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  • 2010-2014  (136)
  • Human Relations Area Files, Inc  (136)
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  • 1
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Bella Coola Indians ; Bellacoola ; 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
    Note: Culture summary: 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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  • 2
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Nootka Indians ; Nuu-chah-nulth Indians ; Makah Indians ; Indians of North America--Washington (State) ; Clayoquot Indians ; Wolf ritua ; Quileute Indians ; Nootka Indians--Social life and customs ; Nootka ; Nootka
    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
    Note: Culture summary: 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 -- , - The Wolf ritual of the northwest coast - by Alice Henson Ernst - 1952 -- - Makah marriage patterns and population stability - Erna Gunther - 1962 -- - Nootkans of Vancouver Island - Eugene Arima and John Dewhirst - 1990 -- - Makah - Ann M. Renker and Erna Gunther - 1990 -- - The Kyuquot way: 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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  • 3
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Miskito Indians ; Misquito ; Misquito
    Note: Culture summary: 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 -- , - Sexual magic and money: 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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  • 4
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Gond (Indic people) ; Ethnology--India--Bastar ; Bastar (India) ; Muria (Indic people) ; Primitive societies ; Adolescence ; Dormitories ; Murder--India--Bastar ; Suicide--India--Bastar ; Bastar (India : District)--History--19th century ; Bastar (India : District)--History--20th century ; Bastar (India : District)--Ethnic relations--Political aspects ; Bharia (Indic people) ; Gond ; Gond
    Abstract: The Gond collection covers a broad range of ethnographic topics dating from approximately 1854 to 2006, with an emphasis on the Gond tribes of Bastar State. The primary document in this collection is Grigson dealing with the general ethnography of the Maria Gond, particularly the Hill and Bison Horn Maria tribal groups. Grigson's data are further supplemented by the ethnographic description of Gond cultural life in Fuchs, and in Elwin. The Grigson's, Elwin's, and Fuchs' studies, however, are limited in time depth to the early and mid-twentieth century. Other topics of ethnographic interest are: the description and analysis of the ghotul, a communal dwelling where the young people of the Gond villages live; murder and suicide among the Bison Horn Maria; genealogical studies of the Gond people in Bastar State; and sociocultural changes in Orcha village introduced by the Indian government
    Note: Culture summary: Gond - Stephen Fuchs - 2011 -- - The Maria Gonds of Bastar - by W. V. Grigson ; with an introduction by J. H. Hutton - 1949 -- - The Muria and their ghotul - Verrier Elwin - 1947 -- - Maria murder and suicide - Verrier Elwin ; with a foreword by W. V. Grigson - 1943 -- - Subalterns and sovereigns: an anthropological history of Bastar, 1854-2006 - Nandini Sundar - 2007 -- - Some aspects of change in a Hill Maria Gond village - Edward J. Jay - 1971 -- - The Gond and Bhumia of eastern Mandla - Stephen Fuchs - 1960
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  • 5
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Marquesans ; Ethnology--French Polynesia--Marquesas Islands ; Tattooing--French Polynesia--Marquesas Islands ; Marquesas Islands (French Polynesia)--Social life and customs ; Marquesans--Psychology ; Ethnophilosophy--French Polynesia--Marquesas Islands ; Individualism ; Social psychology--French Polynesia--Marquesas Islands ; Marquesans--Social life and customs ; Indigenes Volk ; Marquesasinseln ; Marquesasinseln ; Indigenes Volk
    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
    Note: Culture summary: 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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  • 6
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Yi (Chinese people) ; Ethnology--China ; Ethnology--China--Yunnan ; Religion--China--Yunnan ; Nu (Chinese people) ; China--Description and travel
    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
    Note: Culture summary: 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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  • 7
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Guana Indians ; Terena Indians ; Caduveo Indians ; Acculturation ; Terena ; Terena
    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
    Note: The Terena and the Caduveo of Southern Mato Grosso, Brazil - Kalervo Oberg ; prepared in cooperation with the U. S. Dept. of State as a project of the Interdepartmental Committee on Scientific and Cultural Cooperation - 1949 -- - The process of assimilation of the Terena - Roberto Cardoso de Oliveira ; preface by Darcy Ribeiro - 1960 -- - The succession of the chiefs among the Terena - Herbert Baldus - 1944 -- - Culture summary: 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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  • 8
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Tsonga (African people) ; Tsonga (African peoples) ; Tsonga ; Tsonga
    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
    Note: Culture summary: 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 Moc¸ambique Thonga: comments on a study by Marvin Harris - A. Rita-Ferreira - 1960 -- - Labour emigration among the Moc¸ambique 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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  • 9
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Geschichte ; Malays (Asian people) ; Malaya ; Fish trade--Malay Peninsula ; Fishers--Malay Peninsula ; Home economics--Kelantan ; Kelantan--Social life and customs ; Adat law--Perak ; Negeri Sembilan--Politics and government ; Perak--Politics and government ; Selangor--Politics and government ; Malays (Asian people)--Kinship--Malaysia--Negeri Sembilan ; Malays (Asian people)--Malaysia--Negeri Sembilan--Social conditions ; Gender identity--Malaysia--Negeri Sembilan ; Sex role--Malaysia--Negeri Sembilan ; Matrilineal kinship--Malaysia--Negeri Sembilan ; Negeri Sembilan--Social life and customs ; Malays (Asian people)--Kinship ; Malays (Asian people)--Land tenure ; Clans--Malaysia--Rembau (Negeri Sembilan) ; Inheritance and succession--Malaysia--Rembau (Negeri Sembilan) ; Inheritance and succession (Adat law) ; Rembau (Negeri Sembilan)--Economic conditions ; Rembau (Negeri Sembilan)--Social conditions ; Ethnology--Malaysia--Kelantan ; Ethnology--Fieldwork ; Ethnology--Methodology ; Kelantan--Civilization ; Ethnology--Malaysia--Kampong Jelebu (Negeri Sembilan) ; Malaien ; Malaien ; Geschichte
