Ethnology, Volume 41University of Pittsburgh, 2002 - Anthropology |
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Page 37
Mukogodo women married non - Mukogodo men as Mukogodo men who married non- Mukogodo women ( 42 vs. seven , respectively ) . Non - Mukogodo men made attractive sons - in - law in part because they were able to offer livestock as ...
Mukogodo women married non - Mukogodo men as Mukogodo men who married non- Mukogodo women ( 42 vs. seven , respectively ) . Non - Mukogodo men made attractive sons - in - law in part because they were able to offer livestock as ...
Page 62
... married and raised children where they had settled ; two married women from their home district , one married a Chinese woman where he had settled . • All maintained contact with home villages , purportedly through regular visits ...
... married and raised children where they had settled ; two married women from their home district , one married a Chinese woman where he had settled . • All maintained contact with home villages , purportedly through regular visits ...
Page 337
... married ” ( Lantis 1960 : 37 ) . The other woman's account was quite different , however , even contradictory with respect to the reason for seclusion : " At my first menstruation , I was not married yet . I did not have to stay in a ...
... married ” ( Lantis 1960 : 37 ) . The other woman's account was quite different , however , even contradictory with respect to the reason for seclusion : " At my first menstruation , I was not married yet . I did not have to stay in a ...
Contents
A History of Power | 1 |
Contested Ethnicity | 27 |
Bugis Migration and Modes of Adaptation to Local Situations | 51 |
Copyright | |
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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