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  • BSZ  (169)
  • Human Relations Area Files, Inc  (169)
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  • 1
    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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  • 2
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Adat law--Perak ; Clans--Malaysia--Rembau (Negeri Sembilan) ; Ethnology--Fieldwork ; Ethnology--Malaysia--Kampong Jelebu (Negeri Sembilan) ; Ethnology--Malaysia--Kelantan ; Ethnology--Methodology ; Fish trade--Malay Peninsula ; Fishers--Malay Peninsula ; Gender identity--Malaysia--Negeri Sembilan ; Home economics--Kelantan ; Inheritance and succession (Adat law) ; Inheritance and succession--Malaysia--Rembau (Negeri Sembilan) ; Kelantan--Civilization ; Kelantan--Social life and customs ; Malaya ; Malays (Asian people) ; Malays (Asian people)--Kinship ; Malays (Asian people)--Kinship--Malaysia--Negeri Sembilan ; Malays (Asian people)--Land tenure ; Malays (Asian people)--Malaysia--Negeri Sembilan--Social conditions ; Matrilineal kinship--Malaysia--Negeri Sembilan ; Negeri Sembilan--Politics and government ; Negeri Sembilan--Social life and customs ; Perak--Politics and government ; Rembau (Negeri Sembilan)--Economic conditions ; Rembau (Negeri Sembilan)--Social conditions ; Selangor--Politics and government ; Sex role--Malaysia--Negeri Sembilan ; Malaien
    Abstract: Based on fieldwork in the Jelebu district of Negri Sembilan state in 1978-1993, Peletz discusses the effects of colonialism and global market forces on property relations, kinship system and gender issues. Raybeck described the life and cultural values of Malayan villagers near the capital of Kelantan state as observed in 1968-1993. Together, these works provide rich information relating to important socioeconomic changes that have occurred at the family and village levels since the advent of colonialism in 1830
    Abstract: The Malays collection consists of documents, all of them in English, containing cultural, historical and socio-economic information from 1904-1996. Some of the documents were compiled by British government officials who spent most of their career in different parts of Malaysia beginning from early twentieth century. Together, these documents provide the earliest first hand information on Malayan culture and society. Topics covered in these works include history of Malayan culture and society, classic Malay literature, folklores and proverbs, customary law, and daily life and salient features of Malayan custom, arts and entertainment, magic and religious practitioners, traditional architecture, and aspects of material culture. Other themes include economic activities with particular reference to fishing, hunting, trapping, and rice farming.^
    Abstract: The information from these earlier documents is further enriched by the works of anthropologists Raymond and Rosemary Firth who conducted ethnographic fieldwork among Malayan villagers in Kelantan State 1939-1940. Together, these works provide a thorough description of pre-independence Malayan culture and society, but mostly focusing on economic organization and gender roles. The collection also includes the works of two Ph.D. students who completed their dissertation research in Malaysia under the guidance of Raymond Firth. One is M. G. Swift who studied village life in Jelebu district, Negri Sembilan. The other is J. M. Gullicks work which describes dynamics of indigenous Malayan political systems since 1870. The remaining documents in the collection were compiled by two contemporary American anthropologists; Michael Peletz and Douglas Raybeck.^
    Description / Table of Contents: Malays - Manning Nash - 2011 -- - The Malays: a cultural history - [by] Richard Winstedt - 1950 -- - Malay fishermen: their peasant economy - by Raymond Firth - 1946 -- - Housekeeping among Malay peasants - Rosemary Firth - 1943 -- - Malay literature: romance, history, poetry - [by] R. J. Wilkinson - 1924 -- - Malay literature: literature of Malay folk-lore, beginnings, fable, farcical tales, romance - [by] R. O. Winstedt - 1923 -- - Malay literature: Malay proverbs on Malay character. Letter-writing - [by] R. J. Wilkinson - 1925 -- - Law: introductory sketch - [by] R. J. Wilkinson - 1922 -- - History: notes on the history of the Negri Sembilan - [by] R. J. Wilkinson - 1911 -- - Life and customs: the incidents of Malay life - [by] R. J. Wilkinson - 1920 -- - Life and customs: the circumstances of Malay life, the kampong, the house, furniture, dress, food - [by] R. O. Winstedt - 1925 --^
    Description / Table of Contents: Malay amusements - [by] R. J. Wilkinson - 1925 -- - Malay industries: arts and crafts - [by] R. O. Winstedt - 1925 -- - Malay industries: fishing, hunting and trapping - [by] R. O. Winstedt - 1929 -- - Malay industries: rice planting - [by] G. E. Shaw - 1926 -- - The Malay magician being shaman, Saiva and Sufi - [by] Richard Winstedt - 1961 -- - Indigenous political systems of western Malaya - [by] J. M. Gullick - 1958 -- - Reason and passion: representations of gender in a Malay society - Michael G. Peletz - 1996 -- - A share of the harvest: kinship, property, and social history among the Malays of Rembau - Michael Gates Peletz - 1988 -- - Mad dogs, Englishmen, and the errant anthropologist: fieldwork in Malaysia - Douglas Raybeck - 1996 -- - The elastic rule: conformity and deviance in Kelantan village life - Douglas Raybeck - 1986 -- - Malay peasant society in Jelebu - by M.G. Swift - 1965
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  • 3
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Islam--Kazakhstan--Turkistan--20th century ; Islam. gtt ; Kazakhs ; Kazakhs--Religious life ; Kazakhstan--Turkistan--Religion--20th century ; Sufism--Kazakhstan--Turkistan--20th century ; Turkistan (Kazakhstan)--Religion--20th century
    Abstract: The Kazak collection covers a wide variety of ethnographic topics, with a time span covering a period from approximately 1821 to 2005. For a general overview of Kazak ethnography, see Forde, and Svanberg. Other major topics discussed are: Kazak social institutions in Hudson; the impact of the Russian conquest of Kazakhstan on native judicial customs in Grodekov; kinship systems and kinship terminology in Arghynbaev; and land use changes among the Kazak in two townships in western China in Bedunah and Harris. Other subjects of subjects of ethnographic interest in this collection are: an examination of the Kazak intellectual elite; an examination of the resurgence of feasting and gift-giving among Kazak households in the post-Soviet era; migration patterns in western Mongolia; and spirituality and Muslim life among the Kazaks in the city of Turkistan, in southern Kazakstan
    Description / Table of Contents: Kazakh - Vadim P. Kurylev - 2011 -- - Kazak social structure - [by] Alfred E. Hudson - 1938 -- - The Kazakhs and Kirgiz of the Syr-Darya Oblast - By N. I. Grodekov - 1889 -- - The kinship system and customs connected with the ban on pronouncing the personal names of elder relatives among the Kazakhs - Kh. A. Argynbaev - 1984 -- - Observations on changes in Kazak pastoral use in two townships in western China: a loss of traditions - Don Bedunah and Richard Harris - 2005 -- - The Kazak, Kirghiz, and Kalmuck: horse and sheep herders of Central Asia - C. Daryll Forde - [1934] -- - A note on romanization and preface - Ingvar Svanberg - 1999 -- - The Kazak nation - Ingvar Svanberg - 1999 -- - The new Kazak elite - Karen Odgaard and Jens Simonsen - 1999 -- - The dynamics of feasting and gift exchange in rural Kazakstan - Cynthia Ann Werner - 1999 --^
    Description / Table of Contents: scenarios for managing diversity - Hilda C. Eitzen - 1999 -- - The Kazaks of western Mongolia - Peter Finke - 1999 -- - Bibliography - Ingvar Svanberg - 1999 -- - Photographs - Peter Finke, Jens Simonsen, Cynthia Ann Werner - 1999 -- - Muslim Turkistan: Kazak religion and collective memory - Bruce G. Privratsky - 2001
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  • 4
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Ethnology--French Polynesia--Marquesas Islands ; Ethnophilosophy--French Polynesia--Marquesas Islands ; Individualism ; Marquesans ; Marquesans--Psychology ; Marquesans--Social life and customs ; Marquesas Islands (French Polynesia)--Social life and customs ; Social psychology--French Polynesia--Marquesas Islands ; Tattooing--French Polynesia--Marquesas Islands
    Abstract: The Marquesans collection covers a wide range of ethnographic data, covering a time period of from 1770 to approximately 1977. Although nearly all the documents in this collection discuss Marquesan traditional ethnography to varying degrees, probably the best general coverage will be found in Handy, and the works by Linton. Other ethnographic topics in this collection are as follows: tattooing designs, methods, and differences between southeastern and northwestern island groups in Handy; Marquesan sexual behavior in Suggs; a theoretical and comparative study of the Marquesan understanding of person, personal development, differentiation, similarities and potentials in Kirkpatrick, and a summary of major themes in the literature on Polynesian socialization in Martini and Kirkpatrick
    Description / Table of Contents: Marquesans - Nicholas Thomas - 2011 -- - The native culture in the Marquesas - by E. S. Craighill Handy - 1923 -- - The material culture of the Marquesas Islands - by Ralph Linton - 1923 -- - Tattooing in the Marquesas - by Willowdean Chatterson Handy - 1922 -- - Marquesan culture - by Ralph Linton - 1939 -- - Marquesan sexual behavior - by Robert C. Suggs - 1963 -- - The Marquesan notion of the person - by John Kirkpatrick - 1983 -- - Parenting in Polynesia: a view from the Marquesas - Mary Martini, John Kirkpatrick - 1992
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  • 5
    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: Acculturation ; Kinship--Tanzania ; Land tenure--Tanzania ; Ngonde (African people) ; Ngonde (African people)--Politics and government ; Ngonde (African people)--Social life and customs ; Ngonde (Malawi)--Politics and government ; Nyakyusa (African people) ; Nyakyusa (African people)--Social life and customs ; Primitive societies
    Abstract: The Nyakyusa and Ngonde collection covers cultural, economic and historical information, circa 1875 to 1983. Most of the documents in the collection were written by the husband-wife team of Godfrey and Monica Wilson based on ethnographic fieldwork conducted in 1934-1938. The basic introduction to Nyakyusa society and culture is Godfrey Wilson's "An Introduction to Nyakyusa society". The information in this document is further enriched by the works of Monica Wilson which, together, provide a comprehensive first-hand account of Nyakyusa culture and society as observed in mid-1930s. Main themes covered in these works include social and economic structure of a Nyakyusa age-village, communal rituals related to burials, marriage, birth, misfortunes, etc, relationship of religion to Nyakyusa social structure, changes in generational and gender relations, and traditional land tenure systems. The collection also includes two other documents that focus on the Ngonde. These documents cover the traditional political structure of Ngonde society and aspects of socioeconomic change since 18th century. Finally, the collection also includes one essay which seeks to re-evaluate some of the key arguments in the earlier work by the Wilsons. The focus is on dynamics of kinship and chieftainship in age-villages, a uniquely Nyakyusa residence pattern in which a cohort of boys establish their own village settlement in previously uninhabited land
    Description / Table of Contents: Nyakyusa and Ngonde - Michael G. Kenny - 2011 -- - Good company: a study of Nyakyusa age-villages - Monica Wilson - 1951 -- - Rituals of kinship among the Nyakyusa - Monica Hunter Wilson - 1957 -- - The land rights of individuals among the Nyakyusa - by Godfrey Wilson - 1938 -- - The constitution of Ngonde - by Godfrey Wilson - 1939 -- - An introduction to Nyakyusa society - Godfrey Wilson - 1936 -- - Communal rituals of the Nyakyusa - Monica Wilson - 1959 -- - Towards a better understanding of socio-economic change in 18th- and 19th-century Ungonde - Owen J. M. Kalinga - 1984 -- - For men and elders: change in the relations of generations and of men and women among the Nyakyusa-Ngonde people, 1875-1971 - by Monica Wilson - 1977 -- - The social structure of the Nyakyusa: a re-evaluation - Michael G. McKenny
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  • 6
    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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  • 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: Bella Coola Indians ; Bellacoola
    Abstract: The Nuxalk collection covers a wide range of ethnographic topics, but is somewhat lacking in data on material culture. The date of coverage for the collection ranges from approximately 1840 to 2006. The primary documents dealing with the traditional ethnography of the Nuxalk are: McIlwraith, Kennedy and Bouchard, and Boas. Other topics include: mythology and religion in Boas; the importance of magic and sorcery in Nuxalk society in Smith; the examination of two old Nuxalk dance masks in Kramer; the repatriation of an old Echo mask to the tribe in Kramer; and the teaching of Nuxalk cultural traditions by the traditional vs. western methods in Kramer
    Description / Table of Contents: Nuxalk - Adam Arthur Solomonian - 2011 -- - The Bella Coola Indians: volume one - by T. F. McIlwraith - 1948 -- - The Bella Coola Indians: volume two - by T. F. McIlwraith - 1948 -- - Sympathetic magic and witchcraft among the Bellacoola - by Harlan I. Smith - 1925 -- - Third report on the Indians of British Columbia - by Dr. Franz Boas - 1892 -- - The mythology of the Bella Coola Indians - by Franz Boas - 1900 -- - Bella Coola - Dorothy I. D. Kennedy and Randall T. Bouchard - 1990 -- - References - Jennifer Kramer - 2006 -- - Prologue: the repatriation of the Nuxalk Echo mask - Jennifer Kramer - 2006 -- - Privileged knowledge versus public education: tensions at Acwsalcta, the Nuxalk Nation 'Place of Learning' - Jennifer Kramer - 2006 -- - Physical and figurative repatriation: case studies of the Nuxalk Echo mask and the Nuxalk Sun mask - Jennifer Kramer - 2006
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  • 8
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: California--Description and travel ; Folk songs, Hupa--California--History and criticism ; Folk songs, Karok--California--History and criticism ; Folk songs, Yurok--California--History and criticism ; Hupa Indians--Music--History and criticism ; Indian children--North America ; Karok Indians--Music--History and criticism ; Klamath Indians ; Names, Geographical--California ; Yurok Indians ; Yurok Indians--Music--History and criticism ; Yurok language ; 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 Yuroks 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; womens attitude toward menstruation and associated rituals in Buckley; and finally physical anthropology in Ferreira
    Description / Table of Contents: 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 --^
    Description / Table of Contents: sacred song and speech among the Yurok, Hupa, and Karok Indians of northwestern California - Richard Keeling - 1992
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  • 9
    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
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  • 10
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Economic anthropology--Kenya ; Ethnicity--Kenya ; Kenya--Economic conditions ; Kinship--Kenya ; Language and culture ; Law, Luo (Kenya and Tanzania) Marriage (Luo Kenya and Tanzanial law) ; Luo (Kenyan and Tanzanian people) ; Luo (Kenyan and Tanzanian people)--Economic conditions ; Luo (Kenyan and Tanzanian people)--Money ; Luo (Nilotic tribe) ; Luo (Nilotic tribe) Social change
    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
    Description / Table of Contents: 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 --^
    Description / Table of Contents: 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 --^
    Description / Table of Contents: 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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  • 11
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: French language--Dictionaries--Teda ; Teda (African people) ; Tibbu (African people)
    Abstract: The documents in the Teda collection, all of them in English, cover a wide variety of cultural, historical and ecological information, circa 1930s to 1980s. The basic sources to consult are two documents translated from French and German to English for HRAF. One is the work of Jean Chapelle, a Colonel in the French army who, arriving at the inception of the final French occupation in early 1930s, worked among the Teda of Tibesti for twenty-five years. The other is by Andreas Kronenberg, a German-speaking professional anthropologist, who conducted fieldwork in the same area in 1953-1954. Together, these documents provide comprehensive information on Teda culture, history, environment, settlement pattern, clan system, material culture, and religious life. The remaining documents compliment these classic ethnographic accounts with additional information. One of these documents provides a general description of Teda culture and society based on fieldwork both in Tibesti and two other locations not covered by previous researchers. A second document is an ethnographic dictionary with covers numerous small but often unique bits of information on a wide range of topics. The remaining last document is a journal article discussing how the Teda came to conquer the Chadian State by establishing dominance in central government in the later 1970s and early 1980s
    Description / Table of Contents: Teda - Jan Simpson - 2011 -- - The Teda of Tibesti, Borku, and Kawar in the eastern Sahara - Walter Buchanan Cline - 1950 -- - The Teda of Tibesti - Andreas Kronenberg - 1958 -- - Teda ethnographic dictionary preceded by a French-Teda lexicon - Charles Le Coeur - 1950 -- - Black nomads of the Sahara - Jean Chapelle - 1957 -- - The Chadian Tubu: contemporary nomads who conquered a state - Robert Buijtenhuijs - 2001
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  • 12
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: China--Description and travel ; Ethnology--China ; Ethnology--China--Yunnan ; Nu (Chinese people) ; Religion--China--Yunnan ; Yi (Chinese people)
    Abstract: The Yi Collection contains documents concerning twentieth century ethnographic fieldwork and the history of the Yi. The core ethnography is found in books by the anthropologist Lin Yaohua on Yi kinship and genealogical system and Yi society, politics, economy and religion based on fieldwork carried out in 1943. Ma and Lei wrote on Yi exorcism rituals and religion in the same period. Tseng wrote a short ethnography on Yi culture and history based on a 1941 excursion in the region. Graham provides a very brief overview of Yi culture and society. Feng looks at historical accounts of Yi in Chinese and Western records going back as early as 400 BC. The missionary Pollard, who lived in southwestern China from 1888-1915, writes about Yi material culture circa 1900. Mueggler did his fieldwork in the 1990s and writes about a past form of political organization imposed on the Yi by the Han Chinese during the Imperial and Republican periods and which is now used in Yi historical discourse to articulate an unique location and identity within contemporary Chinese society
    Description / Table of Contents: Yi - Lin Yueh-Hwa (Lin Yaohua) - 2011 -- - The Lolo of Liang-shan - [by] Yueh-hwa Lin ; translated by Ju Shu Pan - 1947 -- - Exorcism: a custom of the Black Lolo - [by] Hsueh-liang Ma ; translated by Lien-en Tsao - 1944 -- - Ancestor worship of the Lolo in Ch'êng-chiang, Yunnan - [by] Chin-liu Lei ; translated by Lien-en Tsai - 1944 -- - In unknown China: a record of the observations, adventures and experiences of a pioneer missionary during a prolonged sojourn amongst the wild and unknown Nosu tribe of western China - by S. Pollard - 1921 -- - The Lolo district in Liang-Shan - [by] Tseng Chao-lun; translated by Josette M. Yeu - 1945 -- - The Lolo of Szechuan Province, China - D. C. Graham - 1930 -- - Kinship system of the Lolo - Lin Yueh-Hwa - 1946 -- - The historical origins of the Lolo - Feng Han-Yi and J. K. Shryock - 1938 -- - Procreative metaphor and productive unity in an Yi headmanship - Erik Mueggler - 1998
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  • 13
    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: Miskito Indians ; Misquito
    Description / Table of Contents: Miskito - Mary W. Helms - 2011 -- - Ethnographical survey of the Miskito and Sumu Indians of Honduras and Nicaragua - by Eduard Conzemius - 1932 -- - The health and customs of the Miskito Indians of northern Nicaragua - Michel Pijoan - 1946 -- - It's shame that makes men and women enemies: the politics of intimacy among the Miskitu of Kakabila - Mark Jamieson - 2000 -- - Masks and madness: ritual expressions of the transition to adulthood among Miskitu adolescents - Mark Jamieson - 2001 -- - Ethnobotany of the Miskitu of eastern Nicaragua - Felix G. Coe ; Gregory J. Anderson - 1997 -- - Of kings and contexts: ethnohistorical interpretations of Miskito political structure and function - Mary W. Helms - 1986 -- - Asang: adaptations to culture contact in a Miskito community - [by] Mary W. Helms - 1971 --^
    Description / Table of Contents: Miskitu women's strategies in northern Honduras - Laura Hobson Herlihy - 2006 -- - Matrifocality and women's power on the Miskito Coast - Laura Hobson Herlihy - 2007
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  • 14
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Marshallese ; Ethnology--Marshall Islands ; Majuro (Marshall Islands) ; Bevölkerung ; Marshallinseln ; Marshallinseln ; Bevölkerung
    Abstract: The Marshallese collection consists of 15 documents, covering a wide variety of cultural and historical information, circa 1900 to 2005. The earliest descriptions of Marshallese culture and society in the collection are translations from the German originally compiled by a colonial official, two ethnologists, and a missionary. Together, these three documents provide detailed geographic and ethnographic information as observed in 1900-1909. Two documents in the collection are first-hand accounts of Marshallese village life and economic situation as observed in 1946-1947. One of these was a commissioned research by the U.S. government company which sought background cultural and economic information for planning future economic development for the Marshall Islands. The other was authored by Alexander Spoehr, a former U.S. Navy who returned to the Majuro in 1947 as a civilian to conduct ethnological work. In this work, Spoehr contrasts changes in Marshallese culture he observed with his own earlier observations while on active duty with the Navy during World War II. L. M. Carucci conducted extensive fieldwork among inhabitants of Ujelang/Enewetak Atolls on various occasions in 1976-2005. Topics covered by Carrucci include domestic violence (1990, no. 9), community life and concepts of morality (1998, no. 10), dynamics of grandparent/grandchildren relations, aspects of cosmology (1989, no. 22), and rites of passages. The remaining documents in the collection further enrich information in the above three category of works with additional themes and in-depth analyses including land tenure and inheritance rules, gender and family life, internal political dynamics and international relations, and contemporary development issues
    Note: Culture summary: Marshallese - Laurence Marshall Carucci - 2011 -- - Majuro: a village in the Marshall Islands - Alexander Spoehr - 1949 -- - Ralik-Ratak (Marshall Islands) - Augustin Krämer and Hans Nevermann - 1938 -- - The Marshall Islanders: life and customs, thought and religion of a South Seas people - August Erdland - 1914 -- - The Marshall Islanders - Arno Senfft - 1903 -- - Land tenure in the Marshall Islands - J. E. Tobin - 1952 -- - Notes on the Marshall Islands - Camilla H. Wedgwood - 1943 -- - The economic organization of the Marshall Islanders - Leonard E. Mason - 1947 -- - The source of the force in Marshallese cosmology - Laurence Marshall Carucci - 1989 -- - Negotiations of violence in the Marshallese household - Laurence Marshall Carucci - 1990 -- - Working wrongly and seeking the straight: remedial remedies on Enewetak Atoll - Laurence Marshall Carucci - 1998 -- , - Continuities and changes in Marshallese grandparenting - Laurence Marshall Carucci - 2007 -- - JEKERO: symbolizing the transition to manhood in the Marshall Islands - Laurence Marshall Carucci - 1987 -- - A Marshallese nation emerges from the political fragmentation of American Micronesia - Leonard Mason - 1989 -- - Accounting for change: bringing interdependence into defining sustainability - Karen L. Nero - 1999 -- - Conceptions of maturing and dying in the 'middle of heaven' - Laurence Marshall Carucci - 1985
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  • 15
    Language: English
    Pages: Online-Ressource
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Indians of North America--Agriculture ; Pima Indians ; Tohono O'Odham Indians ; Tohono O'Odham Indians--Social life and customs ; Tohono O'odham Indians ; Tohono O'odham Indians--Health and hygiene ; Tohono O'odham Indians--Medicine ; Tohono O'odham Indians--Religion ; Tohono O'odham women
    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: - 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 , 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 --
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  • 16
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Turkana (African people) ; Turkana (African people)--Economic conditions ; Nomads--Kenya--Turkana ; Human ecology--Kenya--Turkana ; Turkana (African people)--Domestic animals ; Turkana (African people)--Social conditions ; Turkana (African people)--Land tenure ; Cattle herding--Kenya--Turkana District ; Cattle stealing--Kenya--Turkana District ; Turkana District (Kenya)--Social life and customs ; Turkana District (Kenya)--Environmental conditions ; Turkana ; Turkana
