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  • BVB  (8)
  • Online Resource  (8)
  • 2010-2014  (8)
  • 1945-1949
  • Human Relations Area Files  (8)
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  • Online Resource  (8)
Language
Years
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Subjects(RVK)
  • 1
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Pima Indians ; Tohono O'Odham Indians ; Tohono O'odham Indians--Religion ; Tohono O'Odham Indians--Social life and customs ; Tohono O'odham women ; Indians of North America--Agriculture ; Tohono O'odham Indians ; Tohono O'odham Indians--Health and hygiene ; Tohono O'odham Indians--Medicine ; Papago ; Papago
    Abstract: The O'odham collection consists of sixteen English language documents covering the Spanish period from 1687 to 1821; the Mexican period from 1821 to 1848, the American period from 1848 to approximately 1981, and interspersed, on occasion, with bits of information on the prehistory of the general region. Although many historians and anthropologists have treated the Pima and Papago as two separate peoples, by the early twenty-first century, the cultural similarity between the two, has led us to combine them in this collection under the new designation "O'odham". Cultural history and general ethnography are the major topics in many of the documents in this collection, notably by: Underhill; Fontana; Ezell; Bahr; and the history of Christianity among the Pima-Papago in Bahr. Other ethnographic topics discussed in this collection are: the life history of a Papago woman in Underhill; regional geography in Castetter; and Fontana; cultural adaptation in Fontana, Hackenberg, and Castetter. Personalilty development and child-rearing practices are major topics of discussion in Joseph. Finally, shamanism, theories of disease, and curing are all described in Bahr, while food and diet in comparison to disease factors, form a significant topic of discussion in Fazzino
    Note: Culture summary: O'odham - by Donald M. Bahr and David L. Kozak - 2011 -- - Papago Indian religion - Ruth Murray Underhill - 1946 -- - Social organization of the Papago Indians - by Ruth Murray Underhill - 1939 -- - The autobiography of a Papago woman - by Ruth Underhill - 1936 -- - The desert people: a study of the Papago Indians - by Alice Joseph, Rosamond B. Spicer, [and] Jane Chesky - 1949 -- - Pima and Papago Indian agriculture - Edward F. Castetter and Willis H. Bell - 1942 -- - Ethnobiological studies in the American Southwest: II: the ethnobiology of the Papago Indians - Edward F. Castetter and Ruth M. Underhill - 1935 -- - Pima and Papago: Introduction - Bernard L. Fontana - 1983 -- - History of the Papago - Bernard L. Fontana - 1983 -- - History of the Pima - Paul H. Ezell - 1983 -- - Pima and papago ecological adaptations - Robert A. Hackenberg - 1983 -- , - Pima and Papago social organization - Donald M. Bahr - 1983 -- - Pima and Papago medicine and philosophy - Donald M. Bahr - 1983 -- - Contemporary Pima - Sally Giff Pablo - 1983 -- - Pima-Papago Christianity - Donald M. Bahr - 1988 -- - Piman Shamanism and staying sickness (Ka':cim Mu'mkidag) - Donald M. Bahr, anthropologist ; Juan Gregorio, shaman ; David I. Lopez, interpreter ; Albert Alvarez, editor - [1974] -- - Continuity and change in Tohono O'odham food systems: implications for dietary interventions - David Fazzino - 2008
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  • 2
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Yurok Indians ; Indian children--North America ; Names, Geographical--California ; Yurok language ; California--Description and travel ; Klamath Indians ; Yurok Indians--Music--History and criticism ; Hupa Indians--Music--History and criticism ; Karok Indians--Music--History and criticism ; Folk songs, Yurok--California--History and criticism ; Folk songs, Hupa--California--History and criticism ; Folk songs, Karok--California--History and criticism ; Yurok ; Yurok
    Abstract: The Yurok collection consists of all English language documents covering a variety of ethnographic topics. The major source of information on the Yurok is found in Heizer and Mills which is an account of a coastal village through time (ca. 1775-1952), supplemented by additional information from Kroeber, and Pilling. Two of the studies in this collection deal with the Yurok's own view of their culture, in Thompson, and Pilling. The remaining collection is rounded out by data on child training and world view in Erickson; marriage as examined through genealogical records, in Waterman and Kroeber; geography, in Waterman; law, in Kroeber; the tradition of music and songs among the Yurok, in Keeling; women's attitude toward menstruation and associated rituals in Buckley; and finally physical anthropology in Ferreira
