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  • 2000-2004  (23)
  • 2004  (23)
  • Human Relations Area Files, Inc
  • 1
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Sherpa (Nepalese people) ; Sherpa ; Sherpa
    Abstract: The Sherpa are a Tibetan-speaking people who moved into the valleys of eastern Nepal in the middle of the sixteenth century. They survived as traders transporting goods by Yak across the Himalayas, linking the markets of China to Nepal and India. This collection of 19 documents about the Sherpa covers a period from the 1950s to 1990s. The Sherpa environment, religion, and social change have received the most attention by these authors
    Note: Sherpas through their rituals - [by] Sherry B. Ortner - 1978 -- - The place of truth in Sherpa law and religion - [by] Robert A. Paul - 1977 -- - Sherpa purity - [by] Sherry B. Ortner - 1973 -- - Culture summary: Sherpa - Robert A. Paul and HRAF Staff (file evaluation and indexing notes) - 2004 -- - The Sherpas of Nepal: Buddhist highlanders - [by] Christoph von Fürer-Haimendorf - 1964 -- - Himalayan traders: life in highland Nepal - [by] Christoph von Fürer-Haimendorf - 1975 -- - Mani-rimdu: Sherpa dance drama - [by] Luther G. Jerstad - 1969 -- - Sherpas: reflections on change on Himalayan Nepal - [by] James F. Fisher - 1990 -- - The Tibetan symbolic world: psychoanalytic explorations - [by] Robert A. Paul - 1982 -- - The Sherpas of the Khumbu region - [by] Christoph von Fürer-Haimendorf - 1963 -- , - High religion: a cultural and political history of Sherpa Buddhism - [by] Sherry B. Ortner - 1989 -- - Livestock and landscape: the Sherpa pastoral system in Sagarmatha (Mt. Everest) National Park, Nepal - [by] Barbara Anne Brower - 1987 [1990 copy] -- - Sherpa settlement and subsistance: cultural ecology and history in highland Nepal - [by] Stanley Francis Stevens - 1990 -- - Dreams of a final Sherpa - Vincanne Adams - 1997 -- - Production of self and body in Sherpa-Tibetan society - Vincanne Adams - 1992 -- - Fire of Himal: an anthropological study of the Sherpas of Nepal Himalayan region - Ramesh Raj Kunwar - 1989 -- - Biocultural adaptations of the high altitude Sherpas of Nepal - Charles A. Weitz - 1984 -- - The Sherpas transformed: social change in a Buddhist society of Nepal - Christoph von Fürer-Haimendorf - 1984 -- - Recruitment to monasticism among the Sherpas - Robert A. Paul - 1990 -- - The waterspirits and the position of women among the Sherpa - Michael Mühlich - 1997
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  • 2
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Orokaiva (Papua New Guinea people) ; Orokaiva ; Orokaiva
    Abstract: Orokaiva refers to a number of culturally similar ethnic groups concentrated in the Popondetta district of Oro Province, Papua New Guinea. This collection of 31 documents (30 in English and 1 in French) is about the Orokaiva from the late nineteenth century to the 1980s. Williams provides a general overview of daily life, subsistence patterns, social organization, and religion
    Note: Culture summary: Orokaiva - Christopher S. Latham and John Beierle - 2004 -- - Orokaiva society - by F.E. Williams ... with an introduction by Sir Hubert Murray - 1930 -- - Orokaiva magic - by F.E. Williams. With a foreword by R.R. Marett - 1928 -- - Social control amongst the Orokaiva - By Marie Reay - 1953-1954 -- - Five new religious cults in British New Guinea - E.W.P. Chinnery and A. C. Haddon - 1917 -- - Exchange in the social structure of the Orokaiva: traditional and emergent ideologies in the northern district of Papua - by Erik Schwimmer - 1973 -- - Communal cash cropping among the Orokaiva - [by] R.G. Crocombe - 1964 -- , - Land tenure and land use among the Mount Lamington Orokaiva - [by] Max Rimoldi assisted by Cromwell Burau and Robert Ferraris - 1966 -- - The organisation of production and distribution among the Orokaiva: an analysis of work and exchange in two communities participating in both the subsistence and monetary sectors of the economy - [By] E. W. Waddell and P. A. Krinks - 1968 -- - Cognitive capacity among the Orokaiva - George E. Kearney - 1966 -- - Changes in land use and settlement among the Yega - R.B. Dakeyne - 1966 -- - Co-operatives at Yega - R. B. Dakeyne - 1966 -- - A modern Orokaiva feast - R. G. Crocombe - 1966 -- - An Orokaiva marriage - G.R. Hogbin - 1966 -- - Land, work, and productivity at Inonda - [by] R.G. Crocombe and G.R. Hogbin - 1963 -- - Four Orokaiva cash croppers - by R. G. Crocombe - 1967 -- - Twelve Orokaiva traders - by W. J. Oostermeyer and J. Gray - 1967 -- - Land tenure conversion in the northern district of Papua - David Morawetz - 1967 -- - Village and town in New Guinea - [by] R. B. Dakeyne - 1968 [1969 reprint] -- - Reciprocity and structure: a semiotic analysis of some Orokaiva exchange data - Erik Schwimmer - 1979 -- - Virgin birth - Erik G. Schwimmer - 1969 -- , - Cultural consequences of a volcanic eruption experienced by the Mount Lamington Orokaiva - by Eric G. Schwimmer - 1969 -- - The Papuan Orokaiva vs Mt. Lamington: cultural shock and its aftermath - Felix M. Keesing - 1952 -- - What did the eruption mean? - By Erik G. Schwimmer - 1977 -- - Friendship and kinship: an attempt to relate two anthropological concepts - Erik Schwimmer - [1975] -- - Objects of meditation: myth and praxis - By Erik Schwimmer - 1974 -- - The self and the product: concepts of work in comparative perspective - By Erik Schwimmer - 1979 -- - Feasting for oil palm - Janice Newton - 1982 -- - Orokaiva production and change - Janice Newton - 1985 -- - Orokaiva warfare and production - Janice Newton - 1983 -- - Women and modern marriage among the Orokaivans - Janice Newton - 1989 -- - Mythe du corps bouche - by Eric Schwimmer - 1984
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  • 3
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Bakairi Indians ; Bakairí ; Bakairí
    Abstract: This collection of 7 documents is about the Bakairi, a Carib-speaking group living on Upper Xingu River in the state of Mato Grosso in south central Brazil. The German explorer Steinen wrote the earliest accounts of the Bakairi based on his one-month stay with them during his 1884 trip down the Xingu river and his travels among the tribes located along the Kulisehu River, in the Upper Xingu area in 1887. Abreu wrote an early account of Bakairi language, mythology, and religion based on 1892 Portuguese texts. Schmidt includes the history of the Bakairi subsequent to Steinen's expedition and up to the year 1927. During this period of time, numerous socio-political and cultural changes took place among the Bacairi. He describes three different Bacairi groups: the Eastern, Western, and Xinguanos. Altenfelder Silva describes the culture of the Bakairi Indians of Mato Grosso circa 1940 including their technology, kinship terminology, pantheon, ceremonies, shamanism, and the series of ritualistic seclusions, or uanki, that occur at intervals during the life cycle. Oberg's account is based on his fieldwork among the people living on the Government Indian Post on the Rio Paranatinga during June 1947. It should be noted that the information presented in this source, obtained primarily from informants, relates to an earlier period in Bacairi history (ca. 1907) when they lived on the Rio Kuliseu. Data presented pertain to settlement patterns, subsistence activities, house types, furniture, language, culture history and early European contacts, population, dress and personal ornaments, organization of labor, social organization, the life cycle, puberty rites, marriage, burial, shamanism, games, ceremonialism and mythology
    Note: Culture summary: Bakairá - Debra Picchi and Ian Skoggard (file evaluation and indexing notes) - 2004 -- - Expedition for the exploration of the Xingu in the year 1884 - Karl von den Steinen - 1886 -- - Among the primitive peoples of Central Brazil: a travel account and the results of the Second Xingu Expedition 1887-1888 - Karl von den Steinen - 1894 -- - The Bacairi - João Capistrano de Abreu - 1938 -- - The Bacairi - Max Schmidt - 1947 -- - The UANKI state among the Bacairi - F. Altenfelder Silva - 1950 -- - The Bacairi - Kalervo Oberg - 1953 -- - The Bakairí Indians of Brazil: politics, ecology, and change - Debra Picchi - 2000
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  • 4
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Icelanders
    Abstract: This collection of 23 documents is about the Early Icelanders and covers the time span from the first Norse settlement in Iceland around 874 A.D. to Iceland's incorporation into the kingdom of Norway in approximately 1262 A.D. The major focus is on the Commonwealth Period from 930 to 1262 A.D. Much of the cultural data gathered for this period comes from the analysis and interpretation of a number of Icelandic sagas written primarily in the thirteenth century. The most comprehensive study of the social, economic, and political changes taking place in Medieval Iceland over a four hundred year period is The dynamics of medieval Iceland by Durrenberger. This study begins with the first Norse settlement in Iceland around 874 A.D. and ends with the incorporation of Iceland into the kingdom of Norway in 1264 A.D. Fourteen of these documents were originally published in: From sagas to society, edited by Gísli Pálsson
    Note: Culture summary: Early Icelanders - Douglas James Bolender and John Beierle (file evaluation and indexing notes) - 2004 -- - The dynamics of medieval Iceland: political economy and literature - by E. Paul Durrenberger - 1992 -- - Economic representation and narrative structure in Hnsa-þóris saga - E. Paul Durrenberger, Dorothy Durrenberger, ástráður Eysteinsson - 1988 -- - Stratification without a state: the collapse of the Icelandic Commonwealth - E. Paul Durrenberger - 1988 -- - Law and literature in medieval Iceland - E. Paul Durrenberger - 1992 -- - Bibliography - edited by Ross Samson - 1991 -- - The Icelandic family sagas as totemic artefacts - E. Paul Durrenberger - 1991 -- - The name of the witch: sagas, sorcery and social content - Gísli Pálsson - 1991 -- - Regional archaeological research in Iceland: potentials and possibilities - Kevin P. Smith and Jeffrey R. Parsons - 1989 -- , - Anthropological perspectives on the commonwealth period - E. Paul Durrenberger - 1989 -- - References - edited by Gísli Pálsson - 1992 -- - Introduction: Text, life, and saga - =Gísli Pálsson - 1992 -- - From sagas to society: the case of HEIMSKRINGLA - Sverre Bagge - 1992 -- - Emotions and the sagas - William Ian Miller - 1992 -- - Humor as a guide to social change: BANDAMANNA SAGA and heroic values - E. Paul Durrenberger and Jonathan Wilcox - 1992 -- - þógunna's testament: a myth for moral contemplation and social apathy - Knut Odner - 1992 -- - Inheritance, ideology, and literature: HERVARAR SAGA OK HEIðREKS - Torfi H. Tulinius - 1992 -- - GOðAR: democrats of despots? - Ross Samson - 1992 -- - The medieval Icelandic outlaw: lifestyle, saga, and legend - Frederic Amory - 1992 -- - Friendship in the Icelandic Commonwealth - Jón Vidðar Sigurðsson - 1992 -- - Spinning goods and tales: market, subsistence and literary productions - Jón Haukur Ingimundarson - 1992 -- , - Social ideals and the concept of profit in thirteenth-century Iceland - Helgi þorláksson ; [translated by Bernard Schudder] - 1992 -- - The theft of blood, the birth of men: cultural constructions of gender in medieval Iceland - Uli Linke - 1992 -- - Servitude and sexuality in medieval Iceland - Ruth Mazo Karras - 1992
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  • 5
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Chinook Indians ; Chinook ; Chinook
    Abstract: Lower Chinookans is a reference to the group of Chinookan language speakers living on the northwest coast of the United States in the states of Washington and Oregon and on both banks of the Lower Columbia River from its mouth to just beyond the Willamette River. The group consists of the Chinook proper, the Clackamas, Clatsop, Shoalwater Chinook, Wahkiakum, and Cathlamet (Kathlamet). This collection of 10 English language documents deals with the Chinookans of the Lower Chinook region. The major time focus of this collection is from the late eighteenth century through the nineteenth. The most comprehensive traditional ethnographies of the Lower Chinookans can be found in Ray's Lower Chinook ethnographic notes and Silverstein's Chinookans of the Lower Columbia. Other major topics discussed in other documents include songs, beliefs about sickness and death, and humor and verbal irony
    Note: Culture summary: Chinookans - John Beierle - 2004 -- - Lower Chinook ethnographic notes - by Verne F. Ray - 1938 -- - The Chinook Indians: traders of the Lower Columbia River - by Robert H. Ruby and John A. Brown - 1976 -- - Chinook songs - Franz Boas - 1888 [1979 reprint] -- - The doctrine of souls and disease among the Chinook Indians - Franz Boas - 1893 [1979 reprint] -- - Intermarriage and agency: a Chinookan case study - David Peterson-del Mar - 1995 -- - The Chinook Indians in the early 1800s - Verne F. Ray - 1975 -- - The historical position of the Lower Chinook in the native culture of the Northwest - Verne F. Ray - 1937 -- - A Pattern of verbal irony in Chinookan - Dell H. Hymes - 1987 -- - Chinookans of the Lower Columbia - Michael Silverstein - 1990 -- - Bibliography - edited by Wayne Suttles - 1990
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  • 6
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Icelanders ; Isländer ; Isländer
    Abstract: These 22 documents are about the inhabitants of Iceland. The time span ranges from about the middle of the nineteenth century to the late twentieth, with a particular focus on the period of the l940s to the 1980s. Most of the works are widely diversified in subject coverage, although there is emphasis on the economy, especially in regard to the marine fisheries and whaling. The status of women and women's movements in Iceland are the topics of the works by Kristmundsdóttir, Skakptadóttir, and Björnsdóttir. Gurdin's is a study of domestic violence in Iceland. Other topics covered by other authors include ethnolinguistics, zooarchaeology, kinship, literacy and literacy practice, and an analysis of the Icelandic sagas as works of fiction or historical fact