    Note: Culture summary: Turkana - J. Terrence McCabe - 2011 -- - The Turkana - Pamela Gulliver and P. H. Gulliver - 1953 -- - The family herds: a study of two pastoral tribes in East Africa, the Jie and Turkana - by P. H. Gulliver - 1955 -- - South Turkana nomadism: coping with an unpredictably varying environment - By Rada Dyson-Hudson and J. Terrence McCabe - 1985 -- - The Turkana age organization - P. H. Gulliver - 1958 -- - A preliminary survey of the Turkana: a report compiled for the government of Kenya - by P. H. Gulliver - 1951 -- - References - edited by Michael A. Little and Paul W. Leslie - 1999 -- - Framework and theory - Michael A. Little, Rada Dyson-Hudson, Paul W. Leslie, and Neville Dyson-Hudson - 1999 -- - Turkana in time perspective - Rada Dyson-Hudson - 1999 -- - Ecology of South Turkana - Michael A. Little, Rada Dyson-Hudson, and J. Terrence McCabe - 1999 -- , - The social organization of resource exploitation - Neville Dyson-Hudson and Rada Dyson-Hudson - 1999 -- - Social networks and exchange - Brooke R. Johnson, Jr. - 1999 -- - Nomadic movements - J. Terrence McCabe, Rada Dyson-Hudson, and Jan Wienpahl - 1999 -- - Dietary intake and nutritional status - Kathleen A. Galvin and Michael A. Little - 1999 -- - Subsistence, activity patterns, and physical work capacity - Linda S. Curran and Kathleen A. Galvin - 1999 -- - Infant care and feeding - Sandra J. Gray - 1999 -- - Infant, child, and adolescent growth, and adult physical status - Michael A. Little, Sandra J. Gray, Ivy L. Pike, and Mutuma Mugambi - 1999 -- - Health and morbidity: ethnomedical and epidemiological perspectives - Bettina Shell-Duncan, J. Karen Shelley, and Paul W. Leslie - 1999 -- - People and herds - Paul W. Leslie and Rada Dyson-Hudson - 1999 -- - Fecundity and fertility - Paul W. Leslie, Kenneth L. Campbell, Benjamin C. Campbell, Christine S. Kigondu, and Leah W. Kirumbi - 1999 -- , - Population replacement and persistence - Paul W. Leslie, Rada Dyson-Hudson, and Peggy H. Fry - 1999 -- - Migration across ecosystem boundaries - Rada Dyson-Hudson and Dominique Meekers - 1999 -- - Environmental variations in the South Turkana ecosystem boundaries - Michael A. Little, Rada Dyson-Hudson, Neville Dyson-Hudson, and Nancy Winterbauer - 1999 -- - Settled Turkana - Benjamin C. Campbell, Paul W. Leslie, Michael A, Little, Jean M. Brainard, and Michael A. DeLuca - 1999 -- - Synthesis and lessons - Paul W. Leslie, Michael A. Little, Rada Dyson-Hudson, and Neville Dyson-Hudson - 1999 -- - Ngisonyoka event calendar - Paul W. Leslie, Rada Dyson-Hudson, Eliud Achwee Lowoto, and Joseph Munyesi - 1999 -- - Cattle bring us to our enemies: Turkana ecology, politics, and raiding in a disequilibrium system - J. Terrence McCabe - 2004 -- - Success and failure: the breakdown of traditional drought coping institutions among the pastoral Turkana of Kenya - J. Terrence McCabe - 1990 -- , - The failure to encapsulate: resistance to the penetration of capitalism by the Turkana of Kenya - J. Terrence McCabe - 1994 -- - Premarital childbearing in northwest Kenya: challenging the concept of illegitimacy - Bettina Shell-Duncan and Matthew Wimmer - 1999
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  • 17
    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: Acculturation ; Caduveo Indians ; Guana Indians ; Terena Indians
    Abstract: The Terena collection consists of several documents from English, German, and Portuguese Oberg is a study of culture change in Terena society resulting from contact and interaction with the Caduveo, the Mbayá, and Brazilian culture in general. The theme of culture change is continued in Oliveira, which attempts to record and interpret the processes of social interaction between Terena and Brazilian society with the goal of determining the operative socio-cultural mechanism affecting the more specific process of assimilation. Baldus is a study of the succession to chieftainship within a Terena group living near the city of Miranda in the southern part of the Brazilian Mato Grosso. This study also contains some incidental information on such aspects of Terena ethnography as names and naming, eschatology, conception and pregnancy, marriage regulations and arrangements, and kinship terminology and relationships. The second work included by Oliveira is a structural analysis of the Terena marriage and social stratification system
    Description / Table of Contents: Terena - Fernando Carvalho and Rodolpho Telarolli Junior - 2011 -- - Marriage and Terena tribal solidarity: an essay in structural analysis - Roberto Cardoso de Oliveira ; translated by Dale W. Kietzman - 1961
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  • 18
    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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  • 19
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Clayoquot Indians ; Indians of North America--Washington (State) ; Makah Indians ; Nootka Indians ; Nootka Indians--Social life and customs ; Nuu-chah-nulth Indians ; Quileute Indians ; Wolf ritua
    Abstract: The Nuu-Chah-Nulth collection covers a period from about 1780 to 1990. The various works making up this collection are roughly divided between the northern, central, and southern Nuu-Chah-Nulth tribes of Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada, and the Makah, a subgroup living on the Olympic Peninsula at Neah Bay, Washington State in the United States. Major studies in this collection are: Drucker, Colson, Swan, Koppert, Sapir and Swadesh, Arima and Dewhirst, and Reniker and Gunther. Other ethnographic topics discussed in this collection are: the girl's puberty ceremony and potlatch in Sapir; Makah games in Dorsey; an analysis of the Nuu-Chah-Nulth wolf ritual in Ernst; changing marriage patterns over a one hundred year period (1860-1960), in Gunther, and an account of a modern (ca.1970s) Nuku-Chah-Nulth community (Vancouver Island) in historical perspective in Kenyon
    Description / Table of Contents: Nuu-Chah-Nulth - Mark S. Fleisher - 2011 -- - The Northern and central Nootkan tribes - Philip Drucker - 1951 -- - The Makah Indians: a study of an Indian tribe in modern American society - Elizabeth Colson - 1953 -- - The Indians of Cape Flattery: at the entrance to the Strait of Fuca, Washington Territory - By James G. Swan - 1870 -- - Second general report on the Indians of British Columbia: II. the Nootka - Franz Boas - 1891 -- - Games of the Makah Indians of Neah Bay - by George A. Dorsey - 1901 -- - Vancouver Island Indians - Edward Sapir - 1922 -- - A Girl's puberty ceremony among the Nootka Indians - by Edward Sapir - 1913 -- - Neah Bay: the Makah in transition - Beatrice D. Miller - 1952 -- - Contributions to Clayoquot ethnology - by Vincent A. Koppert - 1930 -- - Native accounts of Nootka ethnography - by Edward Sapir and Morris Swadesh - 1955 --^
    Description / Table of Contents: a study of a West Coast (Nootkan) community - Susan M. Kenyon - 1980 -- - Traditional trends in modern Nootka ceremonies - Susan M. Kenyon - 1977
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  • 20
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Havasupai Indians ; Yuman Indians
    Abstract: The Havasupai collection covers a wide range of ethnographic data, covering a time period from approximately 1776 to 2004. Two of the major ethnographies on the traditional culture of the Havasupai are Spier and Cushing. These are supplemented by Smithson who compares modern (twentieth century) Havasupai ethnography to what it was like before European contact, and Schwartz whose culture summary, although relatively brief, covers a wide range of topics. The document by Smithson and Euler provides information on religion and mythology. Land rights and inheritance are topics discussed in Service and Martin. Other subjects of interest in this collection are: prehistory in Schwartz; political structure and leadership in Martin; diet in Bonyshek, and Martin who describes three distinct versions of Havasupai-Hualapai origins and ethnohistoric relations as suggested by Kroeber, Schwartz, and Euler and Dobyns
    Description / Table of Contents: Havasupai - John Beierle - 2011 -- - Havasupai ethnography - by Leslie Spier - 1928 -- - The Havasupai woman - Carma Lee Smithson - 1959 -- - The Havasupai 600 A.D.-1955 A.D.: a short culture history - Douglas W. Schwartz - 1956 -- - Recent observations on Havasupai land tenure - Elman Service - 1947 -- - The Nation of the Willows - Frank Hamilton Cushing - 1882 -- - Havasupai religion and mythology - Carma Lee Smithson and Robert C. Euler - 1964 -- - Havasupai - Douglas W. Schwartz - 1983 -- - Havasupai political structure and leadership - John F. Martin - 1987 -- - A reconsideration of Havasupai land tenure - John F. Martin - 1968 -- - The prehistory and ethnohistory of Havasupai-Hualapai relations - John F. Martin - 1985 -- - The nutritional history of the Havasupai Indians of northern Arizona: dietary change and inadequacy in the reservation era and possible implications for current health - Daniel C. Benyshek - 2003
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  • 21
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Tsonga (African people) ; Tsonga (African peoples)
    Abstract: The Tsonga collection covers cultural, economic and historical information circa 1895 to 1990. The basic sources to consult are two books by the Swiss Missionary anthropologist Henri Junod who lived among the Tsonga in 1895-1909. Together, these books provide a comprehensive account of Tsonga culture and society as observed by the author and his key informants. Major themes covered include agricultural and industrial activities, literary and artistic life (with particular emphasis on language, folklore and music, and texts of songs, proverbs, riddles and folktales), and religious beliefs including concepts of nature and man, medicine and ancestor worship, magical practices, spirit possession, witchcraft and divination, and morality and taboos. The remaining documents examine specific issues relating to change and continuity including the local consequences of labor migration, dynamics of kinship, history of ethnicity and gender relations and rites of passage
    Description / Table of Contents: Tsonga - Carl Christiaan Boonzaaier - 2011 -- - The life of a South African tribe: vol. 1 - Henri A. Junod - 1927 -- - The life of a South African tribe: vol. 2 - Henri A. Junod - 1927 -- - Exclusion, classification and internal colonialism: the emergence of ethnicity among Tsonga-speakers of South Africa - Patrick Harries - 1989 -- - Terms of kinship and corresponding patterns of behaviour among the Thonga - By Rev. A. A. Jaques - 1929 -- - Heat, physiology, and cosmogony: rites de passage among the Thonga - Luc de Heusch - 1980 -- - Labour emigration among the Mocambique Thonga: comments on a study by Marvin Harris - A. Rita-Ferreira - 1960 -- - Labour emigration among the Mocambique Thonga: cultural and political factors - Marvin Harris - 1959 -- - Abafazi Bathonga Bafihlakala: ethnicity and gender in a KwaZulu border community - David Webster - 1991 -- - Tembe-Thonga kinship: the marriage of anthropology and history - David Webster - 1986
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  • 22
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Anthropometry--Morocco ; Berbers ; Ethnology--Morocco ; Folklore--Morocco ; Magic--Morocco ; Morocco--Religion ; Morocco--Social life and customs ; Rif (Morocco) ; Rif Mountains (Morocco) ; Rites and ceremonies--Morocco
    Abstract: ^^ - On the irrelevance of the segmentary lineage model in the Moroccan Rif - Henry Munson, Jr. - 1989 -- - Political ideologies and political forms in the Eastern Rif of Morocco, 1890-1910 - by David Seddon - 1979
    Description / Table of Contents: Berbers of Morocco - David M. Hart - 2011 -- - Tribes of the Rif - Carleton Stevens Coon - 1931 -- - Ritual and belief in Morocco - by Edward Westermarck ... - 1926 -- - An Ethnographic survey of the Riffian tribe of Aith Wuryaghil - David Montgomery Hart - 1954 -- - An 'Imarah in the central Rif: the annual pilgrimage to Sidi Khiyar - David Montgomery Hart - 1957 -- - Emilio Blanco Izaga: colonel in the Rif - Emilio Blanco Izaga ; translated and with an introduction by David Montgomery Hart - 1975 -- - Agriculture in the Rif and Tell mountains of North Africa - Gerard Maurer - 1992 -- - Women and resistance to colonialism in Morocco: the Rif 1916-1926 - By C. R. Pennell - 1987 -- - Rejoinder to Henry Munson, Jr.: 'On the irrelevance of the segmentary lineage model in the Moroccan Rif' - David M. Hart - 1989 --^
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  • 23
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Micmac Indians ; Micmac Indians--Government relations ; Micmac Indians--History ; Micmac Indians--Social life and customs ; Micmac
    Abstract: The Mi'kmaq collection covers a period from about 1500 to the late twentieth century, primarily in the Maritime Provinces of eastern Canada. The main source of information on this group will be found in Wallis and Wallis, supplemented by Le Clercq, and Denys, for historical depth. In addition to the above, a brief culture summary of the Mikmaq people is presented in Bock. Additional ethnographic topics described in this collection are as follows: the hunting territory system in Nova Scotia and Newfoundland; Shamanism; culture loss and culture change for the period of 1912-1950; the contemporary Mikmaq of the Restigouche Reserve (up to 1961); and social revitalization and change in regard to the religious festival of St. Anne
    Description / Table of Contents: Mi'kmaq - Daniel Strouthes - 2011 -- - The Micmac Indians of eastern Canada - Wilson D. Wallis and Ruth Sawtell Wallis - 1955 -- - New relation of Gaspesia: with the customs and religion of the Gaspesian Indians - by Father Chrestien Le Clercq ; translated and edited by William F. Ganong ... - 1910 -- - Description and natural history of the coasts of North America (Acadia) - by Nicolas Denys ; translated and edited by William F. Ganong - 1908 -- - Micmac hunting territories in Nova Scotia and Newfoundland - by Frank G. Speck - 1922 -- - Notes on Micmac shamanism - Frederick Johnson - 1943 -- - Culture loss and culture change among the Micmac of the Canadian Maritime Provinces 1912-1950 - Wilson D. Wallis and Ruth Sawtell Wallis - 1953 -- - Micmac - Phillip K. Bock - 1978 --^
    Description / Table of Contents: resistance, accomodation, and cultural survival - Harald E.L. Prins - 1996 -- - The Micmac Indians of Restigouche: history and contemporary description - by Philip K. Bock - 1966 -- - Ceremony, social revitalization and change: Micmac leadership and the annual festival of St. Anne - Janet Elizabeth Chute - 1992
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  • 24
    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: Osage Indians ; Osage Indians--Folklore ; Osage Indians--History ; Osage Indians--Religion ; Osage Indians--Rites and ceremonies ; Osage Indians--Social life and customs ; Osage mythology ; Osage
    Abstract: The Osage collection covers a variety of cultural, historical and environmental information on different sections of Osage society from pre-contact times to late 1990s. The works of James Owen Dorsey and George A. Dorsey represent the earliest systematic attempts at understanding and reconstructing pre-reservation Osage society and culture. However, the basic and most comprehensive sources in the collection are four works by Francis La Flesche, a native Omaha who studied the Osage in 1910-1920. Topics covered in these works include marriage customs, ceremonies and rituals and child-naming rites. The collection also includes other works by the anthropologist Garrick A. Bailey who conducted ethnographic field work among the Osage in Oklahoma in the mid-1960s and 1970s. Two of these works are broad descriptions of Osage culture and history. The remaining two works, Bailey explores similarities and differences between the traditional Osage world described by La Flesche and the Osage world of later times with particular reference to religion and rituals and social organization. Also included in the collection is an article exploring ideas of justice and punishment held by various Indians and Europeans, ending with the trial of several Osage men accused by the United States of the kind of killing that the Osage had done for a century in protection of their trade and land rights
    Description / Table of Contents: Osage - Garrick Bailey - 2011 -- - An account of the war customs of the Osages - given by Red Corn (Hapa 0ü1se), of the Tsi0u peace-making gens to the Rev. J. Owen Dorsey - 1884 -- - Traditions of the Osage - by George A. Dorsey - 1904 -- - Osage marriage customs - by Francis La Flesche - 1912 -- - Ceremonies and rituals of the Osage - Francis La Flesche - 1914 -- - Right and left in Osage ceremonies - Francis La Flesche - 1916 -- - The Osage tribe: two versions of the child-naming rite - by Francis La Flesche - 1928 -- - The Osage and the invisible world: from the works of Francis La Flesche - introduced and edited by Garrick A. Bailey - 1995 -- - Osage - Garrick A. Bailey - 2001 -- - Changes in Osage social organization, 1673-1906 - by Garrick Alan Bailey - 1973 -- - The Osage and the valley of the middle Arkansas - Garrick Bailey - 1998 -- - Cross-cultural crime and Osage justice in the western Mississippi valley, 1700-1826 - Kathleen DuVal - 2007
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  • 25
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Chaga (African people) ; Law, Primitive ; Primitive societies ; Children--Africa ; Chaga language--Texts ; Kilimanjaro, Mount (Tanzania) ; Law, Chaga ; Customary law--Tanzania--Kilimanjaro ; Chaga (African people)--Social life and customs ; Dschagga ; Dschagga
    Abstract: The Chagga collection consists of documents in English (including two translations from the German, and one from Swahili), covering cultural, economic and historical information circa 1880 to early 2003. The most comprehensive works are by a missionary who lived with the Chagga for more than two decades in the first quarter of the twentieth century. Together, these books provide the first systematic attempts to understand pre-colonial Chagga culture and society with particular reference to customary law, religious life, social organization, and status of elders. The collection also includes two works which provide a general description of Chagga society and various customs by a British government official and a former native chief. The remaining works are ethnographic accounts by professional anthropologists. Specific themes covered include socialization and child-rearing practices, change and continuity in customary laws and aspects of divination
    Note: Culture summary: Chaga - Sally Falk Moore - 2011 -- - Chagga law - Bruno Gutmann - 1926 -- - Chaga childhood: a description of indigenous education in an East African tribe - by O. F. Raum ... With an introduction by W. Bryant Mumford - 1940 -- - The tribal teachings of the Chagga - Bruno Gutmann - 1932 -- - Kilimanjaro and its people: a history of the Wachagga, their laws, customs and legends, together with some account of the highest mountain in Africa - Charles Dundas - 1924 -- - Notes on Chagga customs - Petro I Marealle ;Translated by R. D. Swai - 1963 -- - Social facts and fabrications: 'customary' law on Kilimanjaro, 1880-1980 - Sally Falk Moore - 1986 -- - Divination and experience: explorations of a Chagga epistemology - Knut Christian Myhre - 2006
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  • 26
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Bhil (Indic people)
    Abstract: The Bhil collection of documents, all in English, deal with a population that comprises the third largest (after the Gond and Santals) and most widely distributed ethnic group in India. Two major studies of traditional Bhil ethnography will be found in Naik and Nath. Naiks work deals with the Rajpipla and Western Khandesh regions of western India, while Naths is concerned with the Ratanmal area of northwestern India. Both of these documents however are limited in time depth covering culture history and ethnography only through the mid 1950s. More recent studies deal largely with problems of culture change and effects of acculturation on the society, as indicated in Doshi, Hooda, and Ram. Other major topics deal with marriage in conflict with the Indian Penal Code in Singh, and the status and position of women in terms of changing cultural perspectives, in Mann
    Description / Table of Contents: Bhil - Angelito Palma - 2010 -- - The Bhils: a study - T. B. Naik - [pref. 1956] -- - Bhils of Ratanmal: an analysis of the social structure of a western Indian community - Y. V. S. Nath ; with foreword by Professor Christoph von Fnrer-Haimendorf - 1960 -- - Marriage and law among the Bhils of Rajasthan - Roop Singh - 1987 -- - A Bhil village over last four decades: change in a static society - J. K. Doshi - 2005 -- - Bhil women: changing world-view and development - Kamlesh Mann - 1985 -- - Ecology, environment and economy: a study of the Bhils of Banswara of Rajasthan - D. S. Hooda - 1996 -- - Power patterns in a tribal village Panchayat - G. Ram - 2004
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  • 27
    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: Hutu (African people)--Tanzania--Ethnic identity ; Political refugees--Burundi ; Political refugees--Tanzania ; Rundi (African people)
    Abstract: The Burundi collection provides historical, cultural and economic information on Burundi culture and society, circa 1907-1998. Documents that discuss the colonial period cover important themes including physical geography and material culture, ethnicity and social structure, law and custom, and gender roles and cultural ideals. Other documents deal with political processes and important historical events in the post independence period including the politics of genocide in the Great Lakes region. This includes R. Lemarchands analysis of the genocide of Hutu by Tutsi in Burundi (1972), of Tutsi and Hutu by Hutu in Rwanda (1994) and of Hutu by Tutsi in Congo (1996-1997). Also included is a book by a professional anthropologist who lived among Burundian Hutu refugees in Tanzania. Malkki focuses on the ways the displacement of these Hutu refugees led to the creation of "essentialist" ethnic identities and the horrible violence generated both in Burundi and neighboring countries
    Description / Table of Contents: an ethnological study of German East Africa - Hans Meyer - 1916 -- - The structure of the Barundi community: (Ruanda-Urundi Territory, Central Africa) - George Smets - 1946 -- - The study of native court records as a method of ethnological inquiry - R DeZ. Hall - 1938 -- - Culture Summary: Barundi - Albert Trouwborst - 2010 -- - Women of Burundi: a study of social values - Ethel M. Albert - 1963 -- - Purity and exile: violence, memory, and national cosmology among Hutu refugees in Tanzania - Liisa H. Malkki - 1995 -- - Genocide in the Great Lakes: which genocide? whose genocide? - RenT Lemarchand - 1998
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  • 28
    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: Toda (Indic people)
    Abstract: The Toda collection covers a variety of cultural, linguistic and historical information from 1870s to 1980s. The earliest account was compiled by William Marshall, a British colonial official who, with help from missionaries in the Nilgiri hills, visited the Toda in 1870. It provides a firsthand description of Toda villages, family system, marriage and burial customs, diet, religion and rituals. Marshalls portrait of the Toda was largely shaped by a mix of European stereotypes and phrenological inferences. The remaining documents are based on research conducted in the 1900s, 1930s, 1940s and 1980s. W. H. R. Rivers systematically covers a broad range of Toda culture as observed in 1901-1902. The works of Emeneau and Peter compliment Rivers by documenting and examining more specific aspects of Toda culture including marriage regulations and taboos, beliefs and practices associated with menstruation, language and social forms and patterns of acculturation
    Description / Table of Contents: Toda - Anthony R. Walker - 2010 -- - The Todas - William Halse Rivers - 1906 -- - A phrenologist amongst the Todas - William E. Marshall - 1873 -- - Toda marriage regulations and taboos - Murray B. Emeneau - 1937 -- - Toda culture thirty-five years after: an acculturation study - Murray B. Emeneau - 1939 -- - Toda menstruation practices - Murray B. Emeneau - 1939 -- - Language and social forms: a study of Toda kinship and dual descent - Murray B. Emeneau - 1941 -- - A study of polyandry - H.R.H. Prince Peter of Greece and Denmark - 1963 -- - The Toda of South India: a new look - Anthony R. Walker - 1986
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  • 29
    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: Coffee industry--Guatemala--Santiago Chimaltenango ; Coffee plantation workers--Guatemala--Santiago Chimaltenango--Social conditions ; Guatemala--Economic conditions--1918-1945 ; Indians of Central America--Guatemala ; Indians of Central America--Religion ; Indians of Central America--Social life and customs ; Mam Indians ; Mam Indians--Economic conditions ; Mam Indians--Social conditions ; Santiago Chimaltenango (Guatemala) ; Santiago Chimaltenango (Guatemala)--Economic conditions ; Santiago Chimaltenango (Guatemala)--Social conditions ; Santiago Chimaltenango, Guatemala ; Wages--Coffee plantation workers--Guatemala--Santiago Chimaltenango
    Abstract: Documents in the Mam Maya Collection, all of them in English, provide first hand accounts of culture and society as observed in late 1930s and 1980s. Two of these documents are the works of anthropologist Charles Wagley who lived in the Mam Mayan town of Santiago Chimaltenango in 1937 when the influence of the Guatemalan government on indigenous communities was still very minimal. In the first work, Wagley describes economic life with particular emphasis on agricultural practices, land tenure, wage labor, and trends in consumption and economic stratification. The second work focuses on social organization and religious beliefs. Topics discussed include kinship, the expected life cycle of individuals and families, and religious organizations. This document also contains a field diary by Juan de Dios Rosales, a researcher with the Carnegie Institution who visited Santiago Chimaltenango in 1944 looking for nutritional information on indigenous Mayan diet. The collection also includes a fairly recent book by anthropologist John Watanabe who, inspired by Wagley, conducted extensive fieldwork in Santiago Chimaltenango in 1978-1988. Watanabe is mainly concerned with the interplay of identity, history, and experience in this Mam-speaking Maya community. He builds on contemporary anthropological theories on ethnicity and social change to argue that the continuity of Mam Maya's ethnic distinctiveness has to do with to specific social, economic and political processes that shaped their choices and relationships, as opposed to some enduring cultural sentiments or powerful external forces
    Description / Table of Contents: Mam Maya - John M. Watanabe - 2010 -- - Economics of a Guatemalan village - Charles W. Wagley - 1941 -- - The social and religious life of a Guatemalan village - Charles W. Wagley - 1949 -- - Maya saints and souls in a changing world - by John M. Watanabe - 1992
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  • 30
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Gilyak ; Gilyaks
    Description / Table of Contents: Nivkh - Robert Austerlitz - 2010 -- - The Gilyak, Orochi, Goldi, Negidal, Ainu: articles and materials - Lev IAkovlevich Shternberg ; Edited and preface by IA. P. Al'Kor (Koshkin) - 1933 -- - The peoples of the Amur region - Leopold von Schrenck - 1881-1895 -- - Hunting of the beluga by the Gilyaks of the village of Puir - E. A. Kreinovich - 1935 -- - The Gilyaks: an ethnographic sketch - Nicolas Seeland - 1882 -- - Pregnancy, birth and miscarriage among the inhabitants of Sakhalin Island (Gilyak and Ainu) - Bronislaw Pilsudski - 1910 -- - The Nivkh (Gilyak) of Sakhalin and the Lower Amur - Lydia Black - 1973 -- - Relative status of wife givers and wife takers in Gilyak society - Lydia T. Black - 1972
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  • 31
    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: Quechua Indians
    Abstract: The documents in this collection focus on a time span from 1936 to 1978, although some contain considerable historical background information as far back as the Inca occupation and the Spanish Conquest in the sixteenth century. The fundamental ethnography, by Beals, is based on fieldwork conducted in the community of Nayón in 1949. It is a study of community organization emphasizing how the growing links between the traditional and national economies on the eastern outskirts of the capital city of Quito in Pichincha Province, and ways in which the resultant forces of acculturation are affecting social organization. Other prominent themes include the daily routines of life and forms of mutual aid. Beals follows up with an argument that encroaching urbanization with its pressures on land ownership is a more potent force for social change in Nayón than the lure of cultural assimilation (mestizaje) that accompanies economic integration. In a study of what were by the late 1970s the newly (sub)urbanized eastern barrios of Quito, Salomon validates Beals' hypothesis with a fascinating look at the psychological, religious, social, and philosophical dimensions of the Yumbo dancing that is part of the Corpus Christi festival, revealing how the costumed dance/dramatic performance is a means of reaffirming collective ethnic identity and asserting ethnic pride given increasingly nationalized and westernized surroundings and individual aspirations
    Description / Table of Contents: Quito Quichua - Kathleen Fine-Dare - 2010 -- - Community in transition: Nayón - Ecuador - Ralph L. Beals - 1966 -- - Acculturation, economics, and social change in an Ecuadorean village - Ralph L. Beals - 1952 -- - Killing the Yumbo: a ritual drama of northern Quito - Frank Salomon - 1981
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  • 32
    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: Apache Indians--Biography ; Apache Indians--Claims ; Mescalero Indians ; Mescalero Indians--Biography ; Mescalero Indians--Religion ; Mescalero astronomy ; Mescalero philosophy ; Mescalero
    Abstract: The Mescalero Apache collection consists of all English language documents covering a time span from approximately 1540 to the late 1980s. Documents which provide a general summary of Mescalero culture history and ethnography are Opler, and the last section of Farrer's work on this group. The three studies by Basehart in this collection, also provide information on social and political organization, leadership, and subsistence patterns. Dealing with the more metaphysical concepts of Mescalero society are the works by Farrer. Farrer discusses Mescalero concepts of space, time, and sound and the way they communicate meaning and order within the culture. The second study by Farrer, describes native concepts of cosmology, ethnoastronomy, and the relationship between celestial phenomena and the environment. Various other ethnographic topics of interest in this document are: shamanism and supernatural power in Chris and Opler; mythology associated with the birth of the culture hero, Child-of-the Water; Mescalero beliefs and practices related to death, and peyote ceremonialism in Opler. Of major interest in this collection of documents is the study of the girls' puberty ceremony in Nicholas, which gives a general account of this ceremony, and is further supplemented in greater detail in Farrer
    Description / Table of Contents: Mescalero Apache - Claire R. Farrer - 2010 -- - Apache odyssey: a journey between two worlds - by Morris E. Opler - 1969 -- - Mescalero Apache subsistence patterns and socio-political organization - [by] Harry W. Basehart. Commission findings on the Apache - 1974 -- - The resource holding corporation among the Mescalero Apache - Harry W. Basehart - 1967 -- - Mescalero Apache band organization and leadership - Harry W. Basehart - 1970 -- - The position of woman among the Mescalero Apache - Regina Flannery - 1932 -- - Mescalero Apache girls' puberty ceremony - Dan Nicholas - 1939 -- - The slaying of the monsters, a Mescalero Apache myth - Morris Edward Opler - 1946 -- - Reaction to death among the Mescalero Apache - Morris Edward Opler - 1946 --^
    Description / Table of Contents: a practical ethnography of the Mescalero Apache - Claire Rafferty Farrer - 1977 (1980 copy) -- - Mescalero Apache - Morris E. Opler - 1983 -- - Living life's circle: Mescalero Apache cosmovision - Claire R. Farrer - 1991
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  • 33
    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: Abipon Indians ; Paraguay--Description and travel--Early works to 1800
    Abstract: The Abipón ethnographic collection is a small collection. The primary work, and the one that provided the major source of data for this summary, is that of the Jesuit, Father Martin Dobrizhoffer, who lived among this group for eighteen years in the mid eighteenth century. Dobrizhoffer was a keen observer of Abipón behavior and customs and the information he recorded forms the basis of what little we know about this now extinct group. The Dobrizhoffer document deals primarily with various aspects of ethnography, covering such topics as territory occupied, historical origins, physical appearance and characteristics, religion, tribal divisions, leadership (chiefs, captains or caciques), food, clothing, language, marriage customs, games, diseases, shamans (jugglers), death and mortuary customs, fauna, and warfare. The study by Metraux is a brief summary of the history of the Abipón, their relations with the Spanish and other aboriginal groups, and of missionary activity among them. This document, abstracted from the Handbook of South American Indians (Bulletin 143, Vol.1), largely duplicates information already contained in Dobrizhoffer
    Description / Table of Contents: Abipón - John Beierle - 2010 -- - An account of the Abipones, an equestrian people of Paraguay: volume 2 - Martin Dobrizhoffer - 1822 -- - Ethnography of the Chaco - Alfred Metraux - 1946
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  • 34
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    New Haven, Conn : Human Relations Area Files, Inc
    Language: English
    Pages: Online-Ressource
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Imperialism ; Mongo (African people) ; Mongo (African people)--Economic conditions ; Mongo (African people)--History ; Mongo (African people)--Social conditions ; Oral tradition--Congo (Democratic Republic)--Tshuapa River Region ; River Region ; Subsistence economy--Congo (Democratic Republic)--Tshuapa ; Tshuapa River Region (Congo)--Economic conditions ; Tshuapa River Region (Congo)--History ; Tshuapa River Region (Congo)--Social conditions
    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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  • 35
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Javanese (Indonesian people) ; Produce trade--Indonesia--Java ; Cottage industries--Indonesia--Java ; Java (Indonesia)--Commerce ; Java (Indonesia)--Social conditions--Case studies ; Modjokerto, Indonesia--Social conditions ; Java (Indonesia)--Religion ; Kinship ; Ethnology--Java ; Java (Indonesia)--Civilization ; Ethnology--Indonesia--Surakarta ; Social change--Indonesia--Surakarta ; Women--Indonesia--Surakarta ; Surakarta (Indonesia)--Social conditions ; Javaner ; Javaner
    Abstract: The Javanese Collection features documents, all of them in English, covering a variety of cultural and socioeconomic information. Most of the documents deal with the post 1949 period in which the Javanese, as citizens of the newly founded Indonesian Republic, witnessed political violence and rapid economic transformation. The place focus is central Java where a group of scholars, sponsored by Massachusetts Institute of Technology, conducted ethnographic research in early 1950s. The outputs of this study included the works of the scholarly couple Hildred and Clifford Geertz, and several other researchers. Major themes covered include kinship and family system, religion and culture change, social organization and village life, marketing behavior of peasants. Together, these studies provide a comprehensive account of Javanese culture and society as observed in the 1950s-1970s. These earlier studies are supplemented by other documents in the collection which, based on information from 1980s to mid-2000s, examine more specific themes. Coverage includes family life, aspects of culture including concepts of self, shame, place, gender and power. Other documents in the collection include broad ethnographic descriptions of Javanese culture by an Indonesian anthropologist
    Note: Culture Summary: Javanese - M. Marlene Martin - 2010 -- - Javanese - Koentjaraningrat - 1976 -- - Javanese villagers: social relations in rural Modjokuto - [by] Robert R. Jay - 1969 -- - Peasant marketing in Java - Alice G. Dewey - 1962 -- - The social history of an Indonesian town - Clifford Geertz - 1975 -- - The religion of Java - Clifford Geertz - [1960] -- - The Javanese family: a study of kinship and socialization - Hildred Geertz - [1961] -- - Latah in Java: a theoretical paradox - Hildred Geertz - 1968 -- - Javanese culture - Koentjaraningrat - 1985 -- - The domestication of desire: women, wealth, and modernity in Java - Suzanne April Brenner - 1998 -- - Changing places: relatives and relativism in Java - Andrew Beatty - 2002 -- - Rice harvesting and social change in Java: an unfinished debate - Ben White - 2000 -- - Feeling your way in Java: an essay on society and emotion - Andrew Beatty - 2005 -- , - Shame and stage fright in Java - Ward Keeler - 1983 -- - Power, property and parentage in a central Javanese village - Frans Hnsken - 1991 -- - Constructing gender and local morality: exchange practices in a Javanese village - Vibeke Asmussen - 2004 -- - Self and self-conduct among the Javanese priyayi elite - J. Joseph Errington - 1984
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  • 36
    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: Kinship ; Tallensi (African people) ; Tallensi (African people)--Religion ; Talensi
    Abstract: Documents in the Tallensi Collection, all of them in English, cover cultural, economic and environmental information circa 1930 to 1994. Most are by Meyer Fortes, a leading British social anthropologist who conducted extensive fieldwork among the Tallensi in 1934-1937 and 1971. Fortes's works provide detailed first hand description and analysis of Tallensi society with particular emphasis on clans and lineages, kinship and social relations, and religious practices including divination, ancestor worship and moral life. Other documents in the collection compliment Fortess seminal works by examining other themes relating to Tallensi culture and society including food culture, communal fishing, naming custom, the judicial process, ritual festivals, education and socialization, land tenure and settlement patterns. Most of the information in these documents was collected from a locality called Tongo which Fortes described as the biggest settlement in Tallensi land
    Description / Table of Contents: Tallensi - Teferi Abate Adem - 2010 -- - The dynamics of clanship among the Tallensi: being the first part of an analysis of the social structure of a Trans-Volta tribe - Meyer Fortes - 1945 -- - The web of kinship among the Tallensi: the second part of an analysis of the social structure of a Trans-Volta tribe - Meyer Fortes - 1949 -- - Food in the domestic economy of the Tallensi - M. and S. L. Fortes - 1936 -- - Social and psychological aspects of education in Taleland - Meyer Fortes - 1938 -- - Communal fishing and fishing magic in the northern territories of the Gold Coast - Meyer Fortes - 1937 -- - Ritual festivals and social cohesion in the Hinterland of the Gold Coast - Meyer Fortes - 1936 -- - Names among the Tallensi of the Gold Coast - Meyer Fortes - 1955 --^
    Description / Table of Contents: essays on Tallensi religion - Meyer Fortes ; edited and with an introduction by Jack Goody - 1987 -- - Towards the judicial process: a Tallensi case - Meyer Fortes - 1987 -- - The land is ours: research on the land-use system among the Tallensi in northern Ghana - Volker Riehl - 1990 -- - Lineage organisation of the Tallensi compound: the social logic of domestic space - Nick Gabrilopoulos, Charles Mather and Caesar Roland Apentiik - 2002
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  • 37
    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: Kwoma (Papua New Guinean people) ; Kwoma (Papua New Guinean people)--Rites and ceremonies
    Abstract: The Kwoma Collection consists of several documents, all of them in English, covering social and cultural information circa 1930s -1980s. The basic sources to consult are by John Whiting, consisting of an ethnographic account and a published field work journal. Together, these provide a comprehensive account of Kwoma society and culture, with particular reference to socialization, family life, economic activities and material culture, as observed in 1936-1937. The remaining documents compliment Whiting by providing additional information on sex and gender relations, kinship regulation of sex and marriage, and ceremonial arts and community rituals
    Description / Table of Contents: Kwoma - Ross Bowden - 2010 -- - Becoming a Kwoma: teaching and learning in a New Guinea tribe - by John W. M. Whiting ; with a foreword by John Dollard - 1941 -- - Kwoma journal - by John W. M. Whiting - 1970 -- - Yena: art and ceremony in a Sepik society - Ross Bowden ; with a foreword by Rodney Needham - 1983 -- - Sex relations and gender relations: understanding Kwoma conception - Margaret Holmes Williamson - 1983 -- - Incest, exchange, and the definition of women among the Kwoma - Margaret Holmes Williamson - 1985
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  • 38
    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: Tucuna Indians
    Abstract: The Ticuna Collection documents, all of them in English, cover cultural, economic and environmental information circa 1941 to 1995. Two of these documents are produced by Curt Nimuendaju, a German anthropologist who conducted ethnographic fieldwork among the Ticuna in 1935 and 1941-1942 on behalf of University of California. The documents vary in size, and coverage. One is a larger monograph describing economic activities, aspects of material culture, personality character and social life, social organization (largely focusing on clans and moieties), art, religion and magic. The other is a brief over view of Ticuna culture originally published in the Handbook of South American Indians. Together, these works provide a well rounded first hand account of Ticuna culture and society as observed by the author. The document by Hammond, Dolman and Watkinson discusses the ways the Ticuna adaptively transformed their traditional swidden-fallow land use practices to make advantage of emerging market opportunities in timber and forest products
    Description / Table of Contents: Ticuna - Gloria Myriam Fajardo Reyes (translated by Ruth Gubler) - 2010 -- - The Tukuna - By Curt Nimuendajú ; edited by Robert H. Lowie ; translated by William D. Hohenthal - 1952 -- - The Tucuna: habitat, history, and language - By Curt Nimuendajú - 1948 -- - Modern Ticuna swidden-fallow management in the Colombian Amazon: ecologically integrating market strategies and subsistence-driven economies - D. S. Hammond, P. M. Dolman, and A. R. Watkinson - 1995
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  • 39
    Language: English
    Pages: Online-Ressource
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Customary law--China--Tibet ; Ethnological jurisprudence ; Law--China--Tibet ; Nomads--China--Tibet--Economic conditions ; Nomads--China--Tibet--Social life and customs ; Nomads--Government policy--China--Tibet ; Tibet (China)--Ethnology ; Tibet (China)--Marriage ; Tibet (China)--Religion ; Tibet (China)--Social life and customs ; Tibetans
    Abstract: The Tibetans collection covers approximately one hundred years from the early 20th century through the early 21st century. The earliest documents are by Bell, a British government official who served in the region from 1904 to 1921. He wrote about Tibetan life and culture and Tibetan Buddhism. Hermanns was a Catholic missionary who wrote an ethnography on Tibetans in Qinghai Province with a focus on animal husbandry. Shen is a Chinese government official living in Lhasa before 1949 and writes about the Ge Lu Pa sect of Buddhism. Peter and Goldstein write about marriage. Goldstein also writes about serfdom, Chinese-Tibet relations between 1949 and 1996, Buddhism under Communism, and the post-collectivization era and reforms in western Tibet. Levine and Yeh also write about decollectivization among Tibetans living in western Sichuan Province and outside Lhasa, respectively. French writes about Tibetan law
    Note: - Reexamining choice, dependency and command in the Tibetan social system: 'tax appendages' and other landless serfs - by Melvyn C. Goldstein - 1986 -- - Change and continuity in nomadic pastoralism on the western Tibetan plateau - Melvyn C Goldstein and Cynthia M Beall - 1991 -- - Cattle and the cash economy: responses to change among Tibetan nomadic pastoralists in Sichuan, China - Nancy E. Levine - 1999 -- - Property relations in tibet since decollectivisation and the question of fuzziness - Emily T. Yeh - 2004 -- - Stratification, polyandry, and family structure in central Tibet - Melvyn C. Goldstein - 1971 -- - The golden yolk: the legal cosmology of Buddhist Tibet - Rebecca Redwood French - 1995 , Culture Summary: Tibetans - Rebecca R. French - 2010 -- - Tibet and the Tibetans - [by] Tsung-lien Shên and Shên-chi Liu ; foreword by George E. Taylor - 1953 -- - The people of Tibet - [by] Sir Charles Bell - 1928 -- - The religion of Tibet - [by] Charles Bell - 1931 -- - The A Mdo Pa greater Tibetans: the socio-economic bases of the pastoral cultures of Inner Asia - [by] Matthias Hermanns - 1948 -- - A study of polyandry - [by] Peter, Prince of Greece and Denmark - 1963 -- - Nomads of western Tibet: the survival of a way of life - photography and text by Melvyn C. Goldstein and Cynthia M. Beall - [1990] -- - Introduction - Melvyn c. Goldstein - 1998 -- - The revival of monastic life in Deprung Monastery - Melvyn c. Goldstein - 1998 -- - Bibliography - edited by Melvyn C. Goldstein and Matthew T. Kapstein - 1998 --
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  • 40
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Schwarze. USA ; African Americans ; African Americans--New York (State)--New York--Politics and government ; Urban ecology--New York (State)--New York--History--20th centuryPolitical culture--New York (State)--New York--History--20th century ; Corona (New York, N.Y.)--Race relations ; New York (N.Y.)--Race relations ; African Americans--Education (Secondary)--Case studies ; Academic achievement--United States--Case studies ; African Americans--Race identity--Case studies ; African American students--Psychology--Case studies ; Educational anthropology--United States--Case studies ; African American families United States Case studies ; Poor United States Case studies ; Schwarze ; USA ; USA ; Schwarze
    Abstract: The African American Collection provides information on history, race relations, civil rights movement, culture and contemporary economic problems, circa 1620s to 2000s. Davis and Pinkey cover from the earliest days of slavery up to about 1970. Four documents deal with racial segregation and discrimination both prior to and immediately after the civil rights movements. Three documents feature in-depth portrayals of individual life histories, communities and families, and kinship networks and migration patterns. Two documents provide a theoretically complex discussion of race relations and opportunities in urban communities. Two recent documents address deconstructing erroneous representations of African Americans in scholarly discourse and public policy and education and popular culture. The remaining documents discuss the continuity of racial discrimination and class- and gender-based exploitation in the lives of African American women and artists
    Note: Culture Summary: African Americans - Molefi Kete Asante - 2010 -- - Black Americans - Alphonso Pinkney - [1975] -- - Drylongso: a self-portrait of Black America - [edited by] John Langston Gwaltney - 1981 -- - Soulside: inquiries into ghetto culture and community - Ulf Hannerz - 1969 -- - Deep South: a social anthropological study of caste and class - written by Allison Davis, Burleigh B. Gardner and Mary R. Gardner, directed by W. Lloyd Warner - 1941 -- - Black metropolis: a study of Negro life in a northern city [Vol. 1 - By St. Clair Drake and Horace R. Cayton - 1970 -- - Black metropolis: a study of Negro life in a northern city [Vol. 2 - By St. Clair Drake and Horace R. Cayton - 1970 -- - Family and childhood in a Southern Negro community - Virginia Heyer Young - 1970 -- , - Spout Spring: a Black community - by Peter Kunkel and Sara Sue Kennard - 1971 -- - After freedom: a cultural study in the Deep South - Hortense Powdermaker ; with a new preface by Elliott M. Rudwick - 1968 -- - Black Corona: race and the politics of place in an urban community - Steven Gregory - 1998 -- - Blacked out: dilemmas of race, identity, and success at Capital High - Signithia Fordham - 1996 -- - All our kin - Carol Stack - 1997 -- - The color-blind - Lee D. Baker - 1998 -- - Purity, soul food, and Sunni Islam: explorations at the intersection of consumption and resistance - Carolyn Rouse, Janet Hoskins - 2004 -- - Black like this: race, generation, and rock in the post-civil rights era - Maureen Mahon - 2000 -- - Resistance and resilience: the sojourner syndrome and the social context of reproduction in central Harlem - Leith Mullings - 2005
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  • 41
    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: Amazon River Region--Ethnic relations ; Canelo Indians ; Canelo Indians--Government relations ; Canelo Indians--Social life and customs ; Indians of South America--Ecuador--Ethnic identity ; Power (Social sciences) Ecuador--Ethnic relations ; Puyo (Pastaza, Ecuador)--Social life and customs
    Abstract: The Canelos Quichua collection consists of English language documents covering the period from about 1961 to 1976, focusing on the fieldwork of the Whittens. The major source of information on this group will be found in Sicuanga Runa. Although this monograph focuses primarily on the site of Nueva Esperanza (Nayapi Llacta) in Ecuador in order to explore the theme of the duality of power patterning in the community, it does contain a variety of information on various aspects of Canelos Quichua ethnography. Ritual structure is a study of the large-scale Ayllu ceremony held once or twice each year involving a period of from two to three weeks in initial preparation, and then its actual enactment on a final Sunday feast day. The third document, by Whitten and Whitten, is a detailed study of kinship structure and marriage among the Canelos Quichua of East-Central Ecuador
    Description / Table of Contents: Canelos Quichua - Norman E. Whitten, Jr. and Dorothea Scott Whitten - 2010 -- - Sicuanga Runa: the other side of development in Amazonian Ecuador - Norman E. Whitten, Jr. - 1985 -- - Ritual structure - Norman E. Whitten, Jr. - 1976 -- - The structure of kinship and marriage among the Canelos Quichua of east-central Ecuador - Norman E. Whitten, Jr., and Dorothea S. Whitten - 1984
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  • 42
    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: Canelo Indians ; Quechua Indians
    Abstract: The documents of the Saraguro Quichua collection include historical information but focus on the latter half of the twentieth century. Linda Belote describes ethnic relations between largely rural Indians and largely town-dwelling whites in the Parish of Saraguro, Loja Province, Ecuador. Religion is discussed as another sphere of ethnic competition, highlighting the role of a progressive (white) priest in social change. The author also touches upon often interrelated forces of outmigration and transculturation. Belote and Belote review the roles of three institutions in promoting culture change among the Saraguro Quechua during the middle/late-twentieth century. In order of importance these were: folklore music groups, religious organizations, and the Andean Mission, a government development agency whos featured modernization programs included sanitation, furniture, textiles and clothing, and agriculture and animal husbandry. James Belotes dissertation is a study of the changing adaptive strategies of the Saraguro indigenes who live in the southern Ecuadorian provinces of Loja and Zamora-Chinchipe. The study is divided into three major parts: background information on the highland region; "the highland adaptation", an analysis of the Saraguro economy; and "the lowland adaptation", cultural and economic adaptation to living conditions in the lowland region. Ruthbeth Finerman presents a succinct culture summary of the Saraguro people who live in Loja Province in Ecuador's southern Andes. Major emphasis in the study is on illness, theories of illness, treatment of the sick, and life cycle events related to problems of health
