Ethnology, Volume 19University of Pittsburgh, 1980 - Anthropology |
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Page 157
THE PERSISTENCE OF RECIPROCAL LABOR In our review of the ethnographic
literature of Central Andean small - scale peasants written in the last twenty years
the findings suggest , at the very least , a remarkable persistence in reciprocal ...
THE PERSISTENCE OF RECIPROCAL LABOR In our review of the ethnographic
literature of Central Andean small - scale peasants written in the last twenty years
the findings suggest , at the very least , a remarkable persistence in reciprocal ...
Page 191
Central Eskimo Song Duels : A Contextual Analysis of Ritual Ambiguity Penelope
Eckert and Russell Newmark University of Michigan In the early 1920s , Knud
Rasmussen , the Danish explorer and ethnographer , travelled across the Central
...
Central Eskimo Song Duels : A Contextual Analysis of Ritual Ambiguity Penelope
Eckert and Russell Newmark University of Michigan In the early 1920s , Knud
Rasmussen , the Danish explorer and ethnographer , travelled across the Central
...
Page 193
A comparison of the Central Eskimo duels with those described for other Eskimo
groups highlights several of the duel's most important features . The song contest
was a prominent social feature in almost all Eskimo groups from Siberia to ...
A comparison of the Central Eskimo duels with those described for other Eskimo
groups highlights several of the duel's most important features . The song contest
was a prominent social feature in almost all Eskimo groups from Siberia to ...
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Contents
January | 1 |
THE MANIPULATION OF KPELLE SOCIAL | 29 |
The Ideology and Practice of Sharecropping Tenancy in Kukulewa | 47 |
Copyright | |
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andē animals areas association become behavior birth called cash cent child claim close committee context cultivation cultural daughter economic established example exchange expected fact father fatherhood female husband fertility field garden girl given hand herding household important indicated individuals involved kind kinship labor land landlords less live male manioc marriage married means mother noted observed organization Otomí owner parents participate pastoral pattern peasants person plants political position practice present problem production reciprocal reference relations relationship relative residence respect responsibility result role sexual share shepherds sibling situation social societies song status stress structure Table tion traditional unions University usually village wife wives woman women young