    Note: Literacy identity and literacy practice - Beverly A. Sizemore and Christopher H. Walker - 1996 -- - The wandering semioticians: tourism and the image of modern Iceland - Magnús Einarsson - 1996 -- - History and the sagas: the effects of nationalism - Jesse L. Byock - 1992 -- - Culture summary: Icelanders - Bolender, Douglas James - 2004 -- - Coastal economies, cultural accounts: human ecology and Icelandic discourse - Gísli Pálsson - 1991 -- - Forms of production and fishing expertise - E. Paul Durrenberger and Gísli Pálsson - 1989 -- - The idea of mystical power in modern Iceland - Daryl Wieland - 1989 -- - The hunter and the animal - Haraldur ólafsson - 1989 -- - Problems and prospects in the study of Icelandic kinship - George W. Rich - 1989 -- - Outside, muted, and different: Icelandic women's movements and their notions of authority and cultural separateness - Sigríður Dúna Kristmundsdóttir - 1989 -- , - Public view and private voices - Inga Dóra Björnsdóttir - 1989 -- - Language and society: the ethnolinguistics of Icelanders - Gísli Pálsson - 1989 -- - Work and identity of the poor: work load, work discipline, and self-respect - Finnur Magnússon - 1989 -- - Contributions to the zooarchaeology of Iceland: some preliminary notes - Thomas Amorosi - 1989 -- - References - edited by Gísli Pálsson and E. Paul Durrenberger - 1996 -- - Whale sitting: spatiality in Icelandic nationalism - Anne Brydon - 1996 -- - A Sea of images: fishers, whalers, and environmentalists - Níels Einarsson - 1996 -- - The politics of production: enclosure, equity, and efficiency - Gísli Pálsson and Agnar Helgason - 1996 -- - Housework and wage work: gender in Icelandic fishing communities - Unnur Dís Skaptadóttir - 1996 -- - The mountain woman and the presidency - Inga Dóra Björnsdóttir - 1996 -- - Motherhood, patriarchy, and the nation: domestic violence in Iceland - Julie E. Gurdin - 1996 -- - Premodern and modern constructions of population regimes - Daniel E. Vasey - 1996 -- - Every Icelander a special case - E. Paul Durrenberger - 1996
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  • 7
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Gisu (African people) ; Gisu ; Gisu
    Abstract: This collection of three documents about the Bagisu, all in English, covers a time span from the late nineteenth century to approximately 1989. The Bagisu or Gisu live on the western slopes of the now extinct volcano Mount Elgon in eastern Uganda. Lugisu (Masaba), the language of the Bagisu, is a Bantu language in the larger Niger-Congo group of languages. A concise summary of most major features of Bagisu ethnography from around the 1890s to 1954 can be found in LaFontaine. This is supplemented by Roscoe's earlier account of Bagisu ethnography that deals with information from the late nineteenth through the early twentieth centuries. While this latter document does contain some unique cultural data, LaFontaine questions the validity of some of Roscoe's information (e.g., the existence of cannibalism among the Bagisu). Heald's work on the Bagisu is based on the author's fieldwork in Central Bugisu from 1965-1969, and is a detailed study of the various ways in which violence is expressed in Bagisu society and the manner in which it is brought under control. This document presents data on the reputation and history of violence among the Bagisu, statistics on homicide, the association of violence with manhood and the expression of anger, the ordeal of circumcision, behavior and treatment of witches and thieves, hostility management in the community, and the establishment of vigilante groups and drinking companies to control violence
    Note: Culture summary: Bagisu - John Beierle - 2004 -- - The Gisu of Uganda - J. S. La Fontaine - 1959 -- - The Bagesu and other tribes of the Uganda Protectorate: the third part of hte report of the Mackie ethnological expedition to Central Africa - John Roscoe - 1924 -- - Controlling anger: the sociology of Gisu violence - Suzette Heald - 1989
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  • 8
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Orokaiva (Papua New Guinea people) ; Orokaiva
    Abstract: Orokaiva refers to a number of culturally similar ethnic groups concentrated in the Popondetta district of Oro Province, Papua New Guinea. This collection of 31 documents (30 in English and 1 in French) is about the Orokaiva from the late nineteenth century to the 1980s. Williams provides a general overview of daily life, subsistence patterns, social organization, and religion
    Description / Table of Contents: Orokaiva - Christopher S. Latham and John Beierle - 2004 -- - Orokaiva society - by F.E. Williams ... with an introduction by Sir Hubert Murray - 1930 -- - Orokaiva magic - by F.E. Williams. With a foreword by R.R. Marett - 1928 -- - Social control amongst the Orokaiva - By Marie Reay - 1953-1954 -- - Five new religious cults in British New Guinea - E.W.P. Chinnery and A. C. Haddon - 1917 -- - Exchange in the social structure of the Orokaiva: traditional and emergent ideologies in the northern district of Papua - by Erik Schwimmer - 1973 -- - Communal cash cropping among the Orokaiva - [by] R.G. Crocombe - 1964 --^
    Description / Table of Contents: cultural shock and its aftermath - Felix M. Keesing - 1952 -- - What did the eruption mean? - By Erik G. Schwimmer - 1977 -- - Friendship and kinship: an attempt to relate two anthropological concepts - Erik Schwimmer - [1975] -- - Objects of meditation: myth and praxis - By Erik Schwimmer - 1974 -- - The self and the product: concepts of work in comparative perspective - By Erik Schwimmer - 1979 -- - Feasting for oil palm - Janice Newton - 1982 -- - Orokaiva production and change - Janice Newton - 1985 -- - Orokaiva warfare and production - Janice Newton - 1983 -- - Women and modern marriage among the Orokaivans - Janice Newton - 1989 -- - Mythe du corps bouche - by Eric Schwimmer - 1984
    Description / Table of Contents: an analysis of work and exchange in two communities participating in both the subsistence and monetary sectors of the economy - [By] E. W. Waddell and P. A. Krinks - 1968 -- - Cognitive capacity among the Orokaiva - George E. Kearney - 1966 -- - Changes in land use and settlement among the Yega - R.B. Dakeyne - 1966 -- - Co-operatives at Yega - R. B. Dakeyne - 1966 -- - A modern Orokaiva feast - R. G. Crocombe - 1966 -- - An Orokaiva marriage - G.R. Hogbin - 1966 -- - Land, work, and productivity at Inonda - [by] R.G. Crocombe and G.R. Hogbin - 1963 -- - Four Orokaiva cash croppers - by R. G. Crocombe - 1967 -- - Twelve Orokaiva traders - by W. J. Oostermeyer and J. Gray - 1967 -- - Land tenure conversion in the northern district of Papua - David Morawetz - 1967 -- - Village and town in New Guinea - [by] R. B. Dakeyne - 1968 [1969 reprint] -- - Reciprocity and structure: a semiotic analysis of some Orokaiva exchange data - Erik Schwimmer - 1979 -- - Virgin birth - Erik G. Schwimmer - 1969 --^