    Note: Culture summary: 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 -- , Life and customs: 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 , 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. , 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. Gullick's 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. , 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
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  • 10
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Uttar Pradesh (India) ; Country life--India ; Missions--India ; India--Social life and customs ; Caste--India--Dhanaura ; Ethnology--India--Dhanaura ; Dhanaura, India ; Uttar Pradesh ; Uttar Pradesh
    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
    Note: Culture summary: 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 -- , - The extensions of an Indian village - Morris E. Opler - 1956 -- - The place of religion in a north Indian village - Morris Edward Opler - 1959 -- - Caste interaction in a village tribe: an anthropological case study of the tribes in Dhanaura Village in Mirzapur District of Uttar Pradesh - L. M. Sankhdher - 1974
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  • 11
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Nyakyusa (African people) ; Ngonde (African people) ; Primitive societies ; Kinship--Tanzania ; Nyakyusa (African people)--Social life and customs ; Land tenure--Tanzania ; Ngonde (African people)--Politics and government ; Ngonde (Malawi)--Politics and government ; Ngonde (African people)--Social life and customs ; Acculturation ; Nyakyusa ; Ngonde ; Nyakyusa ; Ngonde
    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
    Note: Culture summary: 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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  • 12
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Teda (African people) ; Tibbu (African people) ; French language--Dictionaries--Teda ; Tubu ; Tubu
    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
    Note: Culture summary: 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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  • 13
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Berbers ; Anthropometry--Morocco ; Ethnology--Morocco ; Rif Mountains (Morocco) ; Morocco--Social life and customs ; Folklore--Morocco ; Magic--Morocco ; Rites and ceremonies--Morocco ; Morocco--Religion ; Rif (Morocco) ; Berber ; Berber
    Note: Culture summary: 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 -- , - 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
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  • 14
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Micmac Indians ; Micmac Indians--History ; Micmac Indians--Government relations ; Micmac Indians--Social life and customs ; Micmac ; 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 Mi'kmaq 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 Mi'kmaq of the Restigouche Reserve (up to 1961); and social revitalization and change in regard to the religious festival of St. Anne
    Note: Culture summary: 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 -- , - The Mi'kmaq: 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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  • 15
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Osage Indians ; Osage Indians--Folklore ; Osage Indians--Rites and ceremonies ; Osage Indians--Religion ; Osage mythology ; Osage Indians--Social life and customs ; Osage Indians--History ; Osage ; 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
    Note: Culture summary: 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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  • 16
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Havasupai Indians ; Yuman Indians ; Havasupai ; Havasupai
    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
    Note: Culture summary: 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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  • 17
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Peasants--Egypt ; Villages--Egypt--Case studies Silwa Bahari ; Peasantry--Egypt ; Egypt--Social life and customs ; Fellachen ; Fellachen
    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 Nasser's brand of socialism, introduced liberalization, including laws allowing for agricultural land to be sold and bought. Bush's work especially focuses on the impact of liberalization on the land rights and security of Fellahin families
    Note: Culture summary: 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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  • 18
    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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  • 19
    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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  • 20
    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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  • 21
    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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  • 22
    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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  • 23
    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
    URL: Volltext  (Deutschlandweit zugänglich)
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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: 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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  • 25
    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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  • 26
    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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  • 27
    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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  • 28
    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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  • 29
    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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  • 30
    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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  • 31
    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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  • 32
