Ethnology, Volume 37University of Pittsburgh, 1998 - Anthropology |
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Page 210
Competing factions in a society may present competing conceptions of tradition ,
each of which favors the faction which invents it , and each of which may be
expressed through public ritual ( e . g . , Errington and Gewertz 1994 ; Kertzer
1980 ...
Competing factions in a society may present competing conceptions of tradition ,
each of which favors the faction which invents it , and each of which may be
expressed through public ritual ( e . g . , Errington and Gewertz 1994 ; Kertzer
1980 ...
Page 309
... severe discipline as an expression of how deeply human eyes are implicated
in the problems of human willfulness . ... were both welcomed and feared ; that is
, Urapmin expressed the same ambivalence toward them that they expressed ...
... severe discipline as an expression of how deeply human eyes are implicated
in the problems of human willfulness . ... were both welcomed and feared ; that is
, Urapmin expressed the same ambivalence toward them that they expressed ...
Page 334
This is expressed in the form of a tension between the idea that the elderly can
legitimately depend upon others and social norms that emphasize avoidance of
burdening others at any age . This tension limits the ability or willingness of the ...
This is expressed in the form of a tension between the idea that the elderly can
legitimately depend upon others and social norms that emphasize avoidance of
burdening others at any age . This tension limits the ability or willingness of the ...
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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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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