    URL: Volltext  (Deutschlandweit zugänglich)
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  • 9
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Chinook Indians
    Abstract: Lower Chinookans is a reference to the group of Chinookan language speakers living on the northwest coast of the United States in the states of Washington and Oregon and on both banks of the Lower Columbia River from its mouth to just beyond the Willamette River. The group consists of the Chinook proper, the Clackamas, Clatsop, Shoalwater Chinook, Wahkiakum, and Cathlamet (Kathlamet). This collection of 10 English language documents deals with the Chinookans of the Lower Chinook region. The major time focus of this collection is from the late eighteenth century through the nineteenth. The most comprehensive traditional ethnographies of the Lower Chinookans can be found in Ray's Lower Chinook ethnographic notes and Silverstein's Chinookans of the Lower Columbia. Other major topics discussed in other documents include songs, beliefs about sickness and death, and humor and verbal irony
    Description / Table of Contents: Chinookans - John Beierle - 2004 -- - Lower Chinook ethnographic notes - by Verne F. Ray - 1938 -- - The Chinook Indians: traders of the Lower Columbia River - by Robert H. Ruby and John A. Brown - 1976 -- - Chinook songs - Franz Boas - 1888 [1979 reprint] -- - The doctrine of souls and disease among the Chinook Indians - Franz Boas - 1893 [1979 reprint] -- - Intermarriage and agency: a Chinookan case study - David Peterson-del Mar - 1995 -- - The Chinook Indians in the early 1800s - Verne F. Ray - 1975 -- - The historical position of the Lower Chinook in the native culture of the Northwest - Verne F. Ray - 1937 -- - A Pattern of verbal irony in Chinookan - Dell H. Hymes - 1987 -- - Chinookans of the Lower Columbia - Michael Silverstein - 1990 -- - Bibliography - edited by Wayne Suttles - 1990
    URL: Volltext  (Deutschlandweit zugänglich)
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  • 10
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Icelanders
    Abstract: This collection of 23 documents is about the Early Icelanders and covers the time span from the first Norse settlement in Iceland around 874 A.D. to Iceland's incorporation into the kingdom of Norway in approximately 1262 A.D. The major focus is on the Commonwealth Period from 930 to 1262 A.D. Much of the cultural data gathered for this period comes from the analysis and interpretation of a number of Icelandic sagas written primarily in the thirteenth century. The most comprehensive study of the social, economic, and political changes taking place in Medieval Iceland over a four hundred year period is The dynamics of medieval Iceland by Durrenberger. This study begins with the first Norse settlement in Iceland around 874 A.D. and ends with the incorporation of Iceland into the kingdom of Norway in 1264 A.D. Fourteen of these documents were originally published in: From sagas to society, edited by Ǵisli Ṕalsson
    Description / Table of Contents: Early Icelanders - Douglas James Bolender and John Beierle (file evaluation and indexing notes) - 2004 -- - The dynamics of medieval Iceland: political economy and literature - by E. Paul Durrenberger - 1992 -- - Economic representation and narrative structure in Hnsa-þóris saga - E. Paul Durrenberger, Dorothy Durrenberger, ástráður Eysteinsson - 1988 -- - Stratification without a state: the collapse of the Icelandic Commonwealth - E. Paul Durrenberger - 1988 -- - Law and literature in medieval Iceland - E. Paul Durrenberger - 1992 -- - Bibliography - edited by Ross Samson - 1991 -- - The Icelandic family sagas as totemic artefacts - E. Paul Durrenberger - 1991 -- - The name of the witch: sagas, sorcery and social content - Gísli Pálsson - 1991 -- - Regional archaeological research in Iceland: potentials and possibilities - Kevin P. Smith and Jeffrey R. Parsons - 1989 --^
    Description / Table of Contents: Text, life, and saga - =Gísli Pálsson - 1992 -- - From sagas to society: the case of HEIMSKRINGLA - Sverre Bagge - 1992 -- - Emotions and the sagas - William Ian Miller - 1992 -- - Humor as a guide to social change: BANDAMANNA SAGA and heroic values - E. Paul Durrenberger and Jonathan Wilcox - 1992 -- - þógunna's testament: a myth for moral contemplation and social apathy - Knut Odner - 1992 -- - Inheritance, ideology, and literature: HERVARAR SAGA OK HEIðREKS - Torfi H. Tulinius - 1992 -- - GOðAR: democrats of despots? - Ross Samson - 1992 -- - The medieval Icelandic outlaw: lifestyle, saga, and legend - Frederic Amory - 1992 -- - Friendship in the Icelandic Commonwealth - Jón Vidðar Sigurðsson - 1992 -- - Spinning goods and tales: market, subsistence and literary productions - Jón Haukur Ingimundarson - 1992 --^
    Description / Table of Contents: cultural constructions of gender in medieval Iceland - Uli Linke - 1992 -- - Servitude and sexuality in medieval Iceland - Ruth Mazo Karras - 1992
    URL: Volltext  (Deutschlandweit zugänglich)
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  • 11
    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: Gisu (African people)
    Abstract: This collection of three documents about the Bagisu, all in English, covers a time span from the late nineteenth century to approximately 1989. The Bagisu or Gisu live on the western slopes of the now extinct volcano Mount Elgon in eastern Uganda. Lugisu (Masaba), the language of the Bagisu, is a Bantu language in the larger Niger-Congo group of languages. A concise summary of most major features of Bagisu ethnography from around the 1890s to 1954 can be found in LaFontaine. This is supplemented by Roscoe's earlier account of Bagisu ethnography that deals with information from the late nineteenth through the early twentieth centuries. While this latter document does contain some unique cultural data, LaFontaine questions the validity of some of Roscoe's information (e.g., the existence of cannibalism among the Bagisu). Heald's work on the Bagisu is based on the author's fieldwork in Central Bugisu from 1965-1969, and is a detailed study of the various ways in which violence is expressed in Bagisu society and the manner in which it is brought under control. This document presents data on the reputation and history of violence among the Bagisu, statistics on homicide, the association of violence with manhood and the expression of anger, the ordeal of circumcision, behavior and treatment of witches and thieves, hostility management in the community, and the establishment of vigilante groups and drinking companies to control violence
    Description / Table of Contents: Bagisu - John Beierle - 2004 -- - The Gisu of Uganda - J. S. La Fontaine - 1959 -- - The Bagesu and other tribes of the Uganda Protectorate: the third part of hte report of the Mackie ethnological expedition to Central Africa - John Roscoe - 1924 -- - Controlling anger: the sociology of Gisu violence - Suzette Heald - 1989
    URL: Volltext  (Deutschlandweit zugänglich)
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  • 12
