Ethnology, Volume 37University of Pittsburgh, 1998 - Anthropology |
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Page 223
This does not mean , however , that there is no diversity of understanding or
opinion on the rescue among individuals within these communities . The Danish
Jews , especially , experienced the rescue in a variety of ways , and their
individual ...
This does not mean , however , that there is no diversity of understanding or
opinion on the rescue among individuals within these communities . The Danish
Jews , especially , experienced the rescue in a variety of ways , and their
individual ...
Page 300
... but are instead focused on transforming relations between individual Urapmin
and between different aspects of each ... to cast people as individuals and as
community members , rather than as subjects of a colonial or postcolonial
political ...
... but are instead focused on transforming relations between individual Urapmin
and between different aspects of each ... to cast people as individuals and as
community members , rather than as subjects of a colonial or postcolonial
political ...
Page 397
... a system of creative kinship in which kin structures were manipulated in order
to select individuals to fill these positions . ... an individual to an already existing
social position required negotiations between the individual and the position : the
...
... a system of creative kinship in which kin structures were manipulated in order
to select individuals to fill these positions . ... an individual to an already existing
social position required negotiations between the individual and the position : 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