    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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  • 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: 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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  • 34
    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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  • 35
    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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  • 36
    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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  • 37
    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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  • 38
    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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  • 39
    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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  • 40
    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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  • 41
    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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  • 42
    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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  • 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: 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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  • 44
    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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  • 45
    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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  • 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: 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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  • 47
    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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  • 48
    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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  • 49
    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
    URL: Volltext  (Deutschlandweit zugänglich)
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  • 50
    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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  • 51
    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
    URL: Volltext  (Deutschlandweit zugänglich)
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  • 52
    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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  • 53
    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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  • 54
    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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  • 55
    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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  • 56
    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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  • 57
    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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  • 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: 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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  • 59
    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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  • 60
    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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  • 61
    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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  • 62
    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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  • 63
    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
    URL: Volltext  (Deutschlandweit zugänglich)
    URL: Volltext  (Deutschlandweit zugänglich)
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  • 64
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    New Haven, Conn : Human Relations Area Files, Inc
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Mam Indians ; Indians of Central America--Guatemala ; Santiago Chimaltenango, Guatemala ; Guatemala--Economic conditions--1918-1945 ; Indians of Central America--Social life and customs ; Indians of Central America--Religion ; Santiago Chimaltenango (Guatemala) ; Mam Indians--Social conditions ; Mam Indians--Economic conditions ; Coffee plantation workers--Guatemala--Santiago Chimaltenango--Social conditions ; Wages--Coffee plantation workers--Guatemala--Santiago Chimaltenango ; Coffee industry--Guatemala--Santiago Chimaltenango ; Santiago Chimaltenango (Guatemala)--Social conditions ; Santiago Chimaltenango (Guatemala)--Economic conditions ; Mam ; Mam
    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
    Note: Culture Summary: 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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  • 65
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Tuaregs ; Ahaggar Mountains (Algeria) ; Tuareg ; Tuareg
    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
    Note: Culture Summary: 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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  • 66
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Tapirapé Indians ; Tapirapé ; Tapirapé
    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
    Note: Culture summary: 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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  • 67
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    New Haven, Conn : Human Relations Area Files, Inc
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Tallensi (African people) ; Kinship ; Tallensi (African people)--Religion ; Talensi ; 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 Fortes's 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
    Note: Culture Summary: 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 -- , - Religion, morality, and the person: 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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  • 68
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Bhil (Indic people) ; Bhil ; Bhil
    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. Naik's work deals with the Rajpipla and Western Khandesh regions of western India, while Nath's 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
    Note: Culture Summary: 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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  • 69
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    New Haven, Conn : Human Relations Area Files, Inc