    Note: Culture summary: Yurok - Thomas R. Hester - 2011 -- - The four ages of Tsurai: a documentary history of the Indian village on Trinidad Bay - Robert F. Heizer and John E. Mills ; Translations of Spanish documents by Donald C. Cutter - 1952 -- - Yurok marriages - by T. T. Waterman and A. L. Kroeber - 1934 -- - Observations on the Yurok: childhood and world image - by Erik Homburger Erikson - 1943 -- - Yurok geography - T. T. Waterman - 1920 -- - Law of the Yurok Indians - A. L. Kroeber - 1928 -- - Handbook of the Indians of California - A. L. Kroeber - 1925 -- - To the American Indian - Lucy Thompson - 1916 -- - Yurok - Arnold R. Pilling - 1978 -- - Slipping through sky holes: Yurok body imagery in northern California - Mariana K. Leal Ferreira - 1998 -- - Menstruation and the power of Yurok women: methods in cultural reconstruction - Thomas Buckley - 1982 -- , - Yurok aristocracy and 'great houses' - Arnold R. Pilling - 1989 -- - Cry for luck: sacred song and speech among the Yurok, Hupa, and Karok Indians of northwestern California - Richard Keeling - 1992
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
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  • 3
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Luo (Kenyan and Tanzanian people) ; Luo (Nilotic tribe) ; Kinship--Kenya ; Law, Luo (Kenya and Tanzania) Marriage (Luo Kenya and Tanzanial law) ; Luo (Nilotic tribe) Social change ; Language and culture ; Ethnicity--Kenya ; Luo (Kenyan and Tanzanian people)--Money ; Luo (Kenyan and Tanzanian people)--Economic conditions ; Economic anthropology--Kenya ; Kenya--Economic conditions ; Luo ; Luo
    Abstract: The Luo collection covers cultural, historical, economic and demographic information circa 1895 to 2000. There are a number of general ethnographies on Luo culture and society as observed by professional anthropologists in late the 1920s to the mid-1930s. Specific themes covered in these works include tribes, kinship and social organization, marriage and sex restrictions, religion, life cycles and burials. These ethnographic accounts are further supplemented by the works of historian Jean Hay, discussing changes in material culture and gender relations that took place before the Second World War as a direct result of British colonial rule and the complex forces it set in motion. The collection also includes anthropological works that specifically focus on the post Second World War decade with particular emphasis on dynamics of lineage and family ties, customary law and Luo attitudes toward homicide and suicide. Other documents in the collection focus on the actual experiences of Luo men and women with urbanization and nationally designed development programs in the post-independence period (1963-2000). Specific themes covered include Luo responses to urbanization, modern education and population growth, changes in public health and nutrition, land policy, and the local effects of labor migration and global market forces; and misguided development programs. The remaining documents by Blount provide a linguistic analysis of Luo genealogical accounting, personal naming systems, and comprehensive bibliographic information of existing works on Luo culture and society, circa 1920-2000
    Note: Culture summary: Luo - Ingrid Herbich - 2011 -- - The Luo of Kenya - by Audrey Butt - 1952 -- - Luo tribes and clans - by E. E. Evans-Pritchard - 1949 -- - Marriage customs of the Luo of Kenya - E. E. Evans-Pritchard - 1950 -- - Some preliminary notes on Luo marriage customs - K. C. Shaw - 1932 -- - Some customs of the Luwo (or Nilotic Kavirondo) living in South Kavirondo - By The Rev. H. Hartmann - 1928 -- - Ghostly vengeance among the Luo of Kenya - by Professor E. E. Evans-Pritchard - 1950 -- - Lineage formation among the Luo - by A. Southall - 1952 -- - Homicide and suicide among the Joluo of Kenya - G. M. Wilson - 1960 -- - Luo customary law and marriage laws customs - Gordon M. Wilson - 1961 -- - The cultural definition of political response: lineal destiny among the Luo - David Parkin - 1978 -- , - Bitter money: cultural economy and some African meanings of forbidden commodities - Parker Shipton - 1989 -- - Daughters of the lakes and rivers: colonization and the land rights of Luo women - Achola Pala Okeyo - 1980 -- - Women in the household economy: managing multiple roles - Achola Pala Okeyo - 1979 -- - Agreeing to agree on genealogy: a Luo sociology of knowledge - Ben G. Blount - [1975] -- - Luo personal names: reference and meaning - Ben G. Blount - 1993 -- - Hoes and clothes in a Luo household: changing consumption in a colonial economy, 1906-1936 - Margaret Jean Hay - 1996 -- - Women as owners, occupants, and managers of property in colonial western Kenya - Margaret Jean Hay - 1982 -- - The significance of earth-eating: social and cultural aspects of geophagy among Luo children - P. Wenzel Geissler - 2000 -- - Medicinal plants used by Luo mothers and children in Bondo district, Kenya - P. Wenzel Geissler, Stephen A. Harris, Ruth J. Prince, Anja Olsen, R. Achieng' Odhiambo, Helen Oketch-Rabah, Philister A. Madiega, Anne Andersen, Per Mølgaard - 2002 -- , - Luo entrustment: foreign finance and the soil of the spirits in Kenya - Parker Shipton - 1995 -- - Debts and trespasses: land, mortgages, and the ancestors in western Kenya - Parker Shipton - 1992 -- - Siaya: the historical anthropology of an African landscape - David William Cohen, E.S. Atiendo Odhiambo - 1989 -- - Luo bibliography - Benjamin Blount - 2010
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  • 4
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Omaha Indians ; Indians of North America--Great Plains--Social conditions ; Acculturation--Great Plains ; Indian women--Great Plains ; Indians of North America--Secret societies ; Omaha ; Omaha
    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
    Note: Culture summary: 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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  • 5
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Mongo (African people) ; Mongo (African people)--History ; Mongo (African people)--Economic conditions ; Mongo (African people)--Social conditions ; Subsistence economy--Congo (Democratic Republic)--Tshuapa ; River Region ; Imperialism ; Oral tradition--Congo (Democratic Republic)--Tshuapa River Region ; Tshuapa River Region (Congo)--History ; Tshuapa River Region (Congo)--Economic conditions ; Tshuapa River Region (Congo)--Social conditions ; Mongo ; Mongo
    Abstract: The Mongo Collection, covers cultural and historical information on the Nkundu and Boyela (central Mongo) and Ntomba and Ekonda (southern Mongo), circa 1880s to 1980s. The earliest source was compiled by Gustave E Hulstaert, who lived among the Nkundu (northern Mongo) in the 1930s, who provides rich information on Mongo marriage types and family life. Also included is an article by E. Boelaert, which may be the first systematic attempt at understanding Mongo social organization. Nelson explores the history of the Mongo people from 1880s-1940s. Topics covered include forced labor on foreign rubber and palm oil plantations, changes in the power base of local leaders, and transformations in kinship system and community organizations. Héléne Pagezy discusses the Mongo practice of making first time mothers build a plump physique. Hiroaki Sato describes and analyzes the hunting techniques of the Boyela of northern Mongo
    Note: Culture Summary: Mongo - Ronald Johnson and Teferi Abate Adem - 2010 -- - Marriage among the Nkundu - Gustave E. Hulstaert - 1938 -- - Nkundo society - E. Boelaert - 1940 -- - Colonialism in the Congo basin, 1880-1940 - by Samuel H. Nelson - 1994 -- - Fatness and culture among the southern Mongo (Zaire): the case of the primparous nursing woman - Hèléne Pagezy - 1991 -- - Hunting of the Boyela, slash-and-burn agriculturalists, in the central Zaire forest - Hiroaki Sato - 1983
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  • 6
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Tewa Indians ; Pueblo Indians ; San Ildefonso (N.M.) ; San Juan Pueblo (N.M.) ; Tewa ; Tewa
    Abstract: The NT18 Tewa Pueblos documents, all in English, cover a time span from approximately 1540 to the late twentieth century. Although this collection does deal to some extent with most of the Tewa pueblos of New Mexico – San Juan, Santa Clara, San Ildefonso, Tesuque, Pojoaque, and Nambe - major emphasis in this document is on the two pueblos of San Juan and San Ildefonso. A "classic" study of traditional Tewa ethnography, at least up to 1927, is found in Parsons, focusing on social organization, ritual, and ceremonies, but lacking much information on material culture. Brief culture summaries on some of the other pueblos will be found as follows: San Ildefonso; Santa Clara; Nambe; Pojoaque; Tesuque; and San Juan. Other major topics include population statistics on San Juan in Aberle; recent (twentieth century) culture change in San Ildefonso in Whitman; Tewa world view and the role of dual moiety organization in a functioning society in Ortiz; and details of the Raingod Drama, and the making of medicine men in San Juan in Laski