    Description / Table of Contents: Saraguro Quichua - Ruthbeth Finerman and Ross Sackett - 2010 -- - Prejudice and pride: Indian-White relations in Saraguro, Ecuador - Linda Smith Belote - 1978 [1983 copy] -- - Development in spite of itself: the Saraguro case - Linda Smith Belote and Jim Belote - 1981 -- - Changing adaptive strategies among the Saraguros of southern Ecuador - James Dalby Belote - 1984 [2007 copy] -- - Indigenous destiny in indigenous hands - Luis Macas, Linda Belote, and Jim Belote - 2003 -- - Saraguros - Ruthbeth Finerman - 2004
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  • 43
    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: Nambicuara Indians
    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
    Description / Table of Contents: 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 --^
    Description / Table of Contents: Aspelin vs. Lévi-Strauss on Nambiquara nomadism - P. David Price - 1978 -- - The ethnography of Nambicuara agriculture - Paul L. Aspelin - 1979
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  • 44
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Family--Kenya ; Kenya--Rural conditions--Case studies ; Kikuyu (African people) ; Rural development--Kenya--Ngecha ; Rural women--Kenya--Kirinyaga District--Interviews ; Rural women--Kenya--Kirinyaga District--Social conditions ; Rural women--Kenya--Ngecha ; Women in rural development--Kenya ; Women, Kikuyu--Kenya--Kirinyaga District--Interviews ; Women, Kikuyu--Kenya--Kirinyaga District--Social conditions
    Abstract: ^^ - The village and its families - Beatrice Whiting and Carolyn Edwards, with Ciarunji Chesaina, John Whiting, John Herzog, and Dorothy Herzog - 2004 -- - The historical stage - Beatrice Whiting, John Whiting, John Herzog, and Carolyn Edwards, with Arnold Curtis - 2004 -- - Women as agents of social change - Beatrice Whiting - 2004 -- - Changing concepts of the good child and good mothering - Beatrice Whiting, with Ciarunji Chesaina, Grace Diru, Jonah Ichoya, Priscilla Kariuki, Violet Nyambura Kimani, Irene Kamau, Rose Maina, Wanjiku Munge-Kagia, Jane Mwangi, John Whiting, Thomas Landauer, and Lynn Streeter - 2004 -- - The teaching of values old and new - Ciarunji Chesaina - 2004 -- - Aging and elderhood - Frances Cox, with Ndung'u Mberia - 2004 -- - The university as gateway to a complex world - Carolyn Edwards, with E.G. Runo and Ezra arap Maritim - 2004 -- - Ngecha today - Violet Nyambura Kimani - 2004
    Abstract: The Gikuyu Collection covers cultural, economic and historical information circa 1900 to 1995. Two documents were compiled by two famous Kenyans; these works provide a very comprehensive and intimate account of Gikuyu culture and recent history. Four documents provide information on pre-colonial Gikuyu culture and society. Ten documents are based on findings of multidisciplinary research conducted, from 1967-1973, in a Gikuyu village called Ngecha; focusing on Ngecha's physical geography and resident families and historical settings, as well as aspects of change in behavior and family life. Other documents are based on work in different Gikuyu villages in 1980s and 1990s. These deal with the lives of women, patterns of marriage across generations, trends in adolescent sexual behavior and fertility, household economic strategies, and continuities in the cultural values of children. A document reviews works on the Mau Mau Rebellion in light of women's participation
    Description / Table of Contents: Gikuyu - Jean Davison - 2010 -- - The central tribes of the north-eastern Bantu: (The Kikuyu, including Embu, Meru, Mbere, Chuka, Mwimbi, Tharaka, and the Kamba of Kenya) - by John Middleton - 1953 -- - Kikuyu social and political institutions - H. E. Lambert - 1956 -- - Mau Mau and the Kikuyu - L. S. B. Leakey - 1952 -- - Facing Mount Kenya: the tribal life of the Gikuyu - by Jomo Kenyatta ; with an introduction by B. Malinowski - 1953 -- - East African age-class system: An inquiry into the social order of Galla, Kipsigis, and Kikuyu - Adriaan Hendrik Johan Prins - 1953 --^
    Description / Table of Contents: the Akikuyu of British East Africa, being some account of the method of life and mode of thought found existent amongst a nation on its first contact with European civilisation - by W. Scoresby Routledge ... and Katherine Routledge (born Pease) ... - 1910 -- - Voices from Mutira: change in the lives of rural Gikuyo women, 1910-1995 - Jean Davison with the women of Mutira - 1996 -- - The Mau Mau Rebellion, Kikuyu women, and social change - Cora Ann Presley - 1988 -- - Generational changes in marriage patterns in the Central Province of Kenya, 1930-1990 - Penelope Hetherington - 2001 -- - Social change in adolescent sexual behavior, mate selection, and premarital pregancy rates in a Kikuyu community - Carol M. Worthman and John W. M. Whiting - 1987 -- - Household strategies for adaptation and change: participation in Kenyan rural woman's associations - Barbara P. Thomas - 1988 -- - The changing value of children among the Kikuyu of Central Province, Kenya - Neil Price - 1966 -- - Acknowledgements - Carolyn Edwards and Beatrice Whiting - 2004 -- - Background and contexts - Carolyn Edwards and Beatrice Whiting - 2004 --^
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  • 45
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Shilluk (African people) ; Shilluk (African people)--Kings and rulers
    Abstract: The Shilluk Collection covers a wide variety of cultural and historical information, circa 1900 to 1990. The earliest and most comprehensive source in the collection is the ethnographic survey by C.G. Seligman and Brenda Z. Seligman, covering political organization, kinship, family life, marriage system, religion and funeral customs as observed in 1909-1910. The collection also includes Evans-Pritchards classic essay on the divine kingship of the Shilluk, and two summary articles by professional anthropologists working with the International African Institute. Other works in the collection include brief ethnographic descriptions, articles and manuscripts that appeared in scholarly journals and records of the Anglo-Egyptian colonial administration. Topics covered in the collection include religious and medical beliefs, folklore, settlement pattern, social organization, customary laws and succession to kingship
    Description / Table of Contents: Shilluk - John W. Burton and Teferi Abate Adem - 2010 -- - The divine kingship of the Shilluk of the Nilotic Sudan - by E. E. Evans-Pritchard - 1948 -- - Pagan tribes of the Nilotic Sudan - C. G. Seligman and Brenda Z. Seligman - 1932 -- - The Nilotes of the Anglo-Egyptian Sudan and Uganda - Audrey Butt - 1952 -- - The Shilluk of the upper Nile - Godfrey Lienhardt - 1954 -- - Observations on the Shilluk of the Upper Nile, customary law: marriage and the violation of rights in women - P. P. Howell - 1953 -- - Observations on the Shilluk of the Upper Nile: the laws of homicide and the legal functions of the Reth - P. P. Howell - 1952 --^
    Description / Table of Contents: power struggles and the question of succession - Burkhard Schnepel - 1990
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  • 46
    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: Indians of South America--Brazil ; Trumaí Indians ; 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
    Description / Table of Contents: Trumai - Teferi Abate Adem - 2010 -- - The TrumaíIndians of central Brazil - [by] Robert F. Murphy and Buell Quain - [1955]
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  • 47
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Pueblo Indians ; San Ildefonso (N.M.) ; San Juan Pueblo (N.M.) ; Tewa Indians
    Abstract: ^^ - 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
    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
    Description / Table of Contents: 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 --^
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  • 48
    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: Tapirapé Indians
    Abstract: The Tapirapé collection consists of nine documents, three of which are translations from the Portuguese, and the other six in English. Major contributions to the collection are the works of Baldus, and Wagley, which together form a comprehensive overview of traditional Tapirapé ethnography from 1935 to 1965. Other topics in this collection deal with culture change and acculturation; shamanism; religion, mythology, and ideas about animals and man; puberty rites; feasting and eating groups, and cultural revitalization processes
    Description / Table of Contents: Tapirapé - Nancy M. Flowers, John Beierle - 2010 -- - The Tapirapé: a Tupí tribe of central Brazil - Herbert Baldus - 1970 -- - Tapirapé social and culture change, 1940-1953 - Charles Wagley - 1955 -- - Tapirapé shamanism - Charles Wagley - 19430 -- - The eating groups and work groups among the Tapirapé - Herbert Baldus - 1937 -- - World view of the Tapirapé Indians - Charles Wagley - 1940 -- - A Tapirapé comes of age - Charles Wagley - 1945 -- - Ceremonial redistribution in Tapirapé society - Judith Shapiro - 1968 -- - The Tapirapé during the era of reconstruction - Judith Shapiro - 1979 -- - Welcome of tears: the Tapirapé Indians of central Brazil - Charles Wagley ; [maps and diagrs. drawn by David Lindroth] - 1977
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  • 49
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Mende (African people) ; Mende (African people)--Social conditions ; Mende (African people)--Economic conditions ; Women, Mende--Social conditions ; Rain forest conservation--Sierra Leone ; Forest reserves--Sierra Leone ; Rain forest ecology--Sierra Leone ; Sex role--Sierra Leone ; Women in rural development--Sierra Leone ; Sierra Leone--Social conditions ; Mende ; Mende
    Abstract: The Mende Collection covers cultural, economic and environmental information circa 1890s to 1990s. The most comprehensive source is by Kenneth Little, a British social anthropologist who did fieldwork among the Mende in 1945-1946. Topics include kinship and political organization, family life and organization of farming, puberty, initiation and secret societies. Also included is a 1936 Ph.D. dissertation by Jules Staub which describes Mende material culture. Melissa Leach discusses gender relations in Mende communities living around a state forest reserve. She focuses on differences in women's and men's experiences around the forest. Barry Isaac documents the gradual shift from subsistence rice cultivation to commercial cocoa, coffee and palm trees growing. The works of Caroline Bledsoe focus on dynamics of gender among polygamous Mende households. An article analyzes lineage meetings and in-group struggles to explore salient features of Mende political culture
    Note: Culture Summary: Mende - Jude C. Aguwa - 2010 -- - Contributions to a knowledge of the material culture of the Mende in Sierra Leone - Staub - 1936 -- - The Mende of Sierra Leone - by K. L. Little - 1951 -- - Rainforest relations: gender and resource use among the Mende of Gola, Sierra Leone - Melissa Leach - 1994 -- - The politics of polygyny in Mende education and child fosterage transactions - Caroline Bledsoe - 1993 -- - Creating the appearance of consensus in Mende political discourse - William P. Murphy - 1990 -- - Why Mende became tree croppers - Barry L. Isaac - 1998 -- - School fees and the marriage process for Mende girls in Sierra Leone - Caroline Bledsoe - 1990
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  • 50
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Khoisan (African people)
    Abstract: The Khoi Collection covers cultural and historical information, circa 1600 to 1930s. The work of Schapera covers social organization, habits and customs, economic life, political structure, religious beliefs and magic, art and folklore. Schultze describes Nama physical features, flora and fauna, material culture, economic activities, food habits, family life, kinship and life-cycles based on fieldwork in 1903-1905. Hoernlé address themes including rites of passage and conception of taboo, social organization and religious beliefs and taboo relating water, as observed in 1912-1913. Laidler provides a firsthand account of Nama medical practices. Barnard addresses historical and cultural ethnic relations. Smith argues against the fragile nature of Khoi economic system to suggest a broader ecological perspective. Viljoen reconsiders the role and function of medicine in the pre-colonial times. Carstens discusses the status of women and patterns of inheritance
    Description / Table of Contents: Khoi - Emile Boonzaier and Teferi Abate Adem - 2010 -- - In Namaland and the Kalahari - Leonhard Schultze - 1907 -- - Certain rites of transition and the conception of !Nau among the Hottentots - A. Winifred Hoernlé - 1918 -- - The social organization of the Nama Hottentots of South Africa - A. Winifred Hoernlé - 1925 -- - The expression of the social value of water among the Naman of South-West Africa - Mrs. R. F. A. Hoernlé (A. W. Hoernlé) - 1923 -- - The magic medicine of the Hottentots - P. W. Laidler - 1928 -- - Culture of the Hottentots - Isaac Schapera - 1930 -- - The Nama and others - Alan Barnard - 1992 -- - The disruption of Khoi society in the 17th century - By Andrew B. Smith - 1983 -- - Medicine, health and medical practice in precolonial Khoikhoi society - Russel Viljoen - 1999 -- - The inheritance of private property among the Nama of southern Africa reconsidered - Peter Carstens - 1983
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  • 51
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Bali Island (Indonesia) ; Bali Island (Indonesia)--Religion ; Bali Island (Indonesia)--Social life and customs ; Balinese (Indonesian people) ; Kinship--Indonesia--Bali Island
    Description / Table of Contents: Balinese - Ann P. McCauley - 2010 -- - Island of Bali - Miguel Covarrubias ; with an album of photos by Rose Covarrubias - 1938 -- - Bali: temple festival - Jane Bello - 1953 -- - Bali: Rangda and Barong - Jane Bello - 1949 -- - The Balinese temper, character and personality - Jane Bello - 1936 -- - Study of Balinese family - Jane Bello - 1936 -- - Form and variation in Balinese village structurer - Clifford Geertz - 1959 -- - Introduction - by J. L. Swellengrebel - 1960 -- - The religious character of the village community - by R. Goris - 1960 -- - The temple system - by R. Goris - 1960 -- - Holidays and holy days - by R. Goris - 1960 -- - The consecration of a priest - by V. E. Korn - 1960 -- - The state temples of Megwi - by C. J. Grader - 1960 -- - Pemayun temple of the Banjar of Tegal - by C. J. Grader - 1960 -- - The festival of Jayaprana at Kallinget - by H. J. Franken - 1960 --^
    Description / Table of Contents: a Balinese village - Clifford Geertz - 1967 -- - Kinship in Bali - [by] Hildred Geertz and Clifford Geertz - 1975 -- - Balinese 'water temples' and the management of irrigation - J. Stephen Lansing - 1987 -- - Revisiting kinship in Bali - core-lines and the emergence of elites in commoner groups - 2003 -- - Gender and decision making in Balinese agriculture - Nitish Jha - 2004
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  • 52
    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: Otavalo Indians ; Quechua Indians
    Abstract: The Otavalo Quichua collection documents focus upon a time span from 1940 to 2001, but include significant historical information extending to the late pre-Inca period (ca. AD 1250). Although the Otavalo may now be encountered in major urban areas worldwide, this collection concentrates on core area in Imbabura province, Ecuador (cantons of Otavalo and Cotacachi); in particular, the towns of Peguche, Ilumán and Cotacachi. Parsons is the classic ethnography, providing basic description of material culture, close observation of family life, participant observation in divination, a full chapter of folklore, and good descriptions of the annual round of religious festivals. Wibbelsmans doctoral dissertation focuses almost exclusively on the ritual/festival cycle, while considering its cosmological underpinnings and role in (re)constituting and revivifying and communities ever more engaged with, and living throughout, Ecuador and the world. Solomon details the politico-economic history behind a uniquely successful ethos and means of cultural survival and promotion
    Description / Table of Contents: Otavalo Quichua - Lynn A. Meisch - 2010 -- - Peguche, canton of Otavalo, province of Imbabura: a study of Andean Indians - Elsie Clews Parsons - 1945 -- - Weavers of Otavalo - Frank L. Salomon - 1981 -- - Rimarishpa Kausanchik: dialogical encounters: festive ritual practices and the making of the Otavalan moral and mythic community - Michelle C. Wibbelsman - 2004 [2007 copy]
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  • 53
    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: Ahaggar Mountains (Algeria) ; Tuaregs
    Abstract: Documents in the Tuareg Collection provide a wide variety of cultural, historical and ecological information, circa 1908 to 2004. Maurice Benhazera, a French army interpreter who visited the Ahaggar region in 1905, describes pre-colonial Tuareg culture and daily life. Henri Lhote provides the first systematic description of Taureg society by a professional ethnologist based on materials (mostly relating to political organization, social classes, marriage system, descent, childbirth and adolescent) collected in 1929-1940. Cabot L. Briggs critiques the above two earlier sources based on fieldwork conducted in 1956. Nicolaisen covers a broad range of themes in Tuareg social organization and cultural ecology as observed in 1951-1962. The remaining articles by Rasmussen explore particular themes including conflict management practices, changes relating to witchcraft and morality, dynamics of class and ethnicity, and local perceptions of health and illness
    Description / Table of Contents: Tuareg - Susan J. Rasmussen - 2010 -- - The Hoggar Tuareg - Henri Lhote - 1944 -- - The living races of the Sahara Desert - L. Cabot Briggs - 1958 -- - Six months among the Ahaggar Tuareg - Maurice Benhazera - 1908 -- - Political systems of pastoral Tuareg in Air and Ahaggar - Johannes Nicolaisen - 1959 -- - Ecology and culture of the pastoral Tuareg: with particular reference to the Tuareg of Ahaggar and Ayr - Johannes Nicolaisen - 1963 -- - Modes of persuasion: gossip, song, and divination in Tuareg conflict resolution - Susan J. Rasmussen - 1991 -- - Reflections on witchcraft, danger, and modernity among the Tuareg - Susan J. Rasmussen - 2004 -- - Disputed boundaries: Tuareg discourse on class and ethnicity - Susan Rasmussen - 1992 -- - Tuareg: Tuareg discourse on class and ethnicity - Susan J. Rasmussen - 2004
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  • 54
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Ainu ; Ainu--Medicine
    Abstract: This collection about the Ainu consists of 8 documents, all in English, including three books which were translated from Japanese. The collection contains a variety of cultural and historical information from two widely contrasting time periods. The first covers the years 1877 to 1924 when most Ainu were living in their traditional homeland in southern Sakhalin. The second is from the 1960s-1970s after the Ainu almost disappeared as a distinct group following their relocation in the Hokkaid̄o Island by the Japanese government during World War II. The oldest materials in the collection were compiled by Batchelor, an English missionary who lived among the Ainu for fifty years in 1877-1924; Pilsudski, a German ethnologist who conducted fieldwork there from 1895-1905; and Munro, an English physician who lived in Japan in 1900-1942. These works provide firsthand accounts of pre-relocation Ainu culture and society, covering religion, ceremonials, mythology, folklore, economic activities, life cycles, and health issues. Three of the books in the collection were authored by Japanese scholars focusing on Japanese conquest and assimilation of the Ainu (Takakura), ecological and economic effects of relocation (Watanabe), and features of Ainu kinship system (Sugiura). The remaining two books are by Ohnuki-Tierney, an American anthropologist who, in 1965-1969, sought to retrospectively reconstruct the "Ainu way of life" through extensive ethnographic fieldwork among elderly informants in Sakhalin. Ohnuki-Tierney's works, which also provide extensive review of previous works on the Ainu in Sakhalin, Hokkaid̄o and the neighboring islands, are the most comprehensive sources. Ainu people who lived in Kurile and the other islands taken over by the USSR during World War II are not covered in the collection
    Description / Table of Contents: Ainu - Emiko Ohnuki-Tierney - 2009 -- - The Ainu of northern Japan: a study in conquest and acculturation - [by] Shinichiro Takakura ; translated and annotated by John A. Harrison - 1960 -- - Ainu life and lore: echoes of a departing race - [by] John Batchelor - 1927 -- - Kinship organization of the Saru Ainu - [by] Kenichi Sugiura and Harumi Befu - 1962 -- - Ainu creed and cult - Edited with a pref. and an additional chapter by B.Z. Seligman. Introd. by H. Watanabe - 1963 -- - Pregnancy, birth and miscarriage among the inhabitants of Sakhalin Island (Gilyak and Ainu) - [by] Bronislaw Pilsudski - 1910 -- - The Ainu: a study of ecology and the system of social solidarity between man and nature in relation to group structure - [by] Hitoshi Watanabe - 1964 -- - The Ainu of the northwest coast of southern Sakhalin - Emiko Ohnuki-Tierney - 1974 -- - Illness and healing among the Sakhalin Ainu: a symbolic interpretation - Emiko Ohnuki-Tierney - 1981
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  • 55
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Ethnic relations--Political aspects ; Ethnology--China--Kweichow Province ; Ethnology--Hmong (Asian people) ; Hmong (Asian people)--China ; Hmong (Asian people)--China--Social life and customs ; Religion--Hmong (Asian people)
    Abstract: This collection of ten documents, three translated from the Chinese, provide historical, economic and cultural information about the Miao, circa 1920-2000. Most are based on fieldwork with different Miao communities in China during the late 1930s and early 1940s at a time when many Miao farmers actively participated first in the liberation struggle against Japanese occupation and later on during the "Long March" with the victorious Red Army. The earliest and most basic sources in the collection are by Graham which, together, provide a variety of cultural information including language, mythology, subsistence, dwellings, family life, kinship, village government, arts, religion and ceremonials. His focus on the Miao of southern Szechwan is complimented by Rui who provides a brief description of a subgroup called Magpai Miao. Four documents focus on different Miao groups living in Kweichow, Hunan, and Yunnan and Guizhou provinces. Based on ethnographic data collected in the 1980s and early 1990s, when the Chinese government gradually opened rural communities to Western researchers and travelers, the two remaining works discuss the ways in which the cultures and identities of the Miao (and other minority ethnic groups) have been constructed and deployed since the 1949 and especially in the context of China's post-Mao economic reforms. The Miao are one of 56 non-Han Chinese people officially recognized by the government as minority nationalities. They are distinguished by language, dress, historical traditions, and cultural practice from neighboring ethnic groups and the dominant Han Chinese
    Description / Table of Contents: Miao - Norma Diamond - 2009 -- - A report on an investigation of the Miao of western Hunan - [by] Shun-sheng Ling and Yih-fu Ruey ; translation by Lien-en Tsao - 1947 -- - The Cowrie Shell Miao of Kweichow - [by] Margaret Portia Mickey - 1947 -- - Religious beliefs of the Miao and I tribes in An-shun Kweichow - [by] Kuo-chun Ch'en ; translation by Lien-en Tsao - 1942 -- - The customs of the Ch'uan Miao - [by] David Crockett Graham - 1937 -- - The ceremonies of the Ch'uan Miao - Translated from the Miao into Chinese by Hsiung Ts'ao-sung ; translated from the Chinese by David Crockett Graham, with the assistance of Hsiung Ts'ao-sung - 1937 -- - Songs and stories of the Ch'uan Miao - [by] David Crockett Graham - 1954 -- - Studies of Miao-I societies in Kweichow - [by] Che-lin Wu, Ch'en Kuo-chnn and others ; translation by Lien-en Tsao - 1942 --^
    Description / Table of Contents: the Miao and the feminine in China's cultural politics - Louisa Schein - 2000 -- - Ethnicity and the state: the Hua Miao of southwest China - Norma Diamond - 1993 -- - Magpie Miao of southern Szechuan - Ruey Yih-fu - 1960
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  • 56
    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: Abkhazians ; Abkhazians--Social conditions ; Abkhazians--Social life and customs ; Centenarians--Georgia (Republic)--Abkhazia ; Child rearing--Georgia (Republic)--Abkhazia ; Family--Georgia (Republic)--Abkhazia
    Abstract: This collection consists of a culture summary and four English language documents dealing with the people and culture of Abkhazia, covering approximately 1864 to 1979. The study by Paula Garb is based on the memories of centenarian informants and goes back in time to the middle or late nineteenth century. They recount the transition from czarist fuedalism to capitalist development, early Soviet government, the formation of collective farms, World War II, and their opinions of modern (late twentieth century) Abkhazian youth. Benet focuses on various environmental and biological factors leading to extreme longevity of a large number of individuals in Abkhaz society. Other ethnographic topics discussed are kinship and kinship terminology, women's roles, marriage, sexual behavior, child-rearing practices, funerals, religion, and folklore. Dzhanashvili and Dzhanashia both deal in large part with Abkhaz religion, including gods, ceremonies, spirits of the dead, and holidays. Dzhanashvili also presents some general ethnographic information on social life (marriage, the fosterage system of the upper class), and some notes on mortuary practices. The Abkhazians mostly live in the de facto autonomous republic of Abkhazia located between the southwestern slopes of the Greater Caucasus Mountains and a narrow strip along the Black Sea coast in the extreme northwest region of the Republic of Georgia