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Quechua Indians ; Quechua ; Quechua
    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
    Note: Culture Summary: 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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  • 70
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    New Haven, Conn : Human Relations Area Files, Inc
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Canelo Indians ; Indians of South America--Ecuador--Ethnic identity ; Power (Social sciences) Ecuador--Ethnic relations ; Amazon River Region--Ethnic relations ; Canelo Indians--Social life and customs ; Canelo Indians--Government relations ; Puyo (Pastaza, Ecuador)--Social life and customs ; Canelos-Quichua ; Canelos-Quichua
    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
    Note: Culture Summary: 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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  • 71
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    New Haven, Conn : Human Relations Area Files, Inc
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Tucuna Indians ; Tukuna ; Tukuna
    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
    Note: Culture Summary: 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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  • 72
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Kikuyu (African people) ; Women, Kikuyu--Kenya--Kirinyaga District--Interviews ; Women, Kikuyu--Kenya--Kirinyaga District--Social conditions ; Rural women--Kenya--Kirinyaga District--Interviews ; Rural women--Kenya--Kirinyaga District--Social conditions ; Rural development--Kenya--Ngecha ; Women in rural development--Kenya ; Rural women--Kenya--Ngecha ; Family--Kenya ; Kenya--Rural conditions--Case studies ; Kikuyu ; Kikuyu
    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
    Note: Culture Summary: 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 -- , - With a prehistoric people: 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 -- , - 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
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  • 73
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Tibetans ; Tibet (China)--Religion ; Tibet (China)--Ethnology ; Tibet (China)--Marriage ; Nomads--China--Tibet--Social life and customs ; Nomads--China--Tibet--Economic conditions ; Nomads--Government policy--China--Tibet ; Tibet (China)--Social life and customs ; Law--China--Tibet ; Customary law--China--Tibet ; Ethnological jurisprudence ; Tibeter ; Tibeter
    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: 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 -- , - 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
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  • 74
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Shilluk (African people) ; Shilluk (African people)--Kings and rulers ; Shilluk ; Shilluk
    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-Pritchard's 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
    Note: Examples of Shilluk folk-lore - (Mrs. D. S.) L. Oyler - 1919 -- - The Shilluk's belief in the good medicine men - D. S. Oyler - 1920 -- - The Shilluk peace ceremony - D. S. Oyler - 1920 -- - The Shilluk tribe - M. E. C. Pumphrey - 1941 -- - Culture Summary: 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 -- , - The Shilluk's belief in the evil eye, the evil medicine man - D. S. Oyler - 1919 -- - The Shilluk settlement - P. P. Howell - 1941 -- - Nikawng's place in the Shilluk religion - D. S. Oyler - 1918 -- - Shilluk kingship: power struggles and the question of succession - Burkhard Schnepel - 1990
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  • 75
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Ho Chunk Indians ; Winnebago ; Winnebago
    Abstract: The Winnebago/Ho-Chunk collection covers a time span from approximately 1620 to the late twentieth century. The primary work in this collection is Radin, which provides a detailed ethnography of the Winnebago/Ho-Chunk from the early seventeenth century to 1913. This material is supplemented by the summary of Winnebago/Ho-Chunk culture history by Lurie, which covers the early period described by Radin, and expands coverage up to 1978. This document discusses the fur trade period, treaties and land cessions between the U. S. government and the Nebraska and Wisconsin branches as two separate entities of the tribe, and post-World War II economic conditions. Other major topics include culture change and cultural stability among the Wisconsin Winnebago/Ho-Chunk in 1944 and the status of the berdache in Winnebago/Ho-Chunk society. In addition Radin attempts to show how three marked characteristics of Winnebago/Ho-Chunk civilization – the conservation of old cultural elements, the receptivity to new ideas, and the capacity for making new integrations – interact with one another to create new culture patterns in the Winnebago/Ho-Chunk milieu. Hill, based on ethno-historical research, is a study of the drinking practices of the Winnebago/Ho-Chunk from the early 1860s to the early 1920s, relating these practices to the changing socio-cultural environment. The major focus in this work is on the manner in which the Peyote religion helped control excessive drinking. Richards' paper in this collection focuses on the Winnebago/Ho-Chunk during the late prehistoric/early historic period, with particular emphasis on subsistence. The Astor site in Green Bay, Wisconsin is suggested as a potential link between the prehistoric/historic Winnebago/Ho-Chunk and limited subsistence information from the site is examined in that light
    Note: Culture Summary: Winnebago/Ho-Chunk - Nancy Oestreich Lurie - 2010 -- - The Winnebago tribe - Paul Radin - 1923 -- - Cultural change among the Wisconsin Winnegabo - Nancy Oestreich - 1944 -- - Winebago berdache - Nancy Oestreich Lurie - 1953 -- - The road of life and death: a ritual drama of the American Indian - Paul Radin ; with a foreword by Mark Van Doren ... - 1945 -- - Winnebago - Nancy Oestreich Lurie - 1978 -- - Peyotism and the control of heavy drinking: the Nebraska Winnebago in the early 1900s - Thomas W. Hill - 1990 -- - Winnebago subsistence - change and continuity - Patricia B. Richards - 1993
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  • 76
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    New Haven, Conn : Human Relations Area Files, Inc
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Canelo Indians ; Quechua Indians ; Quechua ; Quechua