    Note: Culture Summary: Tewa Pueblos - Sue-Ellen Jacobs - 2010 -- - The social organization of the Tewa of New Mexico - by Elsie Clews Parsons - 1929 -- - The Pueblo Indians of San Ildefonso - by William Whitman, 3rd - 1947 -- - The San Ildefonso of New Mexico - William Whitman - 1940 -- - The vital history of San Juan Pueblo - Sophie D. Aberle, J. H. Watkins, and E. H. Pitney - 1940 -- - Child mortality among Pueblo Indians - Sophie B. D. Aberle - 1931-1932 -- - The making of pottery at San Ildefonso - Herbert J. Spinden - 1911 -- - Seeking life - By Vera Laski ; with a foreword by John Collier - 1958 -- - The Tewa world: space, time, being, and becoming in a Pueblo society - Alfonso Ortiz - [1969] -- - Barter, gift, or violence: an analysis of Tewa inter tribal exchange - Richard I. Ford - 1972 -- - Being a grandmother in the Tewa world - Sue-Ellen Jacobs - 1995 -- - San Juan Pueblo - Alfonso Ortiz - 1979 -- , - Santa Clara Pueblo - Nancy S. Arnon and W. W. Hill - 1979 -- - San Ildefonso Pueblo - Sandra A. Edelman - 1979 -- - Nambe Pueblo - Randall H. Speirs - 1979 -- - Pojoaque Pueblo - Marjorie F. Lambert - 1979 -- - Tesuque Pueblo - Sandra A. Edelman and Alfonso Ortiz - 1979
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  • 7
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Nambicuara Indians ; Nambikwara ; Nambikwara
    Abstract: The Nambicuara Collection documents, now all of them in English, cover cultural, economic and environmental information circa 1907 to 1987. The basic source, translated from French, is by Levi-Strauss. This work deals mainly with family and social life, but also covers religion, kinship and subsistence activities. Information from this source is further supplemented by a brief ethnographic description originally published in the Handbook of South American Indians and two other works which focus on specific themes including chieftainship and social use of kinship terms. Seven documents in the collection were written by anthropologists P. David Price and Paul L. Aspelin who conducted original ethnographic fieldwork among different Nambicuara groups in 1967-1976. Five of the documents in this group revisit Levi-Strauss's data and analysis of Nambicuara economic activities, political organization and leadership, while the remaining two focus on specific themes including socioeconomic change and government efforts at resettling several Nambicuara groups. The collection also includes a work, translated from Portuguese, by E. Roqueto-Pinto (based on fieldwork conducted in 1910s) that represents the first anthropological description of the Nambicuara and their culture. This book features extensive anthropometric and linguistic data on Nambicuara groups who lived along a newly built public road crossing through the region
    Note: Culture Summary: Nambicuara - Luiz Boglár and Teferi Abate Adem - 2010 -- - Family and social life of the Nambikwara Indians - Claude Lévi-Strauss - 1948 -- - The Nambicuara - Claude Lévi-Strauss - 1948 -- - The Social and psychological aspect of chieftainship in a primitive tribe: The Nambikuara of northwestern Mato Grosso - Claude Lévi-Strauss - 1945 -- - The Social use of kinship terms among Brazilian Indians - Claude Lévi-Strauss - 1943 -- - Rondonia - E. Roquette-Pinto - 1938 -- - A Reservation for the Nambiquara - David Price - 1982 -- - Nambiquara leadership - David Price - 1981 -- - The present situation of the Nambiquara - P. David Price ; Cecil E. Cook, Jr. - 1969 -- - Nambiquara geopolitical organisation - David Price - 1987 -- - Nambicuara economic dualism: Lévi-Strauss in the garden, once again - Paul L. Aspelin - 1976 -- , - Real toads in imaginary gardens: Aspelin vs. Lévi-Strauss on Nambiquara nomadism - P. David Price - 1978 -- - The ethnography of Nambicuara agriculture - Paul L. Aspelin - 1979
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  • 8
    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: Indians of South America--Brazil ; Trumaí Indians ; Trumai ; Trumai
    Abstract: The Trumai File contains a monograph by Murphy and Quain, the only available primary ethnographic account on the Trumai. This document provides a first hand account of Trumai culture and society as observed by anthropologist Buell Quain in 1938. The document is especially comprehensive in its coverage and analyses of the Trumai personality, ethos, life cycle, and interpersonal attitudes and behavior, but less extensive on material culture and religion. The document also incorporates important ethnographic data from the work of Karl Von den Steinen who visited the Trumai in 1884
    Note: Culture Summary: Trumai - Teferi Abate Adem - 2010 -- - The TrumaíIndians of central Brazil - [by] Robert F. Murphy and Buell Quain - [1955]
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