    Description / Table of Contents: Abkhazians - B. George Hewitt - 2009 -- - Abkhazia and the Abkhaz - M. G. Dzhanashvili - 1894 -- - The Religious beliefs of the Abkhasians - N. S. Janashia - 1937 -- - Abkhasians: the long-living people of the Caucasus - By Sula Benet - [1974] -- - From childhood to centenarian - Paula Garb - 1984
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  • 57
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Family--New Zealand ; Kinship--New Zealand ; Maori (New Zealand people) ; Maori (New Zealand people)--Economic conditions ; Maori (New Zealand people)--Kinship ; Maori (New Zealand people)--Social conditions ; New Zealand--Social life and customs
    Description / Table of Contents: Maori - Christopher Latham - 2009 -- - The Maori: volume 1 - by Elsdon Best - 1924 -- - The Maori: volume 2 - by Elsdon Best ... - 1924 -- - The coming of the Maori - by Te Rangi Hiroa, Sir Peter Buck - 1952 -- - Economics of the New Zealand Maori - Raymond William Firth ; with a pref. by R. H. Tawney - 1959 -- - The Maori: a study in acculturation - H.B. Hawthorn - [1944] -- - New growth from old: the Whanau in the modern world - Joan Metge ; illustrated by Toi Te Rito Maihi - 1995 -- - Conflicts of redistribution in contemporary Maori society: leadership and the Tainui settlement - Toon van Meijl - 2003 -- - Effecting change through electoral politics: cultural identity and the Maori franchise - Ann Sullivan - 2003 -- - References - Edited by Toon van Meijl and Michael Goldsmith - 2003 -- - The making of the Maori: culture invention and its logic - Allan Hanson - 1989
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  • 58
    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: Art, Tiwi (Australia) ; Tiwi (Australian people) ; Tiwi (Australian people)--Folklore ; Tiwi (Australian people)--Rites and ceremonies ; Women, Tiwi (Australia) Tiwi (Australian people)--Social life and customs
    Abstract: This collection about the Tiwi consists of 11 documents and a culture summary, all in English. It covers a variety of historical, geographical, and cultural information from 1900 to the 1960s collected primarily by professional anthropologists and government officials. The Tiwi are aboriginal people inhabiting Melville and Bathurst Islands of northern Australia. Anthropologist Jane Goodale provides comprehensive firsthand ethnographic accounts of Tiwi society as observed in 1950s and 1960s. She describes major features of Tiwi society through detailed exposition of the experiences of individual women, men, and children in different groups (households, matrilineal sibs, phratries, and moieties) and a wide variety of social situations relating to puberty rites, marriage arrangements, and funeral ceremonies. Other anthropological studies included examine status manipulation and political behavior, art and religion, kinship and social organization, use of personal names, marriage contracts, puberty and initiation rites, economic activities, and division of labor by gender. There is little information on changes that might have occurred in Tiwi society after 1962 (the year Goodale visited the area for the last time) to the present
    Description / Table of Contents: Tiwi - Jane C. Goodale - 2009 -- - The Tiwi of North Australia - by C. W. M. Hart and Arnold R. Pilling - 1960 -- - The Tiwi: their art, myth, and ceremony - Charles P. Mountford - 1958 -- - The Tiwi of Melville and Bathurst Islands - C. W. M. Hart - 1939-31 -- - Personal names among the Tiwi - C. W. M. Hart - 1930-31 -- - Notes on the natives of Bathurst Island, North Australia - Herbert Basedow - 1913 -- - Marriage contracts among the Tiwi - Jane C. Goodale - 1962 -- - Qualifications of manhood: Tiwi invoke the power of a yam - Jane C. Goodale - 1963 -- - 'Alonga Bush': a Tiwi hunt - Jane C. Goodale - 1957 -- - Life at Bathurst Island Mission - Arthur Barclay - 1939 -- - Tiwi wives: a study of the women of Melville Island, North Australia - [by] Jane C. Goodale - [1971] -- - Production and reproduction of key resources among the Tiwi of North Australia - Jane C. Goodale - 1982
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  • 59
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    New Haven, Conn : Human Relations Area Files, Inc
    Language: English
    Pages: Online-Ressource
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Captain Marshall Field expedition to Madagascar, 1926-1927 ; Ethnology--Madagascar ; Tanala (Malagasy people) ; Tanala
    Abstract: This collection consists of a culture summary and one book. The book, authored by Ralph Linton, is based on his field work conducted in 1926-1927 and sponsored by the Field Museum. Although Linton was only among the Tanala for two months, he spent about one year and a half traveling throughout Madagascar, and as a result presents data on various other tribes of the island in comparison with that on the Tanala. The work is presented as a standard ethnography, with sections on tribal identification, economy, social organization, government, religion, warfare, amusement, art, life cycle, folklore, and a brief history of tribal wars. The Tanala, also called Antanala, are a Malagasy speaking people living in southeastern Madagascar, an island nation located off the eastern coast of southern Africa
    Note: Culture summary: Tanala - Teferi Abate Adem - 2009 -- - The Tanala: a hill tribe of Madagascar - by Ralph Linton ... Marshall Field expedition to Madagascar, 1926 - 1933
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  • 60
    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: Mossi (African people) ; Ouagadougou (Burkina Faso)--Social conditions
    Abstract: This collection of 10 documents covers historical, cultural, and geographical information on the Mossi people from their first conquest by French colonialists in 1896/1897 to the emergence of Burkina Faso as an independent nation in 1961. The earliest account of pre-colonial Mossi culture and society in this collection was compiled by Mangin, a Catholic missionary who worked among the Mossi at the turn of the 20th century. Two documents focus on political and social structures as observed in 1908-1916 by Tauxier, a French colonial administrator with a long association with traditional Mossi leaders. The remaining seven documents were compiled by two American anthropologists, Skinner and Hammond, and are based on ethnographic fieldwork carried out in Ouagadougou and other parts of Mossi country mostly in 1954-1957. In one document Skinner discusses urbanization and modernization issues based on data and interviews from ethnographic fieldwork conducted in the 1964-1965 and later on in 1966-1969 when the author served as the Ambassador of the United States to Burkina Faso. The Mossi are a Voltaic-speaking people located mostly in the West African nation of Burkina Faso (formerly Upper Volta). The Mossi are historically noted for their empire, which lasted for at least five centuries until conquest by the French at the end of the nineteenth century
    Description / Table of Contents: Mossi - Gregory A. Finnegan - 2009 -- - Essay on the manners and customs of the Mossi people in the western Sudan - Eugène Mangin - 1921 -- - Economic change and Mossi acculturation - Peter B. Hammond - 1959 -- - The black population of the Sudan, Mossi and Gourounsi country, documents and analyses - Louis Tauxier - 1912 -- - The black population of Yatenga - L. Tauxier - 1917 -- - Christianity and Islam among the Mossi - Elliott P. Skinner - 1958 -- - Traditional and modern patterns of succession to political office among the Mossi of the Voltaic Republic - Elliott P. Skinner - 1960 -- - Mossi joking - Peter B. Hammond - 1964 -- - The Mossi of the Upper Volta - Elliott Percival Skinner - 1964 -- - Trade and market among the Mossi people - By Elliott P. Skinner - 1962 -- - African urban life: the transformation of Ouagadougou - by Elliott P. Skinner - [1974]
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  • 61
    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: Vedda (Sri Lankan people)
    Abstract: This collection consists of three documents, all in English, containing information about the Vedda during three periods of time: 1850s, mid-1910s, and late 1960s. The first comprehensive ethnographic account of Vedda in this collection was compiled by C. G. Seligmann and B. Z. Seligmann. It provides a first hand account of Vedda kinship, village life, economic activities, settlement patterns, life cycles, religion, music, language and perceptions as observed in 1907-1908. Seligmanns's account is supplemented by James Brow's study of kinship and caste system among the Vedda of Anuradhapura district in the Northern Central Province of Sri Lanka. The remaining book in the collection was authored by John Bailey, a British colonial government official, and he covers a variety of information relating to settlement pattern, economic activities and religion. The Vedda are a small group of indigenous people living in the center of Sri Lanka, an island off the southern tip of India
    Description / Table of Contents: Vedda - James Brow and Michael Woost - 2009 -- - The Veddas - By C. G. Seligmann... and Brenda Z. Seligman. With a chapter by C.S. Myers ... and an appendix by A. Mendis Gunasekara ... - 1911 -- - An account of the wild tribes of the Veddahs of Ceylon: their habits, customs, and superstitions - John Bailey - 1863 -- - Vedda villages of Anuradhapura: the historical anthropology of a community in Sri Lanka - James Brow - 1978
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  • 62
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Yoruba (African people) ; Yoruba
    Abstract: This collection of 31 documents about the Yoruba covers the time period from 1880 to the 1960s. The book by anthropologist William R. Bascom (1969) provides comprehensive first-hand ethnographic accounts of Yoruba culture as observed in 1937-1938, 1950-1951 and 1965. Articles by Bascom discuss aspects of Yoruba culture and society including social structure, cult groups and divination, functions of local credit institutions, and food and cooking. Other anthropological studies include both broad ethnographic surveys, and relatively short manuscripts examining specific themes including political structure, lineage groups, kinship and marriage, class and economic differentiation, craft organization, land tenure and tenancy, urbanization and change, and divination, cult groups, witchcraft and dynamics of gender and religion. Also included in the collection are reports by a senior colonial government official and two missionaries. The collection focuses largely on Yoruba communities in Nigeria, except Parrinder (1947) who provides a brief ethnographic survey of the Yoruba in Benin (formerly Dahomey). Readers will also find useful information in Matory and Bascom (1969) relating to the influences of Yoruba religion and art forms on the cultures of peoples of African origin in the Caribbean, Cuba, Brazil, and the United States
    Description / Table of Contents: Yoruba - Sandra T. Barnes - 2009 -- - The Yoruba-speaking peoples of south-western Nigeria - Daryll Forde - 1951 -- - The sanctions of Ifa divination - William R. Bascom - 1941 -- - The laws and customs of the Yoruba people - by A. K. Ajisafe ; with a portrait of the author - 1924 -- - The principle of seniority in the social structure of the Yoruba - William R. Bascom - 1942 -- - Yoruba food - William R. Bascom - 1951 -- - Yoruba cooking - William R. Bascom - 1951 -- - The Yoruba lineage - Peter C. Lloyd - 1955 -- - Kinship and lineage among the Yoruba - William B. Schwab - 1955 -- - Craft organization on Yoruba towns - Peter C. Lloyd - 1953 -- - Some problems of tenancy in Yoruba land tenure - Peter C. Lloyd - 1955 -- - Land tenure in the Yoruba provinces - H. L. Ward Price - 1939 -- - The terminology of kinship and marriage among the Yoruba - William B. Schwab - 1958 --^
    Description / Table of Contents: a credit institution of the Yoruba - William R. Bascom - 1952 -- - Ifa divination - J. D. Clarke - 1939 -- - The integration of the new economic classes into local government in western Nigeria - P. C. Lloyd - 1953 -- - Yoruba-speaking peoples in Dahomey - Geoffrey Parrinder - 1947 -- - The Atinga cult among the south-western Yoruba: a sociological analysis of a witch-finding movement - P. Morton-Williams - 1956 -- - Native administration in the British African territories: part III, West Africa: Nigeria, Gold Coast, Sierra Leone, Gambia - Lord Hailey - 1951 -- - Three Yoruba fertility ceremonies - J. D. Clarke - 1944 -- - Ifa Divination: comments on the paper by J. D. Clarke - William R. Bascom - 1942 --^
    Description / Table of Contents: gender and the politics of metaphor in Oyo Yoruba religion - J. Lorand Matory - 1994
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  • 63
    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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  • 64
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Agriculture and state-India-Chingleput (District) ; Agriculture and state-India-Tamil Nadu ; Chingleput, India (District)-Rural conditions ; Land tenure-India-Chingleput (District) ; Love ; Tamil (Indic people) ; Tamil (Indic people)-Social life and customs ; Trawick, Margaret
    Abstract: This collection of 23 documents about Indian Tamils, all in English, deal primarily with specific village surveys or regional studies in Tamil Nadu. No single document in the collection gives a general overview of all aspects of Tamil ethnography. Information regarding the caste and class organization of the Tamil is provided by B́eteille, Sivetsen, Gough, Beck, and Mencher. Tamil economics is covered by Haswell and in the six south Indian village economic studies presented in Thomas, Ramakrishnan, Thirumalai, Natarajan, and Veeraraghaven. Also discussed are the status and powers of women in Tamil society, health and health policies in the village of Thaiyur, and social change in the village of Pulicat. The Tamil homeland is in southwestern India and is roughly equivalent to the modern state of Tamil Nadu. The Tamil comprise the vast majority of the population of Tamil Nadu and a good number of Indian Tamil also live in the small territory of Pondicherry, around the city of Bangalore, and elsewhere in India. The Tamil speak Tamil, a Dravidian language. Within villages, society is ordered by a hierarchy of castes
    Description / Table of Contents: Tamil - Clarence Maloney - 2009 -- - Caste, class, and power: changing patterns of stratification in a Tanjore village - By By André Béteille - 1971 -- - When caste barriers fall: a study of social and economic change in a south indian village - Dagfinn Sivertsen - 1963 -- - Pills against poverty: a study of the introduction of western medicine in a Tamil village - By Goran Djurfeldt and Staffan Lindberg - 1975 -- - Peasant society in Konku: a study of right and left subcastes in south India - Brenda E. F. Beck - 1972 -- - Dravidianization: a Tamil revitalization movement - Ebenezer Titus Jacob-Pandian - 1972 --^
    Description / Table of Contents: past origins, present transformations and future prospects - by Joan P. Mencher - 1978 -- - The tribulations of fieldwork - By André Béteille - 1975 -- - Viewing hierarchy from the bottom up - Joan P. Mencher - 1975 -- - Some south Indian villages: a resurvey with analysis and observations - Edited by P. J. Thomas and K. C. Ramakrishnan - 1940 -- - Vadamalaipuram: (Ramnad District) - By S. Thirumalai - 1940 -- - Gangaikondan: (Tinnevelly District.) - By B. Natarajan - 1940 -- - Palakkurichi: (Tanjore Dt.) - By S. Thirumalai - 1940 -- - Eruvellipet: (South Arcot Dt.) - By A. K. Veeraraghavan - 1940 -- - Dusi: (North Arcot Dt.) - By A. K. Veeraraghavan - 1940 -- - Notes on love in a Tamil family - Margaret Trawick - 1990 -- - On the meaning of sakti to women in Tamil Nadu - Margaret Egnor - 1991 -- - The auspicious married woman - Holly Baker Reynolds - 1991 -- - Marriage in Tamil culture: the problem of conflicting 'models' - Sheryl B. Daniel - 1991 -- - The paradoxical powers of Tamil women - Susan S. Wadley - 1991
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  • 65
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Indian children--Argentina ; Indian children-Chile ; Indians of South America--Chile ; Indians of South America-Argentina ; Indians of South America-Chile ; Mapuche Indians ; Mapuche Indians--Religion ; Mapuche Indians--Social life and customs ; Mapuche Indians-Social life and customs
    Abstract: This collection consists of nine documents, all in English, about the Mapuche. Titiev gives a good overall picture of Mapuche culture with special emphasis on sociopolitical structure and acculturation but only covers the period from 1930 to the late 1940s. Cooper's writing, based on secondary documentation, supplements the data in Titiev, particularly in regard to diversity among the various tribal divisions, and adds more historical background information. Latcham's account of Mapuche culture as it existed in the late nineteenth century is poorly organized, but provides many useful details on Mapuche life. Although its major focus is on childhood and child-rearing practices, Hilger's piece provides a wealth of information on the life cycle, material culture, subsistence activities, religion, kinship, political organization, art, and culture history of both Chilean and Argentinian groups of Mapuche. Faron deals with Mapuche social structure, religion, and morals; Baccara discusses the Mapuche ethnic resurgence in post-dictatorship Chile; and Nakashima Degarrond describes female shamanism among the Mapuche of Chile. Historically, Mapuche or "people from the land" was the term used to designate the Mapuche occupying the south-central area of Chile but now is the term used for all Mapuche. The Mapuche speak a language called Mapudungun, composed of several dialects
    Description / Table of Contents: Mapuche - Lydia Nakashima Degarrod - 2009 -- - Araucanian culture in transition - Mischa Titiev - 1951 -- - Ethnology of the Araucanos - Richard E. Latcham - 1909 -- - The Araucanians - John M. Cooper - 1946 -- - Araucanian child life and its cultural background - by Sister M. Inez Hilger - 1957 -- - Mapuche social structure: institutional reintegration in a patrilineal society of central Chile - Louis C. Faron ; foreword by Julian H. Steward - 1961 -- - Hawks of the sun: Mapuche morality and its ritual attributes - by Louis C. Faron - 1964 -- - The Mapuche people in post-dictatorship Chile - Guillaume Boccara - 2002 -- - Mapuche ceremonial landscape, social recruitment and resource rights - Tom D. Dillehay - 1990 -- - Female shamanism and the Mapuche transformation into Christian Chilean Farmers - Lydia Nakashima Degarrod - 1998
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  • 66
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Bedouins ; Bedouins--Kuwait--Social life and customs ; Bedouins--Saudi Arabia--Social life and customs ; Kuwait--Social life and customs ; Saudi Arabia--Social life and customs
    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
    Description / Table of Contents: 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
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  • 67
    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: Amish
    Description / Table of Contents: Amish - John A. Hostetler - 2009 -- - Amish society - John A. Hostetler - 1980 -- - A peculiar people: Iowa's Old Order Amish - By Elmer Schwieder and Dorothy Schwieder - 1975
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  • 68
    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: Carib Indians ; Indians of South America--Guyana
    Abstract: This collection about the Barama River Carib consists of two documents and a cultural summary that covers cultural, ecological, and historical information collected by professional anthropologists from the 1920s to the 1970s. The Barama River Carib are a small group of indigenous people located in the North West District of Guyana. John Gillin explores relationships between ecology and dominant features of Barama River Carib's social organization and personality as observed in the 1930s. Kathleen Adams studied this community some forty years later. Her work gives particular emphasis to changes observed in Barama River Carib's demography, settlement pattern, and semi-nomadic adaptation to the rain forest as they were being integrated into a national political economy by the Guyanese government
    Description / Table of Contents: Barama River Carib - Kathleen J. Adams - 2009 -- - The Barama River Caribs of British Guiana - John Gillin - 1936 -- - The Barama River Caribs of Guyana restudied: forty years of cultural adaptation and population change - Kathleen Joy Adams - 1973
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  • 69
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Child development-Liberia-Gbarngasuakwelle ; Child psychology-Liberia--Gbarngasuakwelle ; Children, Kpelle ; Children, Kpelle-Cultural assimilation ; Children, Kpelle-Education ; Children, Kpelle-Games ; Education--Liberia ; Folk classification--Liberia ; Gbarngasuakwelle (Liberia)-Social life and customs ; Kpelle (African people) ; Kpelle (African people)--Economic conditions ; Kpelle (African people)--Education ; Kpelle (African people)--Marriage customs and rites ; Kpelle (African people)--Religion ; Kpelle (African people)--Rites and ceremonies ; Kpelle (African people)--Social conditions ; Kpelle (African people)--Social life and customs ; Learning, Psychology of ; Liberia--Social life and customs ; Poro (Society) ; Secrecy ; Socialization--Case studies
    Abstract: This collection about the Kpelle consists of 10 documents, covering a variety of cultural information, from the 1910s to the 1980s. German ethnologist Diedrich H. Westermann describes Kpelle environment, economy, language, family, social organization, religion and arts as observed in 1914-1915. His work is the oldest and by far the largest in the collection, though Gibbs provides a more general social and cultural summary of Kpelle based on ethnographic fieldwork conducted in 1957-1958. The remaining 8 documents are results of research concerned with specific issues and the focus of most of these studies was on rural Kpelle communities in Liberia. Kpelle communities found in cities (e.g., Monorovia) and outside Liberia (e.g., Kpelle of Guinea or Guerźe) are not covered. The Kpelle are the largest ethnic group in the West African nation of Liberia and a significant group in neighboring Guinea
    Description / Table of Contents: Kpelle - Gerald M. Erchak - 2009 -- - The Kpelle of Liberia - James L. Gibbs, Jr. - 1965 -- - Women and marriage in Kpelle society - Caroline H. Bledsoe - 1980 -- - The language of secrecy: symbols & metaphors in Poro ritual - By Beryl Larry Bellman - 1984 -- - Village of curers and assassins: on the production of Fala Kpelle cosmolotical categories - By Beryl Larry Bellman - 1975 -- - The Kpelle: a negro tribe in Liberia - Diedrich H. Westerman - 1921 -- - Full respect: Kpelle children in adaptation - Gerald Michael Erchak - 1977 -- - Marital instability among the Kpelle: towards a theory of epainogamy - James L. Gibbs - 1963 -- - Poro values and courtroom procedures in a Kpelle chiefdom - James L. Gibbs, Jr. - 1962 -- - The Kpelle moot: a therapeutic model for the informal settlement of disputes - James L. Gibbs, Jr. - 1963 -- - Playing on the mother-ground: cultural routines for children's development - David F. Lancy - 1996
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  • 70
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Clans ; Creation--Mythology ; Indians of North America--Social life and customs ; Wyaco, Virgil, 1926- ; Zuni Indians ; Zuni Indians--Biography ; Zuni Indians--Legal status, laws, etc ; Zuni Indians--Politics and government ; Zuni mythology
    Abstract: This collection about the Zuni, a pueblo Indian group located in the southwestern United States, consists of 33 documents. The collection is oriented toward traditional Zuni ethnography represented by the classic works of Stevenson, Cushing, Kroeber, Parsons, Bunzel, and Woodbury. The social and political organization of the Zuni are covered in Ladd, Eggan, Eggan and Pandey, and Pandey. Kinship is discussed in Kroeber, Schneider, and Ladd; and agriculture is covered by Cushing, Bohrer, and Damp. Acculturation and culture change are topics of focus in McFeat, Leighton, Mills, and Eggan and Pandey. Other ethnographic subjects covered in this collection are kachinas, family and household, and ceramics. Wyaco wrote an autobiographical account of growing up in the Zuni society, and Pandey critiques various anthropologists' work with the Zuni over the years. The Zuni, who call themselves "A shiwi," are primarily concentrated in the single village or pueblo of Zuni situated on a reservation in west-central New Mexico
    Description / Table of Contents: their mythology, esoteric fraternities, and ceremonies - by Matilda Coxe Stevenson - 1904 -- - A Zuni life: a Pueblo Indian in two worlds - Virgil Wyaco ; transcribed and edited by J.A. Jones ; historical sketch by Carroll L. Riley - 1998 -- - Bibliography - Alfonso Ortiz, volume editor - 1979 -- - Outlines of Zuñi creation myths - By Frank Hamilton Cushing - 1896 -- - Zuni agriculture - By Vorsila L. Bohrer, With sections by Lawrence Kaplan and Thomas W. Whitaker - 1960 -- - People of the middle place: a study of the Zuni Indians - by Dorothea C. Leighton and John Adair - [1963] -- - Zuni law: a field of values - by Watson Smith and John M. Roberts. With an appendix by Stanley Newman - 1954 --^
    Description / Table of Contents: lessons for repatriation from Zuni Pueblo and the Smithsonian Institution - by William L. Merrill, Edmund J. Ladd, and T. J. Ferguson - 1993 -- - Acts of resistance: Zuni ceramics, social identity, and the Pueblo Revolt - Barbara J. Mills - 2002 -- - Anthropologists at Zuni - Triloki Nath Pandey - 1972 -- - Images of power in a Southwestern pueblo - Triloki Nath Pandey - 1977 -- - Zuni history, 1850-1970 - Fred Eggan and T. N. Pandey - 1979 -- - Zuni sacred theater - by Barbara Tedlock - 1983 -- - The witches were saved: a Zuni origin story - Dennis Tedlock - 1988 --^
