Cultural Anthropology |
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Page 35
... live by for- aging - hunting and collecting wild vegetable produce . It is also a significant kinship group among contemporary middle - class Ameri- cans and Western Europeans . Anthropolo- gists have concerned themselves with ex ...
... live by for- aging - hunting and collecting wild vegetable produce . It is also a significant kinship group among contemporary middle - class Ameri- cans and Western Europeans . Anthropolo- gists have concerned themselves with ex ...
Page 121
... live people whose activities focus on the care of such domesticated livestock as cattle , sheep , goats , and camels . They are called pastoral- ists . East African pastoralists , like many others , live in symbiosis with their animals ...
... live people whose activities focus on the care of such domesticated livestock as cattle , sheep , goats , and camels . They are called pastoral- ists . East African pastoralists , like many others , live in symbiosis with their animals ...
Page 150
... live near or with either of their uncles . If they do , however , the chances are approximately the same that it will be father's brother as moth- er's brother . KINSHIP GROUPS The nuclear family , which consists of parents and children ...
... live near or with either of their uncles . If they do , however , the chances are approximately the same that it will be father's brother as moth- er's brother . KINSHIP GROUPS The nuclear family , which consists of parents and children ...
Common terms and phrases
adaptation Africa agriculture ancestors animals anthro apes Applied Anthropology areas Arembepe associated band behavior Betsileo biological Brazil Brazilian bridewealth Buganda cargo cults chiefdoms chimpanzees chimps complex contemporary contrast cross cousins cross-cultural cultivation descent groups developed Disney economic environment ethnic ethnographic Etoro evolution example exogamy female field food production foragers gathering genetic Homo horticulture household human hunting incest increase individuals kinship terminology labor land language learning lineages linguistic live Madagascar male marriage McDonald's means ment nations native natural nonindustrial nuclear family Nuer organization parents patrilineal patterns peasants percent political pologists Polyandry polygyny population potlatch poverty primates relationship relatives religion religious ritual sex roles sexual share similar sisal social sociolinguistics specific strategy structure taboo tion traditional tribal societies tribes tural ture tween United University Press urban variation village wealth women Yanomamo York