    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 who's featured modernization programs included sanitation, furniture, textiles and clothing, and agriculture and animal husbandry. James Belote's 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
    Note: Culture Summary: 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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  • 77
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    New Haven, Conn : Human Relations Area Files, Inc
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Abipon Indians ; Paraguay--Description and travel--Early works to 1800 ; Abipón ; Abipón
    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
    Note: Culture Summary: 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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  • 78
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Toda (Indic people) ; Toda ; Toda
    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. Marshall's 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
    Note: Culture summary: 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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  • 79
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Rundi (African people) ; Hutu (African people)--Tanzania--Ethnic identity ; Political refugees--Burundi ; Political refugees--Tanzania ; Burundi ; Burundi
    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. Lemarchand's 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
    Note: The Barundi: 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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  • 80
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    New Haven, Conn : Human Relations Area Files, Inc
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Kwoma (Papua New Guinean people) ; Kwoma (Papua New Guinean people)--Rites and ceremonies ; Kwoma ; Kwoma
    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
    Note: Culture Summary: 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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  • 81
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Khoisan (African people) ; Khoisan ; Khoisan
    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
    Note: Culture Summary: 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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  • 82
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Gilyak ; Gilyaks ; Niwchen ; Niwchen
    Note: Culture Summary: 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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  • 83
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Quechua Indians ; Otavalo Indians ; Quechua ; Quechua
    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. Wibbelsman's 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
    Note: Culture Summary: 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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  • 84
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Balinese (Indonesian people) ; Bali Island (Indonesia) ; Bali Island (Indonesia)--Religion ; Kinship--Indonesia--Bali Island ; Bali Island (Indonesia)--Social life and customs ; Balinesen ; Balinesen
    Note: Culture Summary: 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 -- , - The irrigation system in the region of Jembrana - by C. J. Grader - 1960 -- - The position of the blacksmiths - by R. Goris - 1960 -- - The village republic of Tenganan Pegeringsingan - by V. E. Korn - 1960 -- - Bibliography - H. J. Franken, R. Goris, C. J. Grader, V. E. Korn and J. L. Swellengrebel - 1960 -- - Glossary - H. J. Franken, R. Goris, C. J. Grader, V. E. Korn and J. L. Swellengrebel - 1960 -- - Economic development in Tabanan - Clifford Geertz - [1963] -- - Tihingan: 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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  • 85
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Mescalero Indians ; Mescalero Indians--Biography ; Apache Indians--Biography ; Apache Indians--Claims ; Mescalero astronomy ; Mescalero Indians--Religion ; Mescalero philosophy ; Mescalero ; 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
    Note: Culture Summary: 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 -- , - The influence of aboriginal pattern and White contact on a recently introduced ceremony, the Mescalero peyote rite - Morris Edward Opler - 1936 -- - Play and inter-ethnic communication: 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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  • 86
    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
    URL: Volltext  (Deutschlandweit zugänglich)
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  • 87
    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]
    URL: Volltext  (Deutschlandweit zugänglich)
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  • 88
    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
    URL: Volltext  (Deutschlandweit zugänglich)
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  • 89
    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
    URL: Volltext  (Deutschlandweit zugänglich)
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  • 90
    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
    URL: Volltext  (Deutschlandweit zugänglich)
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  • 91
    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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  • 92
    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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  • 93
    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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  • 94
    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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  • 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: 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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  • 96
    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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  • 97
    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
    URL: Volltext  (Deutschlandweit zugänglich)
    URL: Volltext  (Deutschlandweit zugänglich)
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  • 98
    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]
    URL: Volltext  (Deutschlandweit zugänglich)
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  • 99
    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
    URL: Volltext  (Deutschlandweit zugänglich)
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  • 100
    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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