P. Alcionilio Brü;zzi Alves da Silva - 1962 -- - The Cubeo: Indians of the Northwest Amazon - Irving Goldman - 1963 -- - Multilingualism in the northwest Amazon - Arthur P. Sorensen, Jr. - 1967 -- - Amazonian cosmos: the sexual and religious symbolism of the Tukano Indians - Gerardo Reichel-Dolmatoff - [1971] -- - Shamanism and art of the eastern Tukanoan Indians: Colombian northwest Amazon - G. Reichel-Dolmatoff - 1987 -- - The palm and the Pleiades: initiation and cosmology in northwest Amazonia - Stephen Hugh-Jones - 1979 -- , - From the Milk River: spatial and temporal processes in northwest Amazonia - Christine Hugh-Jones - 1979 -- - The fish people: linguistic exogamy and Tukanoan identity in northwest Amazonia - Jean E. Jackson - 1983 -- - Makuna social organization: a study in descent, alliance, and the formation of corporate groups in the north-western Amazon - by Kaj Arhem - 1981 -- - Perceptions of nature and the structure of society: the question of Cubeo descent - Irving Goldman - 1976 -- - Nutrition in the northwest Amazon: household dietary intake and time-energy expenditure - Darna L. Dufour - 1983 -- - The Time and energy expenditure of indigenous women horticulturists in the Northwest Amazon - Darna L. Dufour - 1984 -- - Marriage, language, and history among eastern Tukanoan speaking peoples of the northwest Amazon - Janet Chernela - 1989 -- - The Wanano Indians of the Brazilian Amazon: a sense of space - Janet M. Chernela - 1993
    URL: Volltext  (Deutschlandweit zugänglich)
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  • 5
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    New Haven, Conn : Human Relations Area Files, Inc
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Toraja (Indonesian people) ; Toradja ; Toradja
    Abstract: This collection contains specific information on the Eastern Toraja (the Bareë speakers) of central Celebes (Sulawesi) in Indonesia. It consists of five documents, one in English (Downs) and the other four are translations from the Dutch (Adriani and Kruyt: 1950-1951). Kruyt was a missionary and Adriani was a linguist. Their combined fieldwork stretched from the 1890s to the 1940s. The four-volume work by Adriani and Kruyt make up the bulk of this file and provide a very comprehensive study of traditional Toraja ethnography that ranges in coverage from the precontact to early contact periods. The monograph by Downs, an anthropologist, is a critical analysis of the works of Adriani and Kruyt and is a more concise and manageable summary of Eastern Toraja culture, although its major concentration is on religion
    Note: Culture summary: Eastern Toraja - John Beierle (file evaluation and indexing notes) and Martin J. Malone - 1997 -- - The religion of the Bare-'e-speaking Toradja of central Celebes - Richard Erskine Brown - 1956 -- - The Bare'e-speaking Toradja of central Celebes (the East Toradja): first volume - N. Adriani and Albert C. Kruyt - 1950 -- - The Bare'e-speaking Toradja of central Celebes (the East Toradja): second volume - N. Adriani and Albert C. Kruyt - 1951 -- - The Bare'e-speaking Toradja of central Celebes (the East Toradja): third volume - N. Adriani and Albert C. Kruyt - 1951 -- - The Bare'e-speaking Toradja of central Celebes (the East Toradja): volume of plates - N. Adriani and Albert C. Kruyt - 1951
    URL: Volltext  (Deutschlandweit zugänglich)
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  • 6
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Ona Indians ; Ona ; Ona
    Abstract: The Ona were a Native American group that occupied most of the large island of Tierra del Fuego located at the southern tip of South America. The Ona were divided into two main groups called Haush and Selk'nam, who were distinct both dialectically and culturally. The Ona are considered to be extinct. This file consists of 5 documents that cover the time period from 1850-1940. There are data on both the Haush and the Selk'nam
    Note: Culture summary: Ona - John Beierle - 1996 -- - The Fireland Indians: Vol. 1. The Selk'nam, on the life and thought of a hunting people of the Great Island of Tierra del Fuego - Martin Gusinde - 1931 -- - The Ona - by John M. Cooper - 1946 -- - The Indians of Tierra del Fuego - by Samuel Kirkland Lothrop - 1928 -- - Analytical and critical bibliography of the tribes of Tierra del Fuego and adjacent territory - by John M. Cooper - 1917 -- - Drama and power in a hunting society: the Selk'nam of Tierra del Fuego - Anne Chapman - 1982
    URL: Volltext  (Deutschlandweit zugänglich)
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  • 7
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Lozi (African people) ; Zulu ; Law, Lozi ; Rotse ; Rotse