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Sherpa (Nepalese people)
    Abstract: The Sherpa are a Tibetan-speaking people who moved into the valleys of eastern Nepal in the middle of the sixteenth century. They survived as traders transporting goods by Yak across the Himalayas, linking the markets of China to Nepal and India. This collection of 19 documents about the Sherpa covers a period from the 1950s to 1990s. The Sherpa environment, religion, and social change have received the most attention by these authors
    Description / Table of Contents: Sherpa - Robert A. Paul and HRAF Staff (file evaluation and indexing notes) - 2004 -- - The Sherpas of Nepal: Buddhist highlanders - [by] Christoph von Fürer-Haimendorf - 1964 -- - Himalayan traders: life in highland Nepal - [by] Christoph von Fürer-Haimendorf - 1975 -- - Mani-rimdu: Sherpa dance drama - [by] Luther G. Jerstad - 1969 -- - Sherpas: reflections on change on Himalayan Nepal - [by] James F. Fisher - 1990 -- - The Tibetan symbolic world: psychoanalytic explorations - [by] Robert A. Paul - 1982 -- - The Sherpas of the Khumbu region - [by] Christoph von Fürer-Haimendorf - 1963 --^
    Description / Table of Contents: a cultural and political history of Sherpa Buddhism - [by] Sherry B. Ortner - 1989 -- - Livestock and landscape: the Sherpa pastoral system in Sagarmatha (Mt. Everest) National Park, Nepal - [by] Barbara Anne Brower - 1987 [1990 copy] -- - Sherpa settlement and subsistance: cultural ecology and history in highland Nepal - [by] Stanley Francis Stevens - 1990 -- - Dreams of a final Sherpa - Vincanne Adams - 1997 -- - Production of self and body in Sherpa-Tibetan society - Vincanne Adams - 1992 -- - Fire of Himal: an anthropological study of the Sherpas of Nepal Himalayan region - Ramesh Raj Kunwar - 1989 -- - Biocultural adaptations of the high altitude Sherpas of Nepal - Charles A. Weitz - 1984 -- - The Sherpas transformed: social change in a Buddhist society of Nepal - Christoph von Fürer-Haimendorf - 1984 -- - Recruitment to monasticism among the Sherpas - Robert A. Paul - 1990 -- - The waterspirits and the position of women among the Sherpa - Michael Mühlich - 1997
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  • 13
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Sia Indians
    Abstract: The Zia are a Keres-speaking pueblo tribe who live on the Jemez River, 35 miles northwest of Albuquerque, New Mexico. This collection of eight documents is about the Zia. The classic work is by Leslie White and was based on his fieldwork from 1928-1929 and return visits during the 1930s, 1940s and 1950s. He focused mostly on secret societies, including membership, recruitment, and ceremonies. Two of the documents are by Hoebel. The first is a brief account of Zia history and culture that was also published in the Handbook of North American Indians. The second is about Zia law. There is no private law. Clans and lineages have no role in the legal process. All cases are brought before the governor and a council comprised of the heads of secret societies. Lange has written a detailed account of the famous Green Corn Dance; Hawley et al. a nutritional study; Polese on the Zia sun symbol; and Stevenson on child birth. The bibliography of citations to works on Zia Pueblo is also taken from vol. 9 of the Handbook on North American Indians, Southwest
    Description / Table of Contents: Zia Pueblo - Ian Skoggard - 2004 -- - The pueblo of Sia, New Mexico - Leslie A. White - 1962 -- - Zia Pueblo - E. Adamson Hoebel - 1979 -- - Keresan Pueblo law - E. Adamson Hoebel - 1969 -- - The feast day dance at Zia Pueblo - Charles H. Lange - 1952 -- - An inquiry into food economy and body economy in Zia Pueblo - By F. Hawley, M. Pijoan, and C. A. Elkin - 1943 -- - The Zia sun symbol: variations on a theme - Richard L. Polese - 1968 -- - Childbirth ceremonies of the Sia Pueblo - Matilda Stevenson - 1953 -- - Bibliography - 1979
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  • 14
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Sherpa (Nepalese people)
    Abstract: The Sherpa are a Tibetan-speaking people who moved into the valleys of eastern Nepal in the middle of the sixteenth century. They survived as traders transporting goods by Yak across the Himalayas, linking the markets of China to Nepal and India. This collection of 19 documents about the Sherpa covers a period from the 1950s to 1990s. The Sherpa environment, religion, and social change have received the most attention by these authors
    Description / Table of Contents: Sherpa - Robert A. Paul and HRAF Staff (file evaluation and indexing notes) - 2004 -- - The Sherpas of Nepal: Buddhist highlanders - [by] Christoph von Fürer-Haimendorf - 1964 -- - Himalayan traders: life in highland Nepal - [by] Christoph von Fürer-Haimendorf - 1975 -- - Mani-rimdu: Sherpa dance drama - [by] Luther G. Jerstad - 1969 -- - Sherpas: reflections on change on Himalayan Nepal - [by] James F. Fisher - 1990 -- - The Tibetan symbolic world: psychoanalytic explorations - [by] Robert A. Paul - 1982 -- - The Sherpas of the Khumbu region - [by] Christoph von Fürer-Haimendorf - 1963 --^
    Description / Table of Contents: a cultural and political history of Sherpa Buddhism - [by] Sherry B. Ortner - 1989 -- - Livestock and landscape: the Sherpa pastoral system in Sagarmatha (Mt. Everest) National Park, Nepal - [by] Barbara Anne Brower - 1987 [1990 copy] -- - Sherpa settlement and subsistance: cultural ecology and history in highland Nepal - [by] Stanley Francis Stevens - 1990 -- - Dreams of a final Sherpa - Vincanne Adams - 1997 -- - Production of self and body in Sherpa-Tibetan society - Vincanne Adams - 1992 -- - Fire of Himal: an anthropological study of the Sherpas of Nepal Himalayan region - Ramesh Raj Kunwar - 1989 -- - Biocultural adaptations of the high altitude Sherpas of Nepal - Charles A. Weitz - 1984 -- - The Sherpas transformed: social change in a Buddhist society of Nepal - Christoph von Fürer-Haimendorf - 1984 -- - Recruitment to monasticism among the Sherpas - Robert A. Paul - 1990 -- - The waterspirits and the position of women among the Sherpa - Michael Mühlich - 1997
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  • 15
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Icelanders
    Abstract: These 22 documents are about the inhabitants of Iceland. The time span ranges from about the middle of the nineteenth century to the late twentieth, with a particular focus on the period of the l940s to the 1980s. Most of the works are widely diversified in subject coverage, although there is emphasis on the economy, especially in regard to the marine fisheries and whaling. The status of women and women's movements in Iceland are the topics of the works by Kristmundsd́ottir, Skakptad́ottir, and Bj͏̈ornsd́ottir. Gurdin's is a study of domestic violence in Iceland. Other topics covered by other authors include ethnolinguistics, zooarchaeology, kinship, literacy and literacy practice, and an analysis of the Icelandic sagas as works of fiction or historical fact
    Description / Table of Contents: tourism and the image of modern Iceland - Magnús Einarsson - 1996 -- - History and the sagas: the effects of nationalism - Jesse L. Byock - 1992 -- - Culture summary: Icelanders - Bolender, Douglas James - 2004 -- - Coastal economies, cultural accounts: human ecology and Icelandic discourse - Gísli Pálsson - 1991 -- - Forms of production and fishing expertise - E. Paul Durrenberger and Gísli Pálsson - 1989 -- - The idea of mystical power in modern Iceland - Daryl Wieland - 1989 -- - The hunter and the animal - Haraldur ólafsson - 1989 -- - Problems and prospects in the study of Icelandic kinship - George W. Rich - 1989 -- - Outside, muted, and different: Icelandic women's movements and their notions of authority and cultural separateness - Sigríður Dúna Kristmundsdóttir - 1989 --^
    Description / Table of Contents: the ethnolinguistics of Icelanders - Gísli Pálsson - 1989 -- - Work and identity of the poor: work load, work discipline, and self-respect - Finnur Magnússon - 1989 -- - Contributions to the zooarchaeology of Iceland: some preliminary notes - Thomas Amorosi - 1989 -- - References - edited by Gísli Pálsson and E. Paul Durrenberger - 1996 -- - Whale sitting: spatiality in Icelandic nationalism - Anne Brydon - 1996 -- - A Sea of images: fishers, whalers, and environmentalists - Níels Einarsson - 1996 -- - The politics of production: enclosure, equity, and efficiency - Gísli Pálsson and Agnar Helgason - 1996 -- - Housework and wage work: gender in Icelandic fishing communities - Unnur Dís Skaptadóttir - 1996 -- - The mountain woman and the presidency - Inga Dóra Björnsdóttir - 1996 -- - Motherhood, patriarchy, and the nation: domestic violence in Iceland - Julie E. Gurdin - 1996 -- - Premodern and modern constructions of population regimes - Daniel E. Vasey - 1996 -- - Every Icelander a special case - E. Paul Durrenberger - 1996
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  • 16
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Orokaiva (Papua New Guinea people) ; Orokaiva
    Abstract: Orokaiva refers to a number of culturally similar ethnic groups concentrated in the Popondetta district of Oro Province, Papua New Guinea. This collection of 31 documents (30 in English and 1 in French) is about the Orokaiva from the late nineteenth century to the 1980s. Williams provides a general overview of daily life, subsistence patterns, social organization, and religion
    Description / Table of Contents: Orokaiva - Christopher S. Latham and John Beierle - 2004 -- - Orokaiva society - by F.E. Williams ... with an introduction by Sir Hubert Murray - 1930 -- - Orokaiva magic - by F.E. Williams. With a foreword by R.R. Marett - 1928 -- - Social control amongst the Orokaiva - By Marie Reay - 1953-1954 -- - Five new religious cults in British New Guinea - E.W.P. Chinnery and A. C. Haddon - 1917 -- - Exchange in the social structure of the Orokaiva: traditional and emergent ideologies in the northern district of Papua - by Erik Schwimmer - 1973 -- - Communal cash cropping among the Orokaiva - [by] R.G. Crocombe - 1964 --^
    Description / Table of Contents: cultural shock and its aftermath - Felix M. Keesing - 1952 -- - What did the eruption mean? - By Erik G. Schwimmer - 1977 -- - Friendship and kinship: an attempt to relate two anthropological concepts - Erik Schwimmer - [1975] -- - Objects of meditation: myth and praxis - By Erik Schwimmer - 1974 -- - The self and the product: concepts of work in comparative perspective - By Erik Schwimmer - 1979 -- - Feasting for oil palm - Janice Newton - 1982 -- - Orokaiva production and change - Janice Newton - 1985 -- - Orokaiva warfare and production - Janice Newton - 1983 -- - Women and modern marriage among the Orokaivans - Janice Newton - 1989 -- - Mythe du corps bouche - by Eric Schwimmer - 1984
    Description / Table of Contents: an analysis of work and exchange in two communities participating in both the subsistence and monetary sectors of the economy - [By] E. W. Waddell and P. A. Krinks - 1968 -- - Cognitive capacity among the Orokaiva - George E. Kearney - 1966 -- - Changes in land use and settlement among the Yega - R.B. Dakeyne - 1966 -- - Co-operatives at Yega - R. B. Dakeyne - 1966 -- - A modern Orokaiva feast - R. G. Crocombe - 1966 -- - An Orokaiva marriage - G.R. Hogbin - 1966 -- - Land, work, and productivity at Inonda - [by] R.G. Crocombe and G.R. Hogbin - 1963 -- - Four Orokaiva cash croppers - by R. G. Crocombe - 1967 -- - Twelve Orokaiva traders - by W. J. Oostermeyer and J. Gray - 1967 -- - Land tenure conversion in the northern district of Papua - David Morawetz - 1967 -- - Village and town in New Guinea - [by] R. B. Dakeyne - 1968 [1969 reprint] -- - Reciprocity and structure: a semiotic analysis of some Orokaiva exchange data - Erik Schwimmer - 1979 -- - Virgin birth - Erik G. Schwimmer - 1969 --^
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  • 17
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Icelanders
    Abstract: This collection of 23 documents is about the Early Icelanders and covers the time span from the first Norse settlement in Iceland around 874 A.D. to Iceland's incorporation into the kingdom of Norway in approximately 1262 A.D. The major focus is on the Commonwealth Period from 930 to 1262 A.D. Much of the cultural data gathered for this period comes from the analysis and interpretation of a number of Icelandic sagas written primarily in the thirteenth century. The most comprehensive study of the social, economic, and political changes taking place in Medieval Iceland over a four hundred year period is The dynamics of medieval Iceland by Durrenberger. This study begins with the first Norse settlement in Iceland around 874 A.D. and ends with the incorporation of Iceland into the kingdom of Norway in 1264 A.D. Fourteen of these documents were originally published in: From sagas to society, edited by Ǵisli Ṕalsson
    Description / Table of Contents: Early Icelanders - Douglas James Bolender and John Beierle (file evaluation and indexing notes) - 2004 -- - The dynamics of medieval Iceland: political economy and literature - by E. Paul Durrenberger - 1992 -- - Economic representation and narrative structure in Hnsa-þóris saga - E. Paul Durrenberger, Dorothy Durrenberger, ástráður Eysteinsson - 1988 -- - Stratification without a state: the collapse of the Icelandic Commonwealth - E. Paul Durrenberger - 1988 -- - Law and literature in medieval Iceland - E. Paul Durrenberger - 1992 -- - Bibliography - edited by Ross Samson - 1991 -- - The Icelandic family sagas as totemic artefacts - E. Paul Durrenberger - 1991 -- - The name of the witch: sagas, sorcery and social content - Gísli Pálsson - 1991 -- - Regional archaeological research in Iceland: potentials and possibilities - Kevin P. Smith and Jeffrey R. Parsons - 1989 --^
    Description / Table of Contents: Text, life, and saga - =Gísli Pálsson - 1992 -- - From sagas to society: the case of HEIMSKRINGLA - Sverre Bagge - 1992 -- - Emotions and the sagas - William Ian Miller - 1992 -- - Humor as a guide to social change: BANDAMANNA SAGA and heroic values - E. Paul Durrenberger and Jonathan Wilcox - 1992 -- - þógunna's testament: a myth for moral contemplation and social apathy - Knut Odner - 1992 -- - Inheritance, ideology, and literature: HERVARAR SAGA OK HEIðREKS - Torfi H. Tulinius - 1992 -- - GOðAR: democrats of despots? - Ross Samson - 1992 -- - The medieval Icelandic outlaw: lifestyle, saga, and legend - Frederic Amory - 1992 -- - Friendship in the Icelandic Commonwealth - Jón Vidðar Sigurðsson - 1992 -- - Spinning goods and tales: market, subsistence and literary productions - Jón Haukur Ingimundarson - 1992 --^
    Description / Table of Contents: cultural constructions of gender in medieval Iceland - Uli Linke - 1992 -- - Servitude and sexuality in medieval Iceland - Ruth Mazo Karras - 1992
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  • 18
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Icelanders
    Abstract: These 22 documents are about the inhabitants of Iceland. The time span ranges from about the middle of the nineteenth century to the late twentieth, with a particular focus on the period of the l940s to the 1980s. Most of the works are widely diversified in subject coverage, although there is emphasis on the economy, especially in regard to the marine fisheries and whaling. The status of women and women's movements in Iceland are the topics of the works by Kristmundsd́ottir, Skakptad́ottir, and Bj͏̈ornsd́ottir. Gurdin's is a study of domestic violence in Iceland. Other topics covered by other authors include ethnolinguistics, zooarchaeology, kinship, literacy and literacy practice, and an analysis of the Icelandic sagas as works of fiction or historical fact
    Description / Table of Contents: tourism and the image of modern Iceland - Magnús Einarsson - 1996 -- - History and the sagas: the effects of nationalism - Jesse L. Byock - 1992 -- - Culture summary: Icelanders - Bolender, Douglas James - 2004 -- - Coastal economies, cultural accounts: human ecology and Icelandic discourse - Gísli Pálsson - 1991 -- - Forms of production and fishing expertise - E. Paul Durrenberger and Gísli Pálsson - 1989 -- - The idea of mystical power in modern Iceland - Daryl Wieland - 1989 -- - The hunter and the animal - Haraldur ólafsson - 1989 -- - Problems and prospects in the study of Icelandic kinship - George W. Rich - 1989 -- - Outside, muted, and different: Icelandic women's movements and their notions of authority and cultural separateness - Sigríður Dúna Kristmundsdóttir - 1989 --^
    Description / Table of Contents: the ethnolinguistics of Icelanders - Gísli Pálsson - 1989 -- - Work and identity of the poor: work load, work discipline, and self-respect - Finnur Magnússon - 1989 -- - Contributions to the zooarchaeology of Iceland: some preliminary notes - Thomas Amorosi - 1989 -- - References - edited by Gísli Pálsson and E. Paul Durrenberger - 1996 -- - Whale sitting: spatiality in Icelandic nationalism - Anne Brydon - 1996 -- - A Sea of images: fishers, whalers, and environmentalists - Níels Einarsson - 1996 -- - The politics of production: enclosure, equity, and efficiency - Gísli Pálsson and Agnar Helgason - 1996 -- - Housework and wage work: gender in Icelandic fishing communities - Unnur Dís Skaptadóttir - 1996 -- - The mountain woman and the presidency - Inga Dóra Björnsdóttir - 1996 -- - Motherhood, patriarchy, and the nation: domestic violence in Iceland - Julie E. Gurdin - 1996 -- - Premodern and modern constructions of population regimes - Daniel E. Vasey - 1996 -- - Every Icelander a special case - E. Paul Durrenberger - 1996
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  • 19
    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: Gisu (African people)
    Abstract: This collection of three documents about the Bagisu, all in English, covers a time span from the late nineteenth century to approximately 1989. The Bagisu or Gisu live on the western slopes of the now extinct volcano Mount Elgon in eastern Uganda. Lugisu (Masaba), the language of the Bagisu, is a Bantu language in the larger Niger-Congo group of languages. A concise summary of most major features of Bagisu ethnography from around the 1890s to 1954 can be found in LaFontaine. This is supplemented by Roscoe's earlier account of Bagisu ethnography that deals with information from the late nineteenth through the early twentieth centuries. While this latter document does contain some unique cultural data, LaFontaine questions the validity of some of Roscoe's information (e.g., the existence of cannibalism among the Bagisu). Heald's work on the Bagisu is based on the author's fieldwork in Central Bugisu from 1965-1969, and is a detailed study of the various ways in which violence is expressed in Bagisu society and the manner in which it is brought under control. This document presents data on the reputation and history of violence among the Bagisu, statistics on homicide, the association of violence with manhood and the expression of anger, the ordeal of circumcision, behavior and treatment of witches and thieves, hostility management in the community, and the establishment of vigilante groups and drinking companies to control violence
    Description / Table of Contents: Bagisu - John Beierle - 2004 -- - The Gisu of Uganda - J. S. La Fontaine - 1959 -- - The Bagesu and other tribes of the Uganda Protectorate: the third part of hte report of the Mackie ethnological expedition to Central Africa - John Roscoe - 1924 -- - Controlling anger: the sociology of Gisu violence - Suzette Heald - 1989
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  • 20
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Bakairi Indians ; Bakairí
    Abstract: This collection of 7 documents is about the Bakairi, a Carib-speaking group living on Upper Xingu River in the state of Mato Grosso in south central Brazil. The German explorer Steinen wrote the earliest accounts of the Bakairi based on his one-month stay with them during his 1884 trip down the Xingu river and his travels among the tribes located along the Kulisehu River, in the Upper Xingu area in 1887. Abreu wrote an early account of Bakairi language, mythology, and religion based on 1892 Portuguese texts. Schmidt includes the history of the Bakairi subsequent to Steinen's expedition and up to the year 1927. During this period of time, numerous socio-political and cultural changes took place among the Bacairi. He describes three different Bacairi groups: the Eastern, Western, and Xinguanos. Altenfelder Silva describes the culture of the Bakairi Indians of Mato Grosso circa 1940 including their technology, kinship terminology, pantheon, ceremonies, shamanism, and the series of ritualistic seclusions, or uanki, that occur at intervals during the life cycle. Oberg's account is based on his fieldwork among the people living on the Government Indian Post on the Rio Paranatinga during June 1947. It should be noted that the information presented in this source, obtained primarily from informants, relates to an earlier period in Bacairi history (ca. 1907) when they lived on the Rio Kuliseu. Data presented pertain to settlement patterns, subsistence activities, house types, furniture, language, culture history and early European contacts, population, dress and personal ornaments, organization of labor, social organization, the life cycle, puberty rites, marriage, burial, shamanism, games, ceremonialism and mythology
    Description / Table of Contents: Bakairá - Debra Picchi and Ian Skoggard (file evaluation and indexing notes) - 2004 -- - Expedition for the exploration of the Xingu in the year 1884 - Karl von den Steinen - 1886 -- - Among the primitive peoples of Central Brazil: a travel account and the results of the Second Xingu Expedition 1887-1888 - Karl von den Steinen - 1894 -- - The Bacairi - João Capistrano de Abreu - 1938 -- - The Bacairi - Max Schmidt - 1947 -- - The UANKI state among the Bacairi - F. Altenfelder Silva - 1950 -- - The Bacairi - Kalervo Oberg - 1953 -- - The Bakairí Indians of Brazil: politics, ecology, and change - Debra Picchi - 2000
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  • 21
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Chinook Indians
    Abstract: Lower Chinookans is a reference to the group of Chinookan language speakers living on the northwest coast of the United States in the states of Washington and Oregon and on both banks of the Lower Columbia River from its mouth to just beyond the Willamette River. The group consists of the Chinook proper, the Clackamas, Clatsop, Shoalwater Chinook, Wahkiakum, and Cathlamet (Kathlamet). This collection of 10 English language documents deals with the Chinookans of the Lower Chinook region. The major time focus of this collection is from the late eighteenth century through the nineteenth. The most comprehensive traditional ethnographies of the Lower Chinookans can be found in Ray's Lower Chinook ethnographic notes and Silverstein's Chinookans of the Lower Columbia. Other major topics discussed in other documents include songs, beliefs about sickness and death, and humor and verbal irony
    Description / Table of Contents: Chinookans - John Beierle - 2004 -- - Lower Chinook ethnographic notes - by Verne F. Ray - 1938 -- - The Chinook Indians: traders of the Lower Columbia River - by Robert H. Ruby and John A. Brown - 1976 -- - Chinook songs - Franz Boas - 1888 [1979 reprint] -- - The doctrine of souls and disease among the Chinook Indians - Franz Boas - 1893 [1979 reprint] -- - Intermarriage and agency: a Chinookan case study - David Peterson-del Mar - 1995 -- - The Chinook Indians in the early 1800s - Verne F. Ray - 1975 -- - The historical position of the Lower Chinook in the native culture of the Northwest - Verne F. Ray - 1937 -- - A Pattern of verbal irony in Chinookan - Dell H. Hymes - 1987 -- - Chinookans of the Lower Columbia - Michael Silverstein - 1990 -- - Bibliography - edited by Wayne Suttles - 1990
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  • 22
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Sia Indians
    Abstract: The Zia are a Keres-speaking pueblo tribe who live on the Jemez River, 35 miles northwest of Albuquerque, New Mexico. This collection of eight documents is about the Zia. The classic work is by Leslie White and was based on his fieldwork from 1928-1929 and return visits during the 1930s, 1940s and 1950s. He focused mostly on secret societies, including membership, recruitment, and ceremonies. Two of the documents are by Hoebel. The first is a brief account of Zia history and culture that was also published in the Handbook of North American Indians. The second is about Zia law. There is no private law. Clans and lineages have no role in the legal process. All cases are brought before the governor and a council comprised of the heads of secret societies. Lange has written a detailed account of the famous Green Corn Dance; Hawley et al. a nutritional study; Polese on the Zia sun symbol; and Stevenson on child birth. The bibliography of citations to works on Zia Pueblo is also taken from vol. 9 of the Handbook on North American Indians, Southwest
    Description / Table of Contents: Zia Pueblo - Ian Skoggard - 2004 -- - The pueblo of Sia, New Mexico - Leslie A. White - 1962 -- - Zia Pueblo - E. Adamson Hoebel - 1979 -- - Keresan Pueblo law - E. Adamson Hoebel - 1969 -- - The feast day dance at Zia Pueblo - Charles H. Lange - 1952 -- - An inquiry into food economy and body economy in Zia Pueblo - By F. Hawley, M. Pijoan, and C. A. Elkin - 1943 -- - The Zia sun symbol: variations on a theme - Richard L. Polese - 1968 -- - Childbirth ceremonies of the Sia Pueblo - Matilda Stevenson - 1953 -- - Bibliography - 1979
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  • 23
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Bakairi Indians ; Bakairí
    Abstract: This collection of 7 documents is about the Bakairi, a Carib-speaking group living on Upper Xingu River in the state of Mato Grosso in south central Brazil. The German explorer Steinen wrote the earliest accounts of the Bakairi based on his one-month stay with them during his 1884 trip down the Xingu river and his travels among the tribes located along the Kulisehu River, in the Upper Xingu area in 1887. Abreu wrote an early account of Bakairi language, mythology, and religion based on 1892 Portuguese texts. Schmidt includes the history of the Bakairi subsequent to Steinen's expedition and up to the year 1927. During this period of time, numerous socio-political and cultural changes took place among the Bacairi. He describes three different Bacairi groups: the Eastern, Western, and Xinguanos. Altenfelder Silva describes the culture of the Bakairi Indians of Mato Grosso circa 1940 including their technology, kinship terminology, pantheon, ceremonies, shamanism, and the series of ritualistic seclusions, or uanki, that occur at intervals during the life cycle. Oberg's account is based on his fieldwork among the people living on the Government Indian Post on the Rio Paranatinga during June 1947. It should be noted that the information presented in this source, obtained primarily from informants, relates to an earlier period in Bacairi history (ca. 1907) when they lived on the Rio Kuliseu. Data presented pertain to settlement patterns, subsistence activities, house types, furniture, language, culture history and early European contacts, population, dress and personal ornaments, organization of labor, social organization, the life cycle, puberty rites, marriage, burial, shamanism, games, ceremonialism and mythology
    Description / Table of Contents: Bakairá - Debra Picchi and Ian Skoggard (file evaluation and indexing notes) - 2004 -- - Expedition for the exploration of the Xingu in the year 1884 - Karl von den Steinen - 1886 -- - Among the primitive peoples of Central Brazil: a travel account and the results of the Second Xingu Expedition 1887-1888 - Karl von den Steinen - 1894 -- - The Bacairi - João Capistrano de Abreu - 1938 -- - The Bacairi - Max Schmidt - 1947 -- - The UANKI state among the Bacairi - F. Altenfelder Silva - 1950 -- - The Bacairi - Kalervo Oberg - 1953 -- - The Bakairí Indians of Brazil: politics, ecology, and change - Debra Picchi - 2000
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