Ethnology, Volume 37University of Pittsburgh, 1998 - Anthropology |
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Page 217
This reality is conveyed in the image of the rescue that the community promotes .
It portrays the Jews as an undifferentiated mass of humanity , whose differences
had no effect either on their treatment by the Nazis or on their reception by the ...
This reality is conveyed in the image of the rescue that the community promotes .
It portrays the Jews as an undifferentiated mass of humanity , whose differences
had no effect either on their treatment by the Nazis or on their reception by the ...
Page 220
The events of the rescue symbolized the dramatic effects that such a triumph
could have ; the difference between tolerance and intolerance was quite literally
a difference between life and death . By portraying the Danes as motivated by ...
The events of the rescue symbolized the dramatic effects that such a triumph
could have ; the difference between tolerance and intolerance was quite literally
a difference between life and death . By portraying the Danes as motivated by ...
Page 223
I refer here to public discourse , the way that the rescue is described in public
discussions , literature , journalistic commentary , visual media , and ritual activity
. In these areas , portrayals of the rescue are remarkably standardized . This does
...
I refer here to public discourse , the way that the rescue is described in public
discussions , literature , journalistic commentary , visual media , and ritual activity
. In these areas , portrayals of the rescue are remarkably standardized . This does
...
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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