    Abstract: The Lozi consist of a number of interrelated ethnic groups located along the Zambezi River in Barotse Province of western Zambia. This file consists of 11 documents, including one translation from the German, and covers the period from 1920-1960. Turner's work provides an overall view of Lozi culture and society touchs on the major areas of Lozi ethnography as reflected in the cultural patterns of the affiliated tribes of the Central Barotse Plains. Lozi political structure is discussed in some detail in Gluckman and further supplemented by Jensen. Peters discusses native agricultural techniques, soils and general land use. Gluckman's writings deal with the pattern of land distribution of Barotse property to all homesteads, the king's protection of subjects' rights to a piece of land and the forms of tribute and gifts from commoners to royalty, the relation of bride-price, presence or lack of agnatic lineage groups, inheritance rules and general stability of marriage and the nuclear household, aspects of Barotse jurisprudence, and economic behavior. Reynolds presents a compilation of data relevant to Barotse sorcery based on records of investigations and judicial proceedings conducted by British officials in 1956 during a wave of sorcery and witchcraft incidents. Prins is a comprehensive and reliable account of Lozi society as it existed between the years 1876-1896
    Note: Culture summary: Lozi - John Beierle - 1995 -- - The Lozi peoples of north-western Rhodesia - Victor W. Turner - 1952 -- - The Lozi of Barostseland in north-western Rhodesia - Max Gluckman - 1959 -- - Land usage in Barotseland - David Urlin Peters ; edited by N. W. Smith ; foreword by C. W. Lynn ; preface by William Allen and Max Gluckman. - 1960 -- - Essays on Lozi land and royal property - Max Gluckman - 1943 -- - Kinship and marriage among the Lozi of Northern Rhodesia and the Zulu of Natal - Max Gluckman - 1950 (1958 reprinting) -- - The political organization and the historical traditions of the Barotse on the upper Zambesi - Adolf E. Jensen - 1932 -- - The judicial process among the Barotse of Northern Rhodesia - Max Gluckman ; foreword by A. L. Goodart - 1967 -- - Magic, divination and witchcraft among the Barotse of Northern Rhodesia - Barrie Reynolds - 1963 -- , - Economy of the central Barotse plain - Max Gluckman - 1941 -- - The hidden hippopotamus: reappraisal in African history - Gwyn Prins - 1980 -- - Additional bibliography on the Lozi - Human Relations Area Files - 1993
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  • 8
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Chinese Canadians ; Chinesen ; Chinesen
    Abstract: This collection of 6 documents covers the time period from the middle of the nineteenth century to the 1980s with an emphasis on some of the major Chinatowns located in several Canadian cities. Much of the file deals with the migration of the Chinese to Canada and the restrictive immigration policies applied to them by the Canadian government. Nearly all the documents address the discriminatory and racist practices imposed on the Chinese immigrants by the Caucasian Canadian society. Probably the best general coverage on the Chinese in Canada is presented in Li, which deals with the period from their first arrival in Canada in 1858 to about 1985. Lai is a definitive history of Chinatowns in Canada from 1858-ca. 1985, with particular reference to Victoria, British Columbia. Works describing specific Chinatowns in specific cities begins with Thompson, which is an examination of the history and social organization of the Chinese population in Toronto, Canada. Anderson contributes a systematic analysis of the relationship between Vancouver's Chinese and Canadian communities from the late 1880s to about 1980. Hoe presents a socio-historical study of the structural changes taking place in various Chinese communities in British Columbia and Alberta (Calgary and Edmonton), from the mid-nineteenth century to ca. 1972
    Note: Culture summary: Chinese Canadians - John Beierle - 1995 -- - The Chinese in Canada - Peter S. Li - 1988 -- - Chinatowns: towns within cities in Canada - David Chuenyan Lai - 1988 -- - Toronto's Chinatown: the changing social organization of an ethnic community - Richard H. Thompson - 1989 -- - Vancouver's Chinatown: racial discourse in Canada, 1875-1980 - Kay J. Anderson - 1991 -- - Structural changes of two Chinese communities in Alberta, Canada - Ban Seng Hoe - 1976 -- - Additional bibliography on the Chinese in Canada - Human Relations Area Files - [1994]
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  • 9
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Bambute ; Mbuti ; Mbuti
    Abstract: The Mbuti (Bambuti, pl.) in a general sense are the Pygmies of the Ituri forest in Democratic Republic of the Congo and consist of four subgroups; the Aka, Efe, Mbuti, and Sua. This file on the Mbuti consists of 6 documents with coverage from 1930 to ca. 1975. The file is restricted in its coverage to the Pygmies of the southern and central Ituri forest who are associated with the Babira villagers. The literature contained in the Mbuti file is almost all by Colin Turnbull, whose fieldwork spanned the period from ca. 1950 through 1973
