Ethnology, Volume 41University of Pittsburgh, 2002 - Anthropology |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 21
Page 72
... expected to marry soon after puberty to begin their reproductive duties . An overwhelming 92 per cent of the population identify as Muslim ( EDS 1996 ) . The Qur'an allows a man to marry as many as four wives , a reason often given by ...
... expected to marry soon after puberty to begin their reproductive duties . An overwhelming 92 per cent of the population identify as Muslim ( EDS 1996 ) . The Qur'an allows a man to marry as many as four wives , a reason often given by ...
Page 78
... expected to accept a co - wife , but is considered normal in the Fulbe community , where women are expected to fight to keep the man . While there is no denying that Bamanan women sometimes lament the arrival of co - wives , they tend ...
... expected to accept a co - wife , but is considered normal in the Fulbe community , where women are expected to fight to keep the man . While there is no denying that Bamanan women sometimes lament the arrival of co - wives , they tend ...
Page 80
... expected to take over the household chores of the older . The line separating kinship from friendship is often blurred in co - wife relationships where wives are related to the husband and possibly to each other . This means that women ...
... expected to take over the household chores of the older . The line separating kinship from friendship is often blurred in co - wife relationships where wives are related to the husband and possibly to each other . This means that women ...
Contents
A History of Power | 1 |
Contested Ethnicity | 27 |
Bugis Migration and Modes of Adaptation to Local Situations | 51 |
Copyright | |
11 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Africa Anthropology Balinese Bamanan band behavior Berber bodily body Bugis Calakmul CALIFORNIA/SANTA CRUZ campesino cent chicle co-wife context Contrasto córdobas Cree crew CRUZ The University cultural models Department of Anthropology Dorobo economic Ermineskin ethnic ethnographic ETHNOLOGY example fast food female forest Fulbe groups household Huaulu husband identity il-torrobo Indian indigo dye individual infidelity Iraqw Japan Japanese Kakabila Kenya Kodi land livestock living Maa-speakers Maasai male marriage married McDonald's menarche menstrual blood menstrual hut menstrual taboos mestizo Middle Atlas migrants model of gender modern mother Mukogodo Muslim Nehiyanak neighbors patrilineal patterns person personhood poets political pollution polygyny population practices relations relationships Reserve responses ritual Samburu sea bob sexual shrimp Sinhalese social society Sri Lankan sample Stewart Strathern substances Tara Tasbapauni Teenek traditional U.S. sample University Library UNIVERSITY UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA/SANTA University of Pittsburgh village council woman women Yaaku Yupik