    Description / Table of Contents: a revisionist cultural model of Zuni social organization - Linda K. Watts - 1997 -- - Zuni prehistory and history to 1850 - Richard B. Woodbury - 1979
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  • 71
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Ethnology Rwanda ; Hutu (African people) ; Patron and client--Rwanda--History ; Patronage, Political--Rwanda--History ; Political anthropology--Rwanda--History ; Rwanda--Ethnic relations ; Rwanda--Politics and government ; Rwandans ; Social structure--Rwanda--History ; Tutsi (African people)
    Abstract: This collection of fifteen documents covers historical, cultural, and economic information on the Rwandans, circa 1895 to 2004. The Rwandan culture has its roots in the precolonial kingdom of Rwanda and encompasses both the population of the modern state of Rwanda and speakers of the Kinyarwanda language in the neighboring Congo and Uganda. The basic and most comprehensive sources in the collection were compiled by the Belgian ethnologist Jacques Maquet in 1949-1957. Maquet discusses the processes and rules that structured Rwandan society into a caste-like political system consisting of cattle owning ruling elites, Tutsi, a farming majority, Hutu, and a forest dwelling hunting minority, Twa. However, his arguments are strongly challenged by the works of three scholars, Mamdani, Catharine Newbury, and David Newbury, who do not view ethnicity as a primordial identity. The collection also includes four documents which, together, provide the earliest available firsthand information on the Rwandans: Czekanowski, who, in 1907-1909, collected a wide variety of information relating to history, language, and arts in the Mpororo region; the now classic work of John Roscoe, a European clergy who traveled extensively in central Africa; and van Hove, a Belgian colonial administrator and lawyer. Two documents from Christopher Taylor deal with ethnomedicine and diet, and the remaining three deal with the nature of the violence that swept Rwanda in 1994. The Rwandans encompass groups presently known as the Hutu, Tutsi, and Twa
    Description / Table of Contents: Rwandans - Timothy Longman - 2009 -- - Essay on the common law of Ruanda - J. Vanhove - 1941 -- - The kingdom of Ruanda - Jacques J. Maquet - 1954 -- - A Hamitic kingdom in the center of Africa: in Ruanda on the shores of Lake Kivu (Belgian Congo) - G. Pagés - 1933 -- - Investigations in the area between the Nile and the Congo: First volume: ethnography, the interlacustrine region of Mporo and Ruanda - Jan Czkanowski ; musical appendix by E. M. Hornbostel - 1917 -- - The Bagesu and other tribes of the Uganda Protectorate: the third part of the report of the Mackie ethnological expedition to central Africa - John Roscoe - 1924 -- - The premise of inequality in Ruanda:: a study of political relations in a central African kingdom - Jacques J. Maquet - 1961 -- - The cohesion of oppression: clientship and ethnicity in Rwanda, 1860-1960 - Catharine Newbury - 1988 --^
    Description / Table of Contents: an historical hypothesis - David S. Newbury - 1980 -- - The harp that plays by itself - Christopher C. Taylor - 1992 -- - Loose women, virtuous wives, and timid virgins: gender and the control of resources in Rwanda - Villia Jefremovas - 1991 -- - Mutton, mud, and runny noses - Christopher C. Taylor - 2005 -- - Rwanda: the rationality of genocide - René Lemarchand - 1995 -- - Background to genocide: Rwanda - Catharine Newbury - 1995 -- - Genocide and socio-political change: massacres in two Rwandan villages - Timothy Longman - 1995
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  • 72
    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: Arabian Peninsula--Description and travel ; Bedouins--Arabian Peninsula ; Bedouins--Saudi Arabia ; Folklore--Arabian Peninsula ; Saudi Arabia--Social life and customs
    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
    Description / Table of Contents: 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
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  • 73
    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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  • 74
    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: Burusho
    Abstract: This collection consists of 9 documents about the Burusho, a mountain people living primarily in the Hunza valley, but also in the Nagar and Yasin areas, and in the Gilgit district of the northern areas of Pakistan. All are in English except Lorimer, which provides both the original text in Burushaski and its translation into English. Four documents by David L. Lorimer, a British political agent who lived in Hunza from 1920 to 1924, and his wife, Emily O. Lorimer, focus on folklore, local traditions and linguistic issues. John Tobe's work tries to correct popular western views which wrongly regarded Hunza as a paradise where people live extraordinarily long healthy lifes. John Clark compliments Tobe's work by listing the many cases of disease which he encountered while maintaining a general dispensary in the area in 1948-1951. The remaining two documents discuss economy, ecology and social organization
    Description / Table of Contents: Burusho - Hugh R. Page and Teferi Abate Adem - 2009 -- - The Burusho of Hunza - Emily Overend Lorimer - 1938 -- - Language hunting in the Karakoram - Emily Overend Lorimer - [1939] -- - The Burushaski language: Vol. 1, introduction and grammar - by D. L. R. Lorimer ; with preface by Georg Morgenstierne - 1935 -- - The Burushaski language: Vol. 2, texts and translations - by D. L. R. Lorimer - 1935 -- - Hunza: adventures in a land of paradise - John H. Tobe - 1960 -- - Hunza in the Himalayas: storied Shangri-La undergoes scrutiny - John Clark - 1963 -- - Subsistence, ecology, and social organisation among the Hunzakut: a high-mountain people in the Karakorams - M. H. Sidky - 1993 -- - Historical rivalry and religious boundaries in the Karakorum: the case of Nager and Hunza - Jürgen W. Frembgen - 1992
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  • 75
    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: Indians of South America--Bolivia--Cultural assimilation ; Siriono Indians ; Siriono Indians--Cultural assimilation
    Abstract: This collection about the Siriońo consists of five English language documents plus a culture summary, covering a time span from approximately 1900 to 1984. The Holmberg and Stearman studies are the basic works providing a broad general coverage of Siriońo ethnography. Holmberg is the classic study of the Siriońo based on his fieldwork among these people in 1940-1941. Stearman is largely a review of Holmberg's fieldwork with an update of ethnographic material to about 1984. She describes the affects of acculturation on the Siriońo since Holmberg's visit, and provides additional data on the general economy. Material culture is described and illustrated in Ryden and in Radwan. Radwan also presents some brief comments on general ethnography and on contacts with missionaries. The Siriońo inhabit an extensive tropical forest in northern and eastern Bolivia
    Description / Table of Contents: Siriono - Mario Califano (translated by Ruth Gubler) and John Beierle (synopsis and indexing notes) - 2009 -- - Nomads of the long bow: the Siriono of eastern Bolivia - By Allan R. Holmberg ; prepared in cooperation with the U.S. Dept. of State as a project of the Interdepartmental Committee on Scientific and Cultural Cooperation - 1950 -- - The Siriono: a study of the effect of hunger frustration on the culture of a semi-nomadic Bolivian Indian society - Allan R. Holmberg - [1946] -- - A Study of the Siriono Indians - Stig Rydén - 1941 -- - Information about the Siriono Indians - Eduard Radwan - 1928 -- - No longer nomads: the Sirionó revisited - by Allyn MacLean Stearman - 1987 -- - Figures - Stig Rydén - 1941 -- - Illustrations: Information about the Siriono Indians - Eduard Radwan - 1928
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  • 76
    Language: English
    Pages: Online-Ressource
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Comanche Indians
    Abstract: This collection of 16 documents and a culture summary provide a variety of cultural, historical and environmental information from two historical periods. The first covers the Comanche's long history from antiquity to their first contact with Europeans in 1701, to their defeat by the United States army in the 1870s. The second is from 1875 to the 1990s, and includes the Comanche's 1875 confinement to a reservation, and 1901-1906 when that reservation was broken into scattered allotments. All documents are in English except Canonge which includes stories and folktales in the Comanche language with English translations. The Comanche are a loosely organized Native American group who, before their confinement to reservations, occupied the southern Great Plains grasslands across southeastern Colorado, eastern New Mexico, western Oklahoma, and western Texas. The headquarters of the Comanche Nation is now in southwest Oklahoma
    Note: - Plains Indian law in development: the Comanche - Edward Adamson Hoebel - 1969 -- - Sanapia, Comanche medicine woman - David E. Jones - 1972 -- - Comanche - Thomas W. Kavanagh - 2001 -- - Bibliography - [edited by Raymond J. DeMallie] - 2001 -- - Being Comanche: a social history of an American Indian community - Morris W. Foster - 1991 -- - Comanche belief and ritual - By Daniel Joseph Gelo - 1986 [2006 copy] , Culture summary: Comanche - Daniel J. Gelo and Teferi Abate Adem (synopsis and indexing notes) - 2009 -- - The political organization and law-ways of the Comanche Indians - E. Adamson Hoebel - 1940 -- - The Comanches: lords of the south Plains - Ernest Wallace and E. Adamson Hoebel - 1952 -- - Some notes on uses of plants by the Comanche Indians - Gustav G. Carlson and Volney H. Jones - 1939 -- - The Comanche Sun Dance - Ralph Linton - 1935 -- - The Comanche Sun Dance and Messianic Outbreak of 1873 - E. Adamson Hoebel - 1941 -- - Comanche kin behavior - Thomas Gladwin - 1948 -- - Comanche texts - Elliott Canonge ; illustrated by Katherine Voigtlander ; introduction by Morris Swadesh ; edited by Benjamin Elson - 1958 -- - Comanche baby language - Joseph Bartholomew Casagrande - 1965 -- - The Comanche on the white man's road - Ernest Wallace - 1953 --
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  • 77
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    New Haven, Conn : Human Relations Area Files, Inc
    Language: English
    Pages: Online-Ressource
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Batek (Malaysian people) ; Batek (Malaysian people)--Government relations ; Batek (Malaysian people)--Politics and government ; Batek (Malaysian people)--Religion ; Batek (Malaysian people)--Social conditions ; Forest conservation--Malaysia--Pahang ; Forest degradation--Malaysia--Pahang ; Forest ecology--Malaysia--Pahang ; Indigenous peoples--Ecology--Malaysia--Pahang ; Pahang--Environmental conditions ; Pahang--Social conditions ; Semang (Malaysian people)
    Abstract: This collection of six documents about the Semang covers four time periods: mid-1920s to late 1930s, mid-1950s, early 1970s, and 1993-1996. It documents the Semang's engagement with state and market forces over the degradation of the forests from which they take their identity and modes of life. At least nine distinct cultural-linguistic subgroups still exist: Kensiu of eastern Kedah (near Baling) and southern Thailand (Yala Province); Kintak of northwestern Perak (near Gerik); Jahai of northestern Perak and northwestern Kelantan; Lanòh of northwestern Perak (near Gerik); Mendriq of central Kelantan; Batèk D̀̀̀̀̀è' of southeastern Kelantan and northern Pahang; Batèk Nòng of central Pahang (near Jerantut); Mintil of north-central Pahang (near Cegar Perah); and Mos (or Chong) of the Pattalung-Trang area in southern peninsular Thailand. Semang live in temporary camps scattered in the forests of Malaysia, Indonesia and Southern Thailand
    Note: Culture summary: Semang - Kirk Endicott and Teferi Abate Adem (synopsis and indexing notes) - 2009 -- - The Negritos of Asia; vol. 2, ethnography of the Negritos: half-vol. 1, economy and sociology - Paul Schebesta - 1954 -- - The Negritos of Asia; vol. 2, ethnography of the Negritos: half-vol. 1, religion and mythology - Paul Schebesta - 1957 -- - A Lanoh Negrito funeral near Lenggong, Perak - P. D. R. Williams-Hunt - 1954 -- - Batek Negrito religion: the world-view and rituals of a hunting and gathering people of Peninsular Malaysia - Kirk Endicott - 1979 -- - Changing pathways: forest degradation and the Batek of Pahang, Malaysia - Lye Tuck-Po - 2004
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  • 78
    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 --
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  • 79
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Art, Micronesian ; Caroline Islands ; Caroline Islands -- Social life and customs ; Ethnology--Micronesia (Federated States)--Ifalik Atoll ; Folk music--Micronesia (Federated States)--Ifalik Atoll ; Folk songs, Micronesian--Micronesia (Federated States)--Ifalik Atoll ; Ifalik Atoll (Micronesia) ; Ifaluk Atoll (Micronesia) ; Lamotrek (Micronesia) ; Micronesians -- Social life and customs
    Abstract: This collection of 28 documents about the peoples of the Woleai Region focuses primarily on the atoll of Ifaluk, and contains information on three time periods: the early 20th century, the late 1940s-mid-1950s, and the late 1980s to the early 1990s. The earliest information comes from travel reports by German explorers and missionaries who lived and worked in the region from 1904-1910; the other writings are by professional anthropologists. Together, the documents show that life in this region remains largely traditional, despite many years of administration by successive external powers. The Woleai Region is an administrative section of Yap State of the Federated States of Micronesia (FSM). Woleai is the largest group of closely related atolls in the central and west-central Caroline Islands that also includes Eauripik, Ifaluk, Faraulep, Elato, and Lamotrek. Residents label themselves by means of a nominal prefixed to their particular island name, as in reweleya, which means "person of Woleai (nationality)" and speak dialects of Woleaian, a Micronesian language of the Eatern Oceanic Branch of Austronesian
    Description / Table of Contents: a little-disturbed atoll - Edwin Grant Burrows - [1949] -- - The Central Carolines: part II: Ifaluk, Aurepik, Faraulip, Sorol, Mog-Mog: part II: Ifaluk, Aurepik, Faraulip, Sorol, Mog-Mog - Hans Damm et al. - 1938 -- - Generalities: journal of the expedition - Georg Thilenius and F. E. Hellwig - 1927 -- - Culture summary: Woleai Region - William H. Alkire and John Beierle (synopsis and indexing notes) - 2009 -- - The Central Carolines: part I: the Lamotrek Group, Woleai - Augustin Friedrich Krámer - 1937 -- - Reminiscences of a trip to Russian America, Micronesia, and through Kamchatka - von F.H.v. Kittlitz ... - 1858 -- - The Caroline Islands of Woleai and Lamotrek - Arno Senfft - 1905 -- - Report of his visit to some island groups in the western Carolines - Arno Senfft - 1904 -- - Report of his circuit tour through the western Caroline and Palau Islands - Arno Senfft - 1906 --^
    Description / Table of Contents: arts and ethos of Ifaluk Atoll - By Edwin G. Burrows - 1963 -- - The domain of emotion words on Ifaluk - Catherine Lutz - 1982 -- - Lamotrek Atoll and inter-island socioeconomic ties - [by] William H. Alkire - 1965 -- - The traditional classification and treatment of illness on Woleai and Lamotrek in the Caroline Islands, Micronesia - William H. Alkire - 1982 -- - Childcare on Ifaluk - Laura Betzig, Alisa Harrigan, Paul Turke - 1989 -- - Adoption by rank on Ifaluk - Laura L. Betzig - 1988 -- - Redistribution: equity or exploitation - Laura Betzig - 1988 -- - Ifaluk Atoll: an ethnographic account - Richard Sosis - 2005
    Description / Table of Contents: the devastation of the Woleai Island Group - Born, et al. - 1907 -- - Meteorological observations from the German Protectorates of the South Seas for the year 1902 - 1903 -- - Amounts of precipitation in the Palau, Marianas, Caroline and Marshall Islands - 1904 -- - Results of rainfall measurements in the year 1906 - 1907 -- - Ifaluk: a South Sea culture - Melford E. Spiro - [1949] -- - A Psychotic personality in the South Seas - Melford E. Spiro - 1950 -- - Results of the meteorological observations in Herberts Deep - Wendland - 1905 -- - A new Pacific Ocean script - J. Macmillan Brown - 1914 -- - Coral Island: portrait of an atoll - [by] Marston Bates and Donald P. Abbott - [1958] -- - An atoll culture: ethnography of Ifaluk in the central Carolines - [by] Edwin G. Burrows and Melford E. Spiro - 1953 --^
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  • 80
    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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  • 81
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Agriculture--Early works to 1800 ; Graffito decoration ; History--To 476 ; Natural history--Pre-Linnean works ; Pompeii (Extinct city)--Social conditions ; Rome (Italy)-- ; Rome (Italy)--Commerce ; Rome (Italy)--History--To 476 ; Rome (Italy)--Industries ; Rome--Civilization ; Rome--Economic conditions ; Rome--History--Empire, 30 B.C.-476 A.D. ; Rome--History--Sources ; Rome--Social conditions ; Rome--Social life and customs ; Römisches Reich ; Kultur
    Abstract: This collection of fifteen documents centers primarily on the city of Rome, and secondarily on the Roman Empire at the height of the imperial period. All documents are in English (and some are also in Latin). Most focus on the first century AD, particularly from the death of Augustus in 14 AD to the accession of Trajan in 98 AD, with less emphasis on the principate of Augustus itself and on the period of 99-192 AD. The most comprehensive studies for an overall understanding of Imperial Roman history and ethnography are: Carcopino, Rostovtsev, Lewis and Reinhold, and Pellisson. Both Carcopino and Pellisson are chiefly concerned with the daily life of the citizens of Rome, while Rostovtsev deals with the social and economic history of the empire, and Lewis and Reinhold with imperial policies and administration, economic life, society and culture, life in the municipalities and provinces, the Roman army, law, and religion (particularly with the rise and eventual triumph of Christianity). The works by Columella present one of the most comprehensive and systematic of all treatises by a Roman writer on agricultural affairs and animal husbandry. Loane presents a detailed study of the provisioning of the city of Rome (50 BC-200 AD), including data on various aspects of trade, manufacturing, and other associated commercial activities. Rivenburg gives an account of what Seneca thought about the fashionable life and manners of this day (i. e., 35-65 AD). Tanzier, an archaeologist, attempts to study the life of the common people of Pompeii as revealed through their graffiti, friezes, and wall paintings which were preserved in the ashes resulting from the eruption of Mt. Vesuvius in 79 AD. The documents by Pliny the Elder are all from his Natural History, and deal with ethnometeorology and ethnogeography, ethnosociology, ethnopsychology and ethoanatomy, the medicinal use of plants, and a study of metals, minerals and a history of art
    Description / Table of Contents: Imperial Romans - John Beierle - 2009 -- - Daily life in ancient Rome: the people and the city at the height of the empire - Jérôme Carcopino ; edited with bibliography and notes by Henry T. Rowell ; translated from the French by E. O. Lorimer - 1940 -- - The social and economic history of the Roman Empire - By M. Rostovtzeff - 1926 -- - Roman civilization: Sourcebook II : the empire - Edited and with an introduction and notes by Naphtali Lewis and Meyer Reinhold - 1966 -- - On agriculture: in three volumes : I. Res Rustica I-IV - Lucius Junius Moderatus Columella - 1960 -- - On agriculture: in three volumes : II. Res Rustica V-IX - Lucius Junius Moderatus Columella - 1968 -- - On agriculture and trees: in three volumes : III, Res Tustica X-XII, De Arboribus - Lucius Junius Moderatus Columella - 1968 --^
    Description / Table of Contents: a study of the graffiti - by Helen H. Tanzer - 1939 -- - Natural history in ten volumes: Volume I. Praefatio, Libri I, II - Pliny [Gaius Plinius Secundus] - 1967 -- - Natural history in ten volumes: Volume II. Libri III-VII - Pliny [Gaius Plinius Secundus] - 1969 -- - Natural history in ten volumes: Volume VI. Libri XX-XXIII - Pliny [Gaius Plinius Secundus] - 1969 -- - Natural history in ten volumes: Volume VII. Libri XXIV-XXVII - Pliny [Gaius Plinius Secundus] - 1966 -- - Natural history in ten volumes: Volume IX. Libri XXXIII-XXXV - Pliny [Gaius Plinius Secundus] - 1968 -- - Roman life in Pliny's time - by Maurice Pellison ; translated from the French by Maud Wilkinson ; with an introduction by Frank Justus Miller - 1897
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  • 82
    Language: English
    Pages: Online-Ressource
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Cherokee Indians ; Cherokee Indians--Social life and customs ; North Carolina--Social life and customs
    Abstract: This collection about the Cherokee consists of 46 documents, and covers the time span from 1540, the period of the first Cherokee-European contacts, to the early twenty-first century. Emphasis is placed on culture history, economy, society, and Cherokee-Euro-American relations. Others focus on folklore, myths, and magical formulas. Most deal with the topics of socio-cultural change and acculturation. Three authors, Strickland, Reid, and Reid, concentrate on Cherokee law and government. Fox deals with sex and gender in Cherokee society; Perdue with the invention of the Cherokee writing system; McLoughlin with the origin and development of the Cherokee Ghost Dance; and both Irwin and Fogelson cover shamanism, witchcraft, sorcery, and mysticism. The Cherokee are an Iroquoian-speaking people who originally occupied the southern Appalachians of North America. In 1838-1839 a major portion of the Cherokee were forcibly removed from their homeland by the United States government to the present state of Oklahoma along the infamous Trail of Tears. In the early twenty-first century there are two main groups: the Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma and United Keetoowah Band of Cherokee Indians in Oklahoma
    Note: - Cherokee planters: the development of plantation slavery before removal - Theda Perdue - 1979 -- - Chaos in the Indian country: the Cherokee Nation, 1828-35 - Kenneth Penn Davis - 1979 -- - Post removal factionalism in the Cherokee Nation - Gerard Reed - 1979 -- - The origin of eastern Cherokees as a social and political entity - Duane H. King - 1979 -- - William Holland Thomas and the Cherokee claims - Richard W. Iobst - 1979 -- - Observations on social change among the eastern Cherokees - John Witthoft - 1979 -- - New militants or resurrected state?: The Five County Northeastern Oklahoma Cherokee Organization - Albert L. Wahrhaftig and Jane Lukens-Wahrhaftig - 1979 , - Cherokee plants and their uses: a 400 year history - Paul B. Hamel & Mary U. Chiltoskey - 1975 -- - The Wahnenauhi manuscript: historical sketches of the Cherokees; together with some of their customs, traditions, and superstitions - Edited and with an introduction by Jack Frederick Kilpatrick - 1966 -- - The 'principal people,' 1960: a study of cultural and social groups of the Eastern Cherokee - Harriet Jane Kupferer - 1966 -- - Run toward the nightland: magic of the Oklahoma Cherokees - [by] Jack Frederick Kilpatrick [and] Anna Gritts Kilpatrick - 1967 -- - Fire and the spirits: Cherokee law fron clan to court - by Rennard Strickland ; foreword by Neill H. Alford, Jr. - 1975 -- - Priests and warriors: social structures for Cherokee politics in the 18th century - Frederick Osmond Gearing - 1962 -- - A law of blood: the primitive law of the Cherokee nation - John Phillip Reid - 1970 -- - Notebook of a Cherokee shaman - [by] Jack Frederick [and] Kilpatrick and Anna Gritts Kilpatrick - 1970 -- - Myths of the Cherokee and sacred formulas of the Cherokees - By James Mooney - [reproduced 1982] -- - The eastern Cherokees - by William Harlen Gilbert, Jr. - 1978 -- , - The Cherokee perspective: written by Eastern Cherokees - Edited by Laurence French and Jim Hornbuckle - 1981 -- - Cherokee fair & festival: a history thru 1978 - written by Mary Ulmer Chiltoskey for Cherokee Indian Fall Festival Assoc. - 1979 -- - 13-08 Cherokee - by George Peter Murdock and Timothy J. O'Leary - 1975 -- - Cherokee - Mary Jo Tippeconnic Fox - 2003 -- - Snowbird Cherokees: people of persistence - Sharlotte Neely - 1991 -- - Adaptation and the contemporary North Carolina Cherokee Indians - Sharlotte Neely - 1992 -- - Marketing traditions: Cherokee basketry and tourist economies - Sarah H. Hill - 2001 -- - Women, men and American Indian policy: the Cherokee response to 'civilization' - Theda Perdue - 1995 -- - The Sequoyah syllabary and cultural revitalization - Theda Perdue - 1994 -- - Cherokee Americans: the eastern band of Cherokees in the twentieth century - John R. Finger - 1991 -- - The role of Christianity in the Snowbird Cherokee community - Sharlotte Neely - 1995 -- , - Type II diabetes mellitus: technological development and the Oklahoma Cherokee - Dennis W. Wiedman - 1987 -- - Cherokee anomie, 1794-1910: new roles for Red men, Red women, and Black slaves - by William G. McLoughlin with Walter H. Conser, Jr. and Virginia Duffy McLoughlin - 1984 -- - The Cherokee Ghost Dance movement of 1811-1813 - by William G. McLoughlin with Walter H. Conser, Jr. and Virginia Duffy McLoughlin - 1984 -- - Cherokee healing: myth, dreams, and medicine - Lee Irwin - 1992 -- - Cherokee notions of power - Raymond D. Fogelson - 1977 -- - An Analysis of Cherokee sorcery and witchcraft - Raymond D. Fogelson - 1975 -- - Introduction - Duane H. King - 1979 -- - The origins and development of Cherokee culture - Roy S. Dickens, Jr. - 1979 -- - A Perilous rule: the law of international homicide - John Philip Reid - 1979 -- - Distribution of eighteenth-century Cherokee settlements - Betty Anderson Smith - 1979 -- - The Cherokee frontiers, the French Revolution, and William Augustus Bowles - William C. Sturtevant - 1979 -- - Early ninteenth-century Cherokee political organization - V. Richard Persico, Jr. - 1979 -- , Eastern Cherokee folktales: reconstructed from the field notes of Frans M. Olbrechts - By Jack Frederick Kilpatrick and Anna Gritts Kilpatrick - 1966 -- - Walk in your soul: love incantations of the Oklahoma Cherokees - [by] Jack Frederick Kilpatrick [and] Anna Gritts Kilpatrick - 1965 -- - Cherokees in transition: a study of changing culture and environment prior to 1775 - by Gary C. Goodwin - 1977 -- - Culture summary: Cherokee - Mary Jo Tippeconnic Fox and John Beierle (synopsis and indexing notes) - 2009 -- - Cherokees at the crossroads - John Gulick ; with an epilogue by Sharlotte Neely Williams - 1973 -- - Cherokee dance and drama - By Frank G. Speck and Leonard Broom in collaboration with Will West Long - 1983 --
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  • 83
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Acculturation ; Cree Indians ; Cree Indians--Social life and customs
    Abstract: This collection of eight documents is about the Western Woods Cree who lived aboriginally in the boreal forests from Hudson and James Bays westward to the Peace River in Canada. In the early twenty-first century they are found primarily in the region between Lake Superior and Hudson Bay. Mason provides an overview of the Western Woods Cree ethnography; Smith (1981) presents a brief summary of some of the major features of their ethnography dating from the seventeenth to the late twentieth centuries, with an emphasis on the western Swampy and Rocky Cree populations. Two of the studies in this collection by Smith (1976, 1987) discuss and analyze the ethnological 'myth' dealing with the movement of the Western Woods Cree to the southwest areas at the time of the initial Euro-American contact. According to this belief French and English guns gave the Cree technological superiority over their neighbors to the west and southwest and permitted them to move easily into the conquered lands. Evidence for pottery making at the time of early Euro-American contacts is discussed by Meyer. Fisher describes the socio-cultural evolution of the hunting band discussed in terms of social, ecological, and historical variables within the society. Hallowell presents a study of cross-cousin marriage in relationship to the kinship system
    Description / Table of Contents: Western Woods Cree - James G. E. Smith and John Beierle (synopsis and indexing notes) - 2009 -- - The Swampy Cree: a study in acculturation - by Leonard Mason - 1967 -- - Western Woods Cree - James G. E. Smith - 1981 -- - Bibliography - edited by June Helm - 1981 -- - On the territorial distribution of the Western Woods Cree - James G. E. Smith - 1976 -- - Time-depth of the Western Woods Cree occupation of Northern Ontario, Manitoba, and Saskatchewan - David Meyer - 1987 -- - The Cree of Canada: some ecological and evolutionary considerations - A. D. Fisher - 1969 -- - Cross-cousin marriage in the Lake Winnipeg area - By A. Irving Hallowell - 1935 -- - The Western Woods Cree: anthropological myth and historical reality - James G. E. Smith - 1987
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  • 84
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Ute Indians
    Abstract: ^^ - Ute - Donald Callaway, Joel C. Janetski, and Omer C. Stewart - 1986 -- - Bibliography - Warren L. D'Azevedo, volume editor - 1986
    Abstract: This collection of 11 documents and a culture summary cover Ute society from pre-contact times to the 1980s. Studies include the earliest systematic attempts at reconstructing pre-reservation Ute culture and society, with particular emphasis on organization and composition of bands, settlement patterns and land use practices, as remembered by elderly informants in the 1930s and 1940s. These works also include detailed first hand descriptions of a bear dance performance, a peyote meeting and the sun dance which the authors personally observed. Other topics include mythology, concepts of nature and power, effects of oil money and development intervention and, aspects of history. Ute society was internally divided into several, but continuously fluid, bands and the history and interaction of each band with the state and market forces varied greatly. The Ute are a Native American group located in Utah, Colorado, and New Mexico. At the time of European contact in the 1600s and 1700s, the Ute occupied much of central and eastern Utah and all of western Colorado, as well as minor portions of northwestern New Mexico, living as nomadic hunters and gatherers
    Description / Table of Contents: Ute - Joel C. Janetski and Teferi Abate Adem (synopsis and indexing notes) - 2009 -- - Aboriginal and historical groups of the Ute Indians of Utah: an analysis with supplement - Julian H. Steward - 1974 -- - Native components of the White River Ute Indians - Julian H. Steward - 1974 -- - The Sun Dance of the Northern Ute - By J. A. Jones - 1955 -- - Myths of the Uintah Utes - By J. Alden Mason - [1910] 1963 -- - The ethnohistory and acculturation of the Northern Ute - Joseph Gilbert Jorgensen - 1965 [1980 copy] -- - Ethnography of the Northern Utes - Anne M. Smith - 1974 -- - A Uintah Ute bear dance, March, 1931 - Julian Haynes Steward - 1962 -- - Concepts of nature and power: environmental ethics of the Northern Ute - Stephanie Romeo - 1985 -- - Economic development and self determination: the Northern Ute Case - Gottfried O. Lang - [1971] --^
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  • 85
    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: Ethnology Caroline Islands Ulithi ; Tales--Micronesia ; Ulithi (Caroline Islands) ; Ulithi (Micronesia) ; Ulithi ; Bevölkerung
    Abstract: The collection about the people of Ulithi consists of two documents and a culture summary. The two documents, both by Lessa and both in English, cover the time span from about 1900 to 1949. They present a comprehensive ethnographic study of Ulithi Atoll conducted by the author over a nine month period of fieldwork from 1947 through 1949, and a collection of previously unpublished myths and folktales from Ulithi. The people of Ulithi live on the Ulithi atoll in the west-central Caroline Islands of the western Pacific, and speak a dialect of Chuukese. Ulithi has undergone strong culture change since the atoll came under United States control in 1944
    Description / Table of Contents: Ulithi - William A. Lessa and John Beierle (synopsis and indexing notes) - 2009 -- - The ethnography of Ulithi Atoll - BY William A. Lessa - 1950 -- - Tales from Ulithi Atoll: a comparative study in oceanic folklore - William A. Lessa - 1961
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  • 86
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: China--Inner Mongolia ; China--Inner Mongolia--Description and travel ; China--Inner Mongolia--Economic conditions ; China--Inner Mongolia--Environment ; China--Inner Mongolia--Ethnology ; China--Inner Mongolia--Medical care ; China--Mongols--Ethnology ; Chinese--China--Inner Mongolia ; Hohhot (China) Ethnic relations ; Inner Mongolia (China) History ; Inner Mongolia (China) Social conditions ; Inner Mongolia (China)--Politics and government ; Mongolia ; Mongols ; Mongols China Hu-ho-hao-t'e shih ; Mongols--Child rearing ; Mongols--Ethnology ; Mongols--Hunting ; Pastoral systems China Inner Mongolia
    Abstract: The 15 documents in this collection cover the time period from 1100-2000 AD. A general handbook of Inner Mongolia geography, history, and culture was published by the Far Eastern and Russian Institute (1956). The earliest works in the collection are by the Catholic priest Father Kler who lived among the Ordos Mongolians in the 1920s and 30s. He wrote articles on hunting practices (1941); sickness, death, and burials (1936) and birth, infancy, and childhood (1938). Chang (1933) provides an economic assessment and prognosis of Mongolia in the 1930s. Owen Lattimore (1934) wrote a political ecology of the region, prior to the Japanese occupation in 1932. Two translated Japanese studies examine health and living conditions (Hikage 1938), and housing, clothing and diet (Izumi 1939). Cammann reports on his 1945 travels in the Ordos and Gobi desserts and Houtai plain. Three works examine the twentieth-century Han colonization of the region (Cressy 1932; Lattimore 1932; Pasternak and Salaff 1993). Sneath (2000) examines the history of Chinese government policies imposed on Mongolian pastoral society from the pre-Chinese Revolutionary period up to the post-Mao period. Jankowiak (1993) writes an engaging urban ethnography of Huhhot and Bulag (2002) examines how the contradictions and tensions of vying Chinese and Mongolian nationalisms play out in socialist Inner Mongolia
    Description / Table of Contents: Inner Mongolia - William Jankowiak, Ian Skoggard (synopsis) and John Beierle (indexing notes) - 2006 -- - A regional handbook of the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region - Compiled by The Far Eastern and Russian Institute of the University of Washington, Seattle - 1956 -- - Health and living conditions - [by] Shigeru Hikage - 1938 -- - Manners and customs of the people in Inner Mongolia - [by] Seiichi Izumi - 1939 -- - Birth, infancy and childhood among the Ordos Mongols - [by] Joseph Kler - 1938 -- - Hunting customs of the Ordos Mongols - [by] Joseph Kler - 1941 -- - Chinese colonization in Mongolia: a general survey - [by] George B. Cressey - 1932 -- - Chinese colonization in Inner Mongolia: its history and present development - [by] Owen Lattimore - 1932 -- - Sickness, death and burial among the Mongols of the Ordos Desert - [by] Joseph Kler - 1936 --^
    Description / Table of Contents: tents and temples of Inner Mongolia - [by] Schuyler Cammann - 1951 -- - The Mongols of Manchuria: their tribal divisions, geographical distribution, historical relations with Manchus and Chinese, and present political problems - [by] Owen Lattimore - 1934 -- - The economic development and prospects of Inner Mongolia (Chahar, Suiyuan and Ningsia) - [by] Yin-t'ang Chang - 1933 -- - The Mongols at China's edge: history and the politics of national unity - Uradyn E. Bulag - 2002 -- - Sex, death, and hierarchy in a Chinese city: an anthropological account - William R. Jankowiak - 1993 -- - Changing Inner Mongolia: pastoral Mongolian society and the Chinese state - David Sneath - 2000 -- - Cowboys and cultivators: the Chinese of Inner Mongolia - Burton Pasternak and Janet W. Salaff - 1993
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  • 87
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Amazon River ; Indians of South America--Amazon River Valley ; Jivaran languages ; Jivaro Indians ; Shuar Indians ; South America--Description and travel
    Abstract: This collection includes 30 English language documents, three translated from the German and three from the French, that contain specific data on the Jivaroan-speaking groups of southeastern Ecuador and adjacent Peru, including the Jivaro (Shuar, Shuara), Achuara (Atchuara, Achual), Huambisa, Aguaruna, Mayna, and the extinct Palta and Malacata. The major time span of the works in this collection ranges from about 1863 to 2003. Karsten, Stirling, Ḿetraux, and Harner provide the most comprehensive coverage of traditional Jivaro ethnography, supplemented to a much lesser extent by the brief summaries in Simson, Farabee, Reiss, and Hermessen. War, warfare related ceremonies, including data on head-hunting and the preparation of the shrunken heads, are prominent themes in Up de Graff, Dickey, Bollert, and Bennett Ross. Other ethnographic topics of interest in this collection are: the evaluation of missionaries, their activities and other reports in Rivet, Salazar, and Harner. The influence of Western music on the traditional music of the Jivaro is discussed in Belzner. The formation and activities of the Shuar (Jivaro) Federation in lowland Ecuador are described in Salazar and Harner. Two studies of Jivaro anthropometry will be found in Meyers and Wright . The Shuar are the best known subgroup and a major focus of this collection
    Description / Table of Contents: Jivaro - Anonymous and John Beierle (synopsis and indexing notes) - 2006 -- - The head-hunters of Western Amazonas: the life and culture of the Jibaro Indians of eastern Ecuador and Peru - by Rafael Karsten - 1935 -- - Historical and ethnographical material on the Jivaro Indians - Matthew Williams Stirling - 1938 -- - Notes on the Jivaros and Canelos Indians - Alfred Simson - 1880 -- - Head hunters of the Amazon: seven years of exploration and adventure - by F.W. Up de Graff, with a foreword by Kermit Roosevelt ... - 1923 -- - Contribution to the study of the Jivaro or Suor language - Bertrand Flornoy - 1938 -- - Indian tribes of eastern Peru - by William Curtis Farabee ; introduction by Louis John de Milhau ; twenty-eight plates and twenty illustrations in the text - 1922 -- - The headshrinkers of Ecuador - Herbert Spencer Dickey - 1936 --^
    Description / Table of Contents: geographic, historical and ethnographic research - Paul Rivet - 1907 -- - The Jivaro Indians: geographic, historical and ethnographic research - Paul Rivet - 1908 -- - The Jibaro anthropometry - Harry Meyers - 1937 -- - Jivaro dance regalia - William C. Orchard - 1925 -- - A journey on the Rio Zamora, Ecuador - J. L. Hermessen - 1917 -- - The Jivaro - Alfred Métraux - 1948 -- - On the trail of the unknown in the wilds of Ecuador and the Amazon - George Miller Dyott - [1926] -- - A frequent variation of the maxillary central incisors, with some observations on dental caries among the Jivaro (Shuara) Indians of Ecuador - Harry Bernard Wright - 1942 -- - Travelling in the Aguaruna Region - Hans H. Brüning - 1928 -- - On the idol head of the Jivaro Indians of Ecuador: with an account of the Jivaro Indians - William Bollaert - 1863 -- - The Indians of northeastern Peru - Günter Tessmann - 1930 --^
    Description / Table of Contents: a study in sociometric anthropology - Bengt Danielson - 1949 -- - Jivaro souls - Michael J. Harner - 1962 -- - A Visit among the Jivaro Indians - W. Reiss - 1880 -- - The Jívaro: people of the sacred waterfalls - Michael J. Harner - 1973 -- - Music, modernization, and westernization among the Macuma Shuar - William Belzner - 1981 -- - The Federación Shuar and the colonization frontier - Ernesto Salazar - 1981 -- - Preface to the 1984 edition - Michael J. Harner - 1984 -- - Effects of contact on revenge hostilities among the Achuará Jívaro - Jane Bennett Ross - 1984 -- - Blood feud and table manners: a neo-Hobbesian approach to Jivaroan warfare - James S. Boster - 2003 -- - ARUTAM and culture change - James S. Boster - 2003 -- - 'Requiem for the omniscient informant': there's life in the old girl yet - James Shilts Boster - 1985
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  • 88
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Ethnology--Palau ; Kinship--Palau ; Palau--History ; Palau--Social conditions ; Palau--Social life and customs ; Palauans ; Palauinseln ; Bevölkerung
    Description / Table of Contents: myth, history, and polity in Belau - [by] Richard J. Parmentier - 1987 -- - Being a Palauan - [by] Homer G. Barnett - 1963 -- - Palauan society: a study of contemporary native life in the Palau Islands - [by] Homer G. Barnett - 1949 -- - Report on Palau - [by] John Useem - 1949 -- - Native money of Palau - [by] Robert E. Ritzenthaler - 1949 -- - Political factionalism in Palau: its rise and development - [by] Arthur J. Vidich - 1949 -- - The Palauan and Yap medicinal plant studies of Masayoshi Okabe, 1941-1943 - [by] Robert A. Defilipps, - 1988 -- - Resource exploitation and the tenure of land and sea in Palau - [by] Mary Shaw McCutcheon - 1989 copy -- - An ethnohistory of Palau under the Japanese colonial administration - [by] Goh Abe - 1989 copy --^
    Description / Table of Contents: a study of contemporary native life in the Palau Islands - [by] Homer G. Barnett - 1949 -- - Leadership and cultural change in Palau - [by] Roland W. Force - 1960 -- - Just one house: a description and analysis of kinship in the Palau Islands - Roland W. Force and Maryanne Force - 1972 -- - The Palauan ocheraol: a contemporary economic perspective - Joseph Ysaol, Joseph I. Chilton, Paul Callaghan - 1996 -- - Money walks, people talk: systematic and transactional dimensions of Palauan exchange - Richard J. Parmentier - 2002 -- - Transactional symbolism in Belauan mortuary rites: a diachronic study - Richard J. Parmentier - 1988 -- - Tales of two cities: the rhetoric of rank in Ngeremlengui, Belau - by Richard J. Parmentier - 1986 -- - Time of famine, time of transformation: hell in the Pacific, Palau - Karen L. Nero - 1989 -- - The hidden pain: drunkenness and domestic violence in Palau - Karen L. Nero - 1990 --^
    Description / Table of Contents: a description and analysis of kinship in the Palau Islands - [by] Roland W. Force and Maryanne Force - 1972 -- - Rigid models and ridiculous boundaries: political development and practice in Palau, circa 1955-1964 - [by] Robert Kellogg McKnight - 1974 -- - Palauan journal - [by] Homer G. Barnett - 1970 -- - The geographical recognition of Palauan people with special reference to the four directions - [by] Machiko Aoyagi - 1982 -- - Words of the lagoon: fishing and marine lore in the Palau District of Micronesia - [by] Robert Johannes - 1981 -- - Culture summary: Belauans - Richard J. Parmentier - 2011 -- - Palauan social structure - DeVerne Reed Smith - 1983 -- - The sacred remains: myth, history, and polity in Belau - Richard J. Parmentier - 1987 --^
    Description / Table of Contents: mythological transformations in Palauan politics - Karen L. Nero - 1992 -- - Palau's compact: controversy, conflict, and compromise - Donald R. Shuster - 1994 -- - Crime and criminal actions in the Palau Islands - J. S. Kubary - 2009
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  • 89
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Yap (Micronesia) ; Yapese (Micronesian people)
    Abstract: This collection of 26 documents concerns the Yapese, who speak an Eastern Malayo-Polynesian language and occupy the westernmost of the Caroline Islands in Micronesia. The earliest documents in the collection, translated from German, were published between 1873 and 1917 and cover the time period of 1865 to 1910. The accounts are by explorers, government officials, missionaries, natural scientists, and travelers. There is one Spanish source and a German translation of Russian explorer's diary. Topics include religion, geography, music, poetry, dance, funerals, and money. Documents from the American period and onwards, starting in 1947, include a general ethnography, politics, courtship and marriage, dispute settlement, food, and post-colonial changes. Yap was under Spanish control from 1871 to 1899, German control from 1899 to 1914, Japanese control from 1914 to 1945, and American control from 1945 to 1985, after which it became part of an independent state (Yap State) in the Federated States of Micronesia
    Description / Table of Contents: Yapese - Sherwood Galen Lingenfelter and Ian Skoggard (synopsis and indexing notes) - 2006 -- - The Micronesians of Yap and their depopulation: report of the Peabody Museum Expedition to Yap Island, Micronesia, 1947-1948 - Edward E. Hunt, Jr., David M. Schneider, Nathaniel R. Kidder, and William D. Stevens - 1949 -- - The Carolines Island Yap - Father Salesius - 1906 -- - Yap kinship terminology and kin groups - David M. Schneider - 1953 -- - The Carolines Island Yap or Guap, according to the reports of Alfred Tetens and Johann Kubary - Alfred Tetens and Johann Kubary ; prepared by Dr. E. Gräffe - 1873 --^
    Description / Table of Contents: the island of Yap - José Montes de Oca - 1893 -- - Some remarks on the music, poetry and dance of the people of Yap - L. Born - 1903 -- - The money of the Yapese - Arno Senfft - 1901 -- - Funeral obsequies on Yap (Western Carolines) - L. Born - 1903 -- - The island of Yap: anthropological sketches from the diary of N. N. Miklkukha-Maklai - N. N. Miklucho-Maclay - 1878 -- - Religious views and customs of the inhabitants of Yap (German South Seas) - Sixtus Walleser - 1913 -- - Yap eating classes: a study of structure and communitas - Sherwood G. Lingenfelter - 1979 --^
    Description / Table of Contents: settling disputes in Yap: 1950-1979 - Sherwood G. Lingenfelter - 1991 -- - Courtship and marriage on Yap: Budweiser, U-drives, and rock guitars - Sherwood G. Lingenfelter - 1993 -- - Emic structure and decision-making in Yap - Sherwood G. Lingenfelter - 1977 -- - The demystification of Yap: dialectics of culture on a Micronesian island - David Labby - 1976 -- - Taro, fish, and funerals: transformations in the Yapese cultural topography of wealth - by James Arthur Egan - 1998 [2005 copy] -- - Production and circulation of food in Yap - James A. Egan, Michael L. Burton, and Karen L. Nero - [n.d.]
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  • 90
    Language: English
    Pages: Online-Ressource
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Mongolia ; Mongolia--History ; Mongolia--Politics and government ; Mongols ; Mongols--Ethnology ; Mongols--History ; Mongols--Kinship ; Mongols--Law ; Mongols--Music
    Abstract: This collection of 21 documents contains general data on Mongolia, its inhabitants, and on the Mongol (Menggus) people during the time period from 1200 AD-2000. Documents cover both the present country of Mongolia and historical Mongolia which includes Imperial Mongolia and tribes living in Russia and China. The major works include a handbook on twentieth-century Mongolia from the Far Eastern and Russian Institute, two books on kinship system and structure by Krader and Vreeland, one on tribal organization by Lattimore, and one on Mongolian law by Riasanovsky
    Note: - Mongol community and kinship structure - [by] Herbert Harold Vreeland, III - 1973 -- - The changing world of Mongolia's nomads - photography and text by Melvyn C. Goldstein and Cynthia M. Beall - 1994 -- - Nationalism and hybridity in Mongolia - Uradyn E. Bulag - 1998 -- - A Society and economy in transition - Ole Bruun and Ole Odgaard - 1996 -- - The herding household: economy and organization - Ole Bruun - 1996 -- - Living standards and poverty - Ole Odgaard - 1996 -- - Mongolian nomadic society: a reconstruction of the 'medieval' history of Mongolia - Bat-Ochir Bold - 2001 -- - Rituals of death as a context for understanding personal property in socialist Mongolia - Caroline Humphrey - 2002 -- - My Mongolia - Munhtuya Altangerel - 2001 -- - The twentieth century: from domination to democracy - Nasan Dashdendeviin Bumaa - 2001 -- - DEEL, GER, and altar: continuity and change in Mongolian material culture - Eliot Grady Bikales - 2001 -- - Genghis Khan: father of Mongolian democracy - Paula L. W. Sabloff - 2001 , Culture summary: Mongolia - William Jankowiak and HRAF Staff (synopsis and indexing notes) - 2006 -- - Preliminary remarks on Mongolian musical instruments - [by] Ernst Emsheimer - 1943 -- - Mongolia - [by] Owen Lattimore - 1933 -- - Fundamental principles of Mongolian law - [by] Aleksandrovich Valentin Riasanovsky - 1937 -- - The Torguts of Etsin-Gol - [by] Gösta Montell - 1940 -- - Kinship systems of the Altaic-speaking peoples of the Asiatic steppe - [by] Lawrence Krader - [n.d.] -- - Distilling in Mongolia - [by] Gösta Montell - 1937 -- - Outer Mongolia and its international position - [by] Gerard M. Friters ; introduction by Owen Lattimore - 1949 -- - Mongolian People's Republic (Outer Mongolia) - Far Eastern and Russian Institute of the University of Washington - 1956 -- - Contemporary Mongolia - [by] I. Maiskii - 1921 --
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  • 91
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: African Americans--South Carolina--Saint Helena Island--Social life and customs ; Gullahs ; Saint Helena Island (S.C.)--Social life and customs ; Sea Islanders ; Sea Islands ; Sea Islands ; Bevölkerung
    Abstract: This collection about the Sea Islanders, a Gullah-speaking people who live on the coast and sea islands of Georgia and South Carolina, consists of 14 documents. Four were published between 1926 and 1942, and the rest between 1973 and 2003. The studies focus on folklore and folksongs, oral histories, and language; and the main locations studied are Johns, Wadmalaw, and St. Helena's Islands, South Carolina and St. Simon's Island, Georgia. The Sea Islanders are descendents of slaves first brought to the islands in the seventeenth century. Isolated from the mainland, the Sea Islanders developed a distinct culture, which remained largely intact until the first bridges were built in the 1920s
    Description / Table of Contents: Sea Islanders - Mary H. Moran, Robert Van Kemper, and John Beierle - 2005 -- - Drums and shadows: survival studies among the Georgia coastal Negroes - [by] the Savannah Unit, Georgia Writer's Project, Work Projects Administration, introduction by Charles Joyner, photographs by Muriel and Malcolm Bell, Jr. - 1986 -- - When roots die: endangered traditions on the Sea Islands - [by] Patricia Jones-Jackson - 1987 -- - 'A peculiar people': slave religion and community-culture among the Gullahs - [by] Margaret Washington Creel - 1988 --^
    Description / Table of Contents: The people of Johns Island, South Carolina -- their faces, their words, and their songs - [by] Guy Carawan, recorded and edited by Guy and Candie Carawan ; photographs by Robert Yellin, et al. ; music transcribed by Ethel Raim ; preface by Charles Joyner ; afterword by Bernice Johnson Reagon - 1989 -- - Linguistic change in Gullah: sex, age, and mobility - [by] Patricia Causey Nichols - 1976 [1989 copy] -- - A cross generational study of the parental discipline practices and beliefs of Gullah blacks of the Carolina Sea Islands - [by] Franklin O. Smith - 1973 [1989 copy] -- - The status of Gullah: an investigation of convergent processes - [by] Patricia Ann Jones Jackson - 1978 [1989 copy] -- - Gullah: dedicated to the memory of Ambrose E. Gonzales - [by] Reed Smith - 1926 -- - Slave songs of the Georgia Sea Islands - [compiled by] Lydia Parrish ; foreword by Art Rosenbaum ; introduction by Olin Downes ; music transcribed by Creighton Churchill and Robert MacGimsey - 1942 -- - Folk culture on St. Helena Island, South Carolina - by Guy B. Johnson - 1930 -- - A social history of the Sea Islands, with special reference to St. Helena Island, South Carolina - by Guion Griffis Johnson - 1930 -- - Gullah attitudes toward life and death - Margaret W. Creel - 1990 --^
    Description / Table of Contents: African American communities on a South Carolina sea island - Patricia Guthrie - 1996 -- - An Afrocentric analysis of the transition and transformation of African Medicine (Root Medicine) as spiritual practice among Gullah people of Lowcountry South Carolina - by Wendy Carmen Trott - 2003 [2005 copy]