    Note: Culture summary: Mbuti - John Beierle - 1995 -- - The Mbuti Pygmies: an ethnographic survey - Colin M. Turnbull - 1965 -- - Wayward servants: the two worlds of the African Pygmies - Colin M. Turnbull - 1965 -- - The forest people - Colin M. Turnbull ; foreword by Harry L. Shapiro - 1962 -- - The Pygmies of the Ituri Forest - Patrick Putnam - 1948 -- - The Mbuti Pygmies: change and adaptation - by Colin M. Turnbull - 1983 -- - Additional bibliography on the Mbuti - Human Relations Area Files - 1993
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  • 10
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Berbers (Morocco) ; Berber ; Berber
    Abstract: The Shluh belong to the Masmuda branch of sedentary Berbers inhabiting the Grand-Atlas and Anti-Atlas Mountains and the plain of the Sous River Valley in southern Morocco. They are divided into a large number of relatively small named groups. The term Shluh refers rather indiscriminately to nearly all speakers of Berber dialects in Morocco. This file consists of six documents, three are translations from the French, and three are in English. Berque and Montagne are the major works in the file supplemented by the more recent data presented in Hatt. Montagne deals with the history and political evolution of the Shluh, dealing in turn with the Sous region, with the political organization of the Berber republics, and with the rise to personal power of individual chiefs. Dupas is a short description of the community storehouses in use among the Shluh. Hoffman contains general information on the structure of traditional society, ecology, and economy. Hatt updates the existing material on the Shluh through 1971, deals with the Idaw Tanan confederation of the Shluh, and contains information on economy, subsistence patterns, social structure, and social relationships
    Note: Culture summary: Shluh - John Beierle - 1995 -- - Social structures of the High Atlas - Jacques Berque - 1955 -- - The Berbers and the Makhzen in the south of Morocco: essay on the political transformation of the sedentary Berbers (the Chleuh group) - Robert Montagne - 1930 -- - Note on the collective storehouses of the western High Atlas (tribes of the Ida ou Mahmoud and the Seksaoua) - Pierre Dupas - 1929 -- - The structure of traditional Moroccan rural society - Bernard G. Hoffman - 1967 -- - Skullcaps and turbans: domestic authority and public leadership among the Idaw Tanan of the western High Atlas, Morocco - Doyle Gordon Hatt - 1974 [1993 copy] -- - Ethnographic bibliography of the Shluh - Human Relations Area Files - 1993
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  • 11
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Chinese Americans ; Chinatown (San Francisco, Calif.) ; Taiwanese Americans ; Chinesen ; Chinesen
    Abstract: Chinese Americans are the migrants and their descendants who migrated from China to the United States, starting in approximately 1848. This file contains fifteen documents covering the time period from ca. 1848 to the 1980s. These documents deal with Chinatowns located in several American cities (e.g., San Francisco, New York City), plus additional data on the Chinese American populations in such regional areas as the Monterey Bay region of California, and Hawaii. Much of the file deals with the history of the migration of the Chinese to the United States and the restrictive immigration policies applied to them by the United States government. Additional topics that appear in all the documents in this file are those of the discriminatory and racist practices imposed on the Chinese immigrants by the Caucasian American society, cultural adaptation and acculturation, Chinese associations, and ethnic businesses (e.g., restaurants, laundries, and groceries)
    Note: Culture summary: Chinese Americans - John Beierle - 1995 -- - The challenge of the American dream: the Chinese in the United States - Francis L. K. Hsu - 1971 -- - The Chinese experience in America - Shih-shan Henry Tsai - 1986 -- - Longtime Californ': a documentary study of an American Chinatown - Victor G. and Brett de Bary Nee - 1986 -- - Chinatown: most time, hard time - Chalsa M. Loo, et al. - 1991 -- - Bridging the Pacific: San Francisco Chinatown and its people - Thomas W. Chinn - 1989 -- - Chinese gold: the Chinese in the Monterey Bay region - Sandy Lydon - 1985 -- - Valley City: a Chinese community in America - Melford S. Weiss - 1974 -- - A Chinese American community: ethnicity and survival strategies - by Bernard P. Wong - 1979 -- - Chinatown, economic adaptation and ethnic identity of the Chinese - by Bernard P. Wong - 1982 -- , - Social and political change in New York's Chinatown: the role of voluntary associations - Chia-ling Kuo - 1977 -- - Chinatown: the socioeconomic potential of an urban enclave - Min Zhou ; foreword by Alejandro Portes - 1992 -- - Chinatown no more: Taiwan immigrants in contemporary New York - Hsiang-shui Chen - 1992 -- - The new Chinatown - Peter Kwong - 1987 -- - Sojourners and settlers: Chinese migrants in Hawaii - Clarence E. Glick - 1980 -- - Additional bibliography on Chinese in the United States - Human Relations Area Files - [1994]
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