Ethnology, Volume 37University of Pittsburgh, 1998 - Anthropology |
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Page 177
TRANSLOCAL FOOTINGS Catechists assert their legitimacy in interactions with
pastoral workers , one another , their communities , their faith groups , and with
other Aymara in multiple ways . A catechist ' s relations within his community are
...
TRANSLOCAL FOOTINGS Catechists assert their legitimacy in interactions with
pastoral workers , one another , their communities , their faith groups , and with
other Aymara in multiple ways . A catechist ' s relations within his community are
...
Page 178
Here we know only Aymara , we lack Spanish , ” said one catechist . ... Using a
spatial idiom of authority , catechists boast to their faith - group members of the
many towns and provinces they have visited in the course of their work , and to
one ...
Here we know only Aymara , we lack Spanish , ” said one catechist . ... Using a
spatial idiom of authority , catechists boast to their faith - group members of the
many towns and provinces they have visited in the course of their work , and to
one ...
Page 180
So it falls to the same catechists to lead and today for machaqueños this is a joy .
In Machaqa this is called ministers . This cargo is appearing . Perhaps now in
other big towns more will be seen . Why do I say machaqueños are happy ?
So it falls to the same catechists to lead and today for machaqueños this is a joy .
In Machaqa this is called ministers . This cargo is appearing . Perhaps now in
other big towns more will be seen . Why do I say machaqueños are happy ?
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Contents
Volume XXXVII Number | 4 |
A New Time and Place for Bolivian Popular Politics | 99 |
Performing National Culture in a Bolivian Migrant Community | 117 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
action activities Africa American Anthropology associated authority avoidance Aymara become birds Bolivian called catechists central chief Christian context continued created cultural customs Danish daughter desire economic effect elite established ethnic example exchange existence expressed female husband fiesta folklore groups Hassidic head household human sacrifice identity important indigenous individual initiates institution involved Jews land lineage living male marriage means nature noted offered organization origin participation past pastoral person Pittsburgh political population position practice present production Quirpini Rabbi recent reference regional relations relationship relatives religious represent rescue residence ritual role rural saint social society status structure suggests symbolic town tradition University Urapmin village Virgin whale wife woman women York