Ethnology, Volume 19University of Pittsburgh, 1980 - Anthropology |
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Page 78
The female husband is more able and willing to fend for herself in the domestic
domain than is the typical male husband. If the two women are on good terms,
the female husband will usually sympathize with the problems of her wife, having
...
The female husband is more able and willing to fend for herself in the domestic
domain than is the typical male husband. If the two women are on good terms,
the female husband will usually sympathize with the problems of her wife, having
...
Page 82
It is the estate of the family of a female husband's male husband which provides
bridewealth for her wife and it is this family that is allied to the wife's family by the
marriage. This also explains why most informants agree that a female husband's
...
It is the estate of the family of a female husband's male husband which provides
bridewealth for her wife and it is this family that is allied to the wife's family by the
marriage. This also explains why most informants agree that a female husband's
...
Page 83
IS THE FEMALE HUSBAND A MAN2 Nandi informants know very well that the
female husband is not a man in the sense that she has changed her
physiological sex or all her sex typed behaviors. The impossibility of completely
changing the ...
IS THE FEMALE HUSBAND A MAN2 Nandi informants know very well that the
female husband is not a man in the sense that she has changed her
physiological sex or all her sex typed behaviors. The impossibility of completely
changing the ...
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Contents
CULTURAL AND SOCIAL ANTHROPOLOGY | 1 |
THE MANIPULATION OF KPELLE SOCIAL | 29 |
THE IDEOLOGY AND PRACTICE OF SHARECROPPING | 47 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
andé animals areas association become behavior birth called cash cent child claim close committee context cultivation cultural daughter discussion economic established example exchange expected fact father fatherhood female husband fertility field garden girl given hand herding household important indicated individuals involved kind kinship kinsmen labor land landlords less live male manioc marriage married means mother noted observed organization 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 usually village wage wife wives woman women young