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  • 92
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Gusii (African people)
    Abstract: Gusii or Abagusii is the people's name for themselves. The Gusii are divided into seven clan clusters: Kitutu (Getutu), North Mugirango, South Mugirango, Majoge, Wanjare (Nchari), Bassi, and Nyaribari. Gusiiland is located in western Kenya, 50 kilometers east of Lake Victoria. This collection of 32 English language documents deals with the Gusii people of Kisii District in southwestern Kenya. The major time span covered is approximately one hundred years ranging from about 1900 to 2001, with a focus on the years of 1950-1976. Only one study in this collection (Hakansson, 1994) deals with the pre-colonial period (i.e., pre-1907); specifically with the relationship between agricultural production and grain and cattle exchange. Two studies provide some degree of general ethnographic coverage; these are LeVine 1966 and 1994. In addition the LeVines (Robert and Sarah) provide a wealth of information on infant and child care and development. Other ethnographic topics covered in this collection are: bride-wealth as a significant feature of Gusii marriage arrangements in Mayer, 1950 and Hakansson, 1988 and 1990; kinship in Mayer, 1949 and 1965; witchcraft and sorcery in LeVine, 1963 and Ogembo, 2001; gender in Hakansson and LeVine, 1997, and Hakansson, 1994; and sex offenses and social control in LeVine, 1959 and 1980. Eight documents are from the text, Child Care and culture: Lessons from Africa
    Description / Table of Contents: Gusii - N. Thomas Hakansson and John Beierle (synopsis and indexing notes) - 2006 -- - The lineage principle in Gusii society - by Philip Mayer - 1949 -- - Gusii bridewealth law and custom - by Philip Mayer - 1950 -- - The nature of kinship relations: the significance of the use of kinship terms among the Gusii - by Iona Mayer - 1965 -- - The Gusii mothers of Nyansongo: Kenya, Africa - [by] Leigh Minturn [and] William W. Lambert - [1964] -- - Nyansongo: a Gusii community in Kenya - [by] Robert A. LeVine [and] Barbara B. LeVine - [1966] -- - References - [by] Robert A. LeVine ... [et al.] ; with the collaboration of James Caron ... [et al.] - 1994 -- - Gusii culture: a person-centered perspective - [by] Robert A. LeVine ... [et al.] ; with the collaboration of James Caron ... [et al.] - 1994 --^
    Description / Table of Contents: gender and kinship in processes of socioeconomic change among the Gusii of Kenya - N. Thomas Håkansson - 1994 -- - Socioeconmic stratification and marriage payments: elite marriage and bridewealth among the Gusii of Kenya - Thomas Håkansson - 1990 -- - Separation and indivduation in an African society: the developmental tasks of the Gusii married woman - Sarah LeVine and Gary Pfeifer - 1982 -- - Crime or affliction?: rape in an African community - Sarah LeVine - 1980
    Description / Table of Contents: cultural norms and interpersonal environment - [by] Robert A. LeVine ... [et al.] ; with the collaboration of James Caron ... [et al.] - 1994 -- - Survival and health: priorities for early development - [by] Robert A. LeVine ... [et al.] ; with the collaboration of James Caron ... [et al.] - 1994 -- - Communication and social learning during infancy - [by] Robert A. LeVine ... [et al.] ; with the collaboration of James Caron ... [et al.] - 1994 -- - Variations in infant interaction: illustrative cases - [by] Robert A. LeVine ... [et al.] ; with the collaboration of James Caron ... [et al.] - 1994 -- - Mothers and wives: Gusii women of East Africa - Sarah LeVine in collaboration with Robert A. LeVine - 1979 -- - Witchcraft and sorcery in a Gusii community - Robert A. LeVine - [1963] -- - Adulthood among the Gusii of Kenya - Robert A. LeVine - 1980 -- - The Gusii family - Robert A. LeVine - 1964 --^
    Description / Table of Contents: descent and sex among the Gusii - Thomas Håkansson - 1990 -- - The malaria cognate: folk classification of illness among the Abagusii of Kenya - Isaac K. Nyamongo - 1997 -- - Population growth in a Kenya community - by Sarah B. Nerlove and Robert A. LeVine - 1972 -- - Gusii funerals: meanings of life and death in an African community - Robert A. LeVine - 1982 -- - Cultural narratives, violence, and mother-son loyalty: an exploration into Gusii personification of evil - Justus M. Ogembo - 2001 -- - The dreams of young Gusii women: a content analysis - Sarah LeVine - 1982 -- - Gusii sex offenses: a study in social control - Robert A. LeVine - 1959 -- - Bridewealth, women, and land: social change among the Gusii of Kenya - Thomas Håkansson - 1988 -- - Grain, cattle, and power: social processes of intensive cultivation and exchange in precolonial western Kenya - N. Thomas Håkansson - 1994 --^
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  • 93
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Acculturation--Case studies ; Aleuts ; Art, Primitive ; Art--Alaska--Aleutian Islands ; Aleuten ; Aleuten
    Description / Table of Contents: Aleut - Douglas W. Veltre and Ian Skoggard (synopsis and indexing notes) - 2006 -- - Notes on the Islands of the Unalaska District - Ivan Evsieevich Popov Veniaminov - 1840 -- - History, ethnology, and anthropology of the Aleut - by Waldemar Jochelson - 1933 -- - Our Arctic province: Alaska and the Seal Islands - by Henry W. Elliott - 1886 -- - Account of the Russian discoveries between Asia and America - William Coxe - 1804 --^
    Description / Table of Contents: a study in ethnic distribution and invention - Otis Tufton Mason - 1902 -- - Throwing-sticks in the National Museum - By Otis T. Mason - 1885 -- - Aboriginal American basketry - Otis Tufton Mason - 1904 -- - Human anatomical terms among the Aleutian Islanders - Gordon H. Marsh - [n.d.] -- - An Aleutian burial - by Edward Moffat Weyer, Jr. - 1929 -- - The limit of the Innuit tribes on the Alaska coast - Ivan Petroff - -- - Aconite poison whaling in Asia and America: an Aleutian transfer to the New World - Robert F. Heizer - 1943 -- - Health and growth of Aleut children - Edwin Wilde - 1950 -- - Aleutian islanders: Eskimos of the north Pacific - George Irving Quimby - 1944 -- - Aleut semaphore signals - Jay Ellis Ransom - 1941 -- - Back to the smoky sea - by Nutchuk, with Alden Hatch ; illustrated by Nutchuk - 1946 -- - Aleutian manuscript collection - Avrahm Yarmolinsky - 1944 -- - Notes on the Athin Aleuts and the Koloshi - Ivan Evsieevich Popov Veniaminov - 1840 --^
    Description / Table of Contents: volume II - By Gawrila Sarytschew. Translated out of the Russian and embellished with engravings - 1806 -- - A voyage to the Pacific ocean: Undertaken, by the command of His Majesty, for making discoveries in the northern hemisphere. Performed under the direction of Captains Cook, Clerke, and Gore, in His Majesty's ships the Resolution and Discovery; in the years 1776, 1777, 1778, 1779, and 1780 ... - Published by order of the lords commissioners of the Admiralty - 1785 -- - Voyages and travels in various parts of the world, during the years 1803, 1804, 1805, 1806, and 1807 - By G. H. von Langsdorff ... - 1817 -- - Archaeological investigations in the Aleutian Islands - by Waldemar Jochelson - 1925 -- - Blood-group determinations upon the bones of thirty Aleutian mummies - P. B. Candela - 1939 -- - Two Aleut tales - T. I. Lavrischeff - 1928 -- - Eskimo and Aleut stories from Alaska - F. A. Golder - 1909 -- - An account of a geographical... expedition to ... Russia - Martin Sauer - 1802 -- - Ethnological notes on the Aleuts - Charles I. Shade - [1949] -- - The girls' puberty ceremony at Umnak, Aleutian Islands - Charles I. Shade - 1951 -- - They know their bones - Charles I. Shade - [1950] -- - The outside man and his relation to Aleut culture - Charles I. Shade - [1948] -- - Aleut hunting and headgear and its ornamentation - S. V. Ivanov - 1930 --^
    Description / Table of Contents: II. health and medical lore of the Aleuts - Theodore P. Bank, II - 1953 -- - Aleut dialects of Atka and Attu - Knut Bergsland - 1959 -- - The Aleuts - V. V. Antropova ; [Translated from the Russian by Scripta Technica, inc. English translation edited by Stephen P. Dunn] - 1964 -- - A study of social and economic problems in Unalaska, an Aleut village - Dorothy Miriam Jones - 1970 [1972 copy] -- - Aleuts: survivors of the Bering Land Bridge - by William S. Laughlin - 1980 -- - Aleuts in transition: a comparison of two villages - by Dorothy M. Jones - 1976 -- - The Aleut social system: 1750 to 1810, from early historical sources - Margaret Lantis - 1970 -- - Aleut - Margaret Lantis - 1984 -- - The Aleutian-Pribilof Islands region - Patricia Petrivelli and Taylor Brelsford with Steven L. McNabb - 1992 -- - The northern fur seal: a subsistence and commerical resource for Aleuts of the Aleutian and Pribilof Islands, Alaska - By Douglas W. Veltre and Mary J. Veltre - 1987
    Description / Table of Contents: on the remains of later pre-historic man obtained from caves in the Catherina Archipelago, Alaska Territory, and especially from the caves of the Aleutian Islands - William Healey Dall - 1880 -- - Report on the population, industries, and resources of Alaska - by Ivan Petroff - 1884 -- - Report on the seal islands of Alaska - by Henry W. Elliott - 1884 -- - People of the foggy sea - Waldemar Jochelson - 1928 -- - Bering's successors, 1745-1780 - contributions of Peter Simon Pallas to the history of Russian exploration toward Alaska, by James R. Masterson and Helen Brower - 1948 -- - Stories, myths and superstitions of Fox Island Aleut children - Jay Ellis Ransom - 1947 -- - The Aleut language: the elements of Aleut grammar with a dictionary in two parts containing basic vocabularies of Aleut and English - by Richard Henry Geoghegan ; edited by Fredericka I. Martin - 1944 -- - Scientific results of the ethnological section of the Riabouschinsky Expedition of the Imperial Russian Geographical Society to the Aleutian Islands and Kamchatka - Waldemar Jochelson - 1913 --^
    Description / Table of Contents: Attu, Atka, and Nikolski - William S. Laughlin - [1949] -- - The islands and their people - Henry Bascom Collins, Jr. - 1945 -- - Animal life of the Aleutian Islands - Austin H. Clark - 1945 -- - Plants on the Aleutian Islands - Egbert H. Walker - 1945 -- - A Medical survey of the Aleutian Islands (1948) - Fred Alexander - 1949 -- - Prehistoric art of the Aleutian Islands - George Irving Quimby - 1948 -- - Some textile specimens from the Aleutian Islands - Paul Gebhard and Kate Kent Peck - 1941 -- - The cruise of the Corwin: journal of the Arctic expedition of 1881 in search of De Long and the Jeanette - by John Muir, ed. by William Frederic Badè - 1917 -- - An Aleutian basket - Mary Lois Kissell - 1907 -- - Toggle harpoon heads from the Aleutian Islands - George Irving Quimby - 1946 --^
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  • 94
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Black Carib Indians
    Abstract: This collection of 22 documents describe the Garifuna, also called Black Caribs, who live on the Caribbean coast of Nicaragua, Honduras and Belize. The time period covered is from 1000 to 2000. Fieldwork covers a time span of almost 50 years from 1947 to 1993. Nine of the documents are doctoral dissertations. Basic ethnographies are provided by Taylor, Coelho, and Munroe. Historical perspectives of Garifuna cultural formation are provided by Gonzalez and Gullick. Four articles examine ethnic relations with respect to language use and mating/marital patterns. The Garifuna practice of couvade has been a focus of anthropological inquiry, beginning with Munroe. Chernela reinterprets the meaning of the couvade as practiced by the Garifuna. Coe and Anderson survey the region's ethnobotany. Palacio examines the Garifuna food exchange system and more specifically looks at the relationships between food sharing and fosterage, and age and residence patterns. Other topics covered include language shift in relation to new class formation and ethnic identity, gender roles, women's role in social organization, the control of young women's sexual behavior by older women, ethnomedicine, folk songs, and spirit possession
    Description / Table of Contents: Garifuna - Nancie L. Solien González, Ian Skoggard (file evaluation and indexing notes), and John Beierle (indexing notes) - 2005 -- - Sojourners of the Caribbean: ethnogenesis and ethnohistory of the Garifuna - [by] Nancie L. Gonzalez - 1988 -- - Black Carib household structure: a study of migration and modernization - [by] Nancie L. Gonzßlez - 1969 -- - Exiled from St. Vincent: the development of Black Carib culture in Central America up to 1945 - [by] C.J.M.R. Gullick - 1976 -- - Women and the ancestors: Black Carib kinship and ritual - [by] Virginia Kerns - 1983 -- - Interpreting signs of illness: a case study in medical semiotics - [by] Kathryn Vance Staiano - 1986 -- - Heart drum: spirit possession in the communities of Belize - [by] Byron Foster - 1986 -- - The Black Carib of British Honduras - Douglas MacRae Taylor - 1951 --^
    Description / Table of Contents: the major socio-cultural forms of the Black Carib of Punta Gorda, British Honduras - by Robert Leon Munroe - [April, 1964] -- - Kin ties, food and remittances in a Garifuna village in southern Belize - Joseph Palacio - 1991 -- - Past and present evidence of interethnic mating - Virginia Kerns - 1984 -- - Ethnicity and mating patterns in Punta Gorda, Belize - Sheila Cosminsky and Emory Whipple - 1984 -- - Ethnobotany of the Garífuna of eastern Nicaragua - Felix G. Coe and Gregory J. Anderson - 1996
    Description / Table of Contents: a study in acculturation - By Ruy Coelho - 1955 [1989 copy ] -- - Carib folk songs and Carib culture - [by] Richard Eugene Hadel - 1972 [1989 copy ] -- - Food and social relations in a Garifuna village - [by] Joseph Orlando Palacio - 1982 [1989 copy ] -- - Mating as a reproductive strategy: a Black Carib example - [by] Carolyn Sue McCommon - 1982 [1989 copy ] -- - Age as a source of differentiation within a Garifuna village in southern Belize - [by] Joseph O. Palacio - 1987 -- - Gubida illness and religious ritual among the Garifuna of Santa Fe, Honduras: an ethnopsychiatric analysis - [by] Cynthia Chamberlain Bianchi - 1988 [1989 copy ] -- - Language shift and the redefinition of social boundaries among the Caribs of Belize - [by] Pamela Ann Wright - 1986 [1989 copy ] -- - Garifuna children's language shame: ethnic stereotypes, national affiliation, and transnational immigration as factors in language choice - Donna M. Bonner - 2001 --^
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  • 95
    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: Badaga (Indic people)
    Abstract: This collection of 10 documents is about the Badaga and covers the period from 1550 to the 1990s. The Badagas are the largest community in the Nilgiri Hills at the junction of Kerala, Karnataka, and Tamil Nadu states in southern India. Paul Hockings authored eight of these documents, and his work covers Badaga culture from the first contact with Europeans in the early 1800s up to 1995. His strengths are a thorough analysis of social organization and structure, including kinship, marriage and their associated rituals. Two early sources (Thurston 1909, and Sastri 1891-1892) provide overviews of selected aspects of Badaga society and culture
    Description / Table of Contents: Badaga - Paul Hockings and John Beierle (file evaluation and indexing notes) - 2005 -- - Badaga - By Edgar Thurston ; assisted by K. Rangachari - 1909 -- - Ancient Hindu refugees: Badaga social history 1550-1975 - Paul Hockings - 1980 -- - On giving salt to buffaloes: ritual as communication - Paul Hockings - 1968 -- - Sex and disease in a mountain community - Paul Hockings - 1980 -- - Cultural change among the Badagas: a community in southern India - Paul Edward Hockings - 1965 [1989 copy] -- - The man named Unige Mada (Nilgiri Hills, Tamilnadu) - Paul Hockings - 1987 -- - Badaga kinship rules in their socio-economic context - Paul Hockings - 1982 -- - The Badagas of the Nilagiri District - S. M. Natesa Sastri - 1891-1892 -- - Mortuary ritual of the Badagas of southern India - Paul Hockings - 2001 -- - Kindreds of the earth: Badaga household structure and demography - Paul Hockings with a foreword by John C. Caldwell - 1999
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  • 96
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Chugach Eskimos ; Eskimos--Alaska--Kodiak Island--Antiquities ; Kodiak Island (Alaska)--Antiquities ; Koniagmium Eskimos ; Koniagmiut Eskimos ; Pacific Gulf Yupik Eskimos
    Abstract: This collection of 34 documents describes the Eskimo groups of southern Alaska. The Alutiiq, also referred to in the literature as the Pacific Eskimo(s), are located from the Alaska Peninsula east to Prince William Sound, including the Koniag of Kodiak Island and the Chugach of the Kenai Peninsula. The time period covered is from about 1774, at the time of the first Russian-Eskimo contacts, to approximately 2000. Most of these documents are about the Koniag of Kodiak Island, with some emphasis on the villages of Old Harbor, Karluk, and Kaguyak
    Description / Table of Contents: Alutiiq - Timothy J. O'Leary - 2005 -- - The Chugach Eskimo - Kaj Birket-Smith - 1953 -- - Notes on Koniag material culture - Robert F. Heizer - 1952 -- - Early collections from the Pacific Eskimo - Kaj Birket-Smith - 1941 -- - Vocabularies - George Gibbs - 1877 -- - The mythology of Kodiak Island, Alaska - Margaret Lantis - 1938 -- - Growth studies on a hybrid population of Eskimo-White origin in southwestern Alaska - J. Baslev Jørgensen and William S. Laughlin - 1963 -- - The anthropology of Kodiak Island - Ales Hrdlicka - 1975 -- - Koniag prehistory: archaeological investigations at late prehistoric sites on Kodiak Island, Alaska - Donald Woodford Clark - 1974 -- - General introduction: design of studies and their current status - William Sceva Laughlin and William G. Reeder - 1966 -- - Kodiak studies: introduction - W. S. Laughlin - 1966 --^
    Description / Table of Contents: kinship and fishing in Old Harbor, Alaska - Craig Mishler and Rachel Mason - 1996 -- - The Russian Orthodox Church as a native institution among the Koniag Eskimo of Kodiak Island, Alaska - Robert R. Rathburn - 1981 -- - Pacific Eskimo: historical ethnography - Donald W. Clark - 1984 -- - Contemporary Pacific Eskimo - Nancy Yaw Davis - 1984 -- - Bibliography - David Damas - 1984 -- - Earthquake, tsunami, resettlement and survival in two north Pacific Alaskan native villages - Nancy Yaw Davis - 1986 -- - The role of the Russian Orthodox Church in the five Pacific Eskimo villages as revealed by the earthquake - Nancy Yaw Davis - 1970 -- - The Kodiak Region - Joanna Endter-Wada, Rachel Mason, Joanne Mulcahy, Jon Hofmeister - 1992 -- - The spirits of the Chugash people of Alaska are at rest once again - John F. C. Johnson - 1994 --^
    Description / Table of Contents: introduction - W. S. Laughlin - 1966 -- - The blood groups of three Konyag isolates - Carter Denniston - 1966 -- - Fingerprint patterns from Karluk village, Kodiak Island - Robert J. Meier - 1966 -- - A demographic study of Karluk, Kodiak Island, Alaska, 1962-1964 - Kenneth I. Taylor - 1966 -- - An ethnographic sketch of Old Harbor, Kodiak: an Eskimo village - Harumi Befu - 1970 -- - Koniag-Pacific Eskimo bibliography - Donald W. Clark - 1975 -- - Petroglyphs from southwestern Kodiak Island, Alaska - Robert Fleming Heizer - 1947 -- - Pottery from the southern Eskimo region - Robert Fleming Heizer - 1949 -- - The voyage of Gregory Shelekhof, a Russian merchant from Okhotzk, on the eastern ocean, to the coast of America, in the years 1783, 1784, 1785, 1786, 1787, and his return to Russia: from his own journal - Grigorii Ivanovich Shelikhov - 1795 -- - Voyage of Stephen Glottoff in the Andrean and Natalia, 1762 - William Coxe - 1803 --^
    Description / Table of Contents: a personal experience - Gordon L. Pullar - 1992 -- - Postcontact Koniag ceremonialism on Kodiak Island and the Alaskan Peninsula: evidence from the Fisher Collection - 1992
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  • 97
    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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  • 98
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Black Carib Indians ; Garifuna ; Garifuna
    Abstract: This collection of 16 documents describes the Island Carib during the period from 1492 to 1992. Occupying the Lesser Antilles, the Island Carib were among the first peoples encountered by Europeans in the New World. They fiercely resisted European intrusion, finding their last refuge on the mountain island of Dominica, where they continue to live within the Carib Territory (formerly the Carib Reserve). The Dominican Carib constitute a distinct ethnic minority within the largely Creole population of this West Indian island. Four documents are missionary accounts from the 17th century, all translated from French into English. A late 19th century account is provided by Ober and early 20th century summary by Neveu-Lemaire. Other documents cover the topics of kinship and social structure, dietary and occupational restrictions, basketry, ethnobotany, and the recent resurgence of Carib identity and ethnicity
    Note: Culture summary: Island Carib - Anthony Layng and Ian Skoggard (file evaluation and indexing notes) - 2005 -- - An account of the Island of Guadaloupe - By Raymond Breton and Armand de la Paix - 1929 -- - Carib-French dictionary - By Raymond Breton - 1665 -- - Concerning the savages called Caribs - By Jacques Bouton - 1640 -- - Concerning the natives of the Antilles - By Jean-Baptiste Du Tertre - 1667 -- - The Carib - By Irving Rouse - 1948 -- - The Caribs of Dominica - By Douglas Taylor - 1938 -- - A note on Dominican basketry and its analogues - Douglas Taylor and Harvey C. Moore - 1948 -- - The meaning of dietary and occupational restrictions among the Island Carib - Douglas Taylor - 1950 -- - The Caribs of the Lesser Antilles - By Frederick A. Ober ... - 1895 -- - The Caribs of the Antilles - by M. Neveu-Lemaire - 1921 -- , - Kinship and social structure of the Island Carib - Douglas Taylor - 1946 -- - The interpretation of some documentary evidence on Carib culture - Douglas Taylor - 1949 -- - The ethnobotany of the Island Caribs of Dominica - W. H. Hodge and Douglas Taylor - 1957 -- - The Carib Reserve: identity and security in the West Indies - Anthony Layng ; with a foreword by Leo A. Despres - 1983 -- - Land, politics, and ethnicity in a Carib Indian community - Nancy H. Owen - 1975 -- - Land rights, cultural identity and gender conflicts in the Carib territory of Dominica - Brigitte Kossek - 1994
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  • 99
    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: Mongour (Chinese people)
    Abstract: This collection of five documents is about the Monguor and covers the time period from 1271-1949. The Monguor live in the Qilian Mountains and on the banks of the Huang and Datong rivers in Qinghai and Gansu provinces in northwestern China. Two of these documents are translations, one from French and the other from German. All are written by two Roman Catholic missionaries, Father Louis Schram, who was in the area from 1911-1922, and Father Dominik Schr͏̈oder, from 1946-1949. Topics covered include Monguor origins; history and social organization; religious practices and beliefs, including the origin and historical development of the lamaseries; clan histories; and marriage practices
    Description / Table of Contents: Monguor - Ian Skoggard - 2005 -- - The Monguors of the Kansu-Tibetan frontier: their origin, history and social organization - [by] Louis M.J. Schram ; introduction by Owen Lattimore - 1954 -- - Marriage among the T'u-jen of Kansu (China) - [by] Louis Schram ; translation by Jean H. Winchell - 1932 -- - On the religion of the Tujen of the Sining Region (Koko Nor) - [by] Dominik Schröder ; translated by Richard Neuse - 1952-1953 -- - The Monguors of the Kansu-Tibetan frontier: Part II. their religious life - [by] Louis M.J. Schram - 1957 -- - The Monguors of the Kansu-Tibetan frontier: Part III. Records of the Monguor clans : history of the Monguors in Huangchung and the chronicles of the Lu family - [by] Louis M. J. Schram - 1961
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  • 100
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Children--Iran--Social conditions ; Children--Iran--Social life and customs ; Ethnology--Iran ; Iran--Rural conditions ; Iran--Social life and customs ; Land tenure--Iran--Luristan ; Lur (Iranian people) ; Luristan (Iran)--Economic conditions ; Luristan (Iran)--Social conditions ; Luristan(Iran)--Social life and customs ; Nomads--Iran--Luristan ; Rural women--Iran--Biography ; Rural women--Iran--Social conditions ; Sheep industry--Iran--Luristan ; Tales--Iran--Luristan ; Tribes--Iran
    Abstract: This collection of 7 English-lanugage documents contains specific data on the Lur peoples, including the Bakhtiari, Kahgalu, and Mamassani. The documents cover the time period from 9000 BC to 1997 AD, with an emphasis on the period from 1920-1994. Although the Lur are found mainly in three administrative districts of Iran - Lorestan (or Lurestan), Kohkiluyeh, and Bakhtiari - the focus of this collection is on the Lur of the Lorestan district. The cultural summary is based on the article "Lur" by Ronald Johnson in the Encyclopedia of World Cultures, Vol. 9, Africa and the Middle East, John Middleton and Amal Rassam, eds. 1995. It was revised and expanded with the addition of the synopsis and indexing notes by John Beierle in June, 2005
    Description / Table of Contents: Lur - Ronald Johnson and John Beierle - 2006 -- - Culture summary: Lur - Ronald Johnson and John Beierle - 2006 -- - The Kuhgalu of Iran - Mahmud Bawer - [n.d.] -- - Tribes of Iran - Sekandar Amanolahi - 1988 -- - Sheep and land: the economics of power in a tribal society - Jacob Black-Michaud - 1986 -- - Nomads of Luristan: history, material culture, and pastoralism in western Iran - Inge Demant Mortensen ; Ida Nicolaisen, editor-in-chief - 1993 -- - Tales from Luristan (Matalyâ Lurissu): tales, fables, and folk poetry from the Lur of Bâlâ-Garîva / transcribed and translated with notes on the phonology, the grammar of Luri and Luri-English vocabulary - by Sekander Amanolahi, W.M. Thackston - 1986 -- - Women of Deh Koh: lives in an Iranian village - Erika Friedl - 1989 -- - Children of Deh Koh: young life in an Iranian village - Erika Friedl - 1997
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