Ya̦nomamö, the Fierce PeopleTPB:s talboksannotation: Studium av levnadssätt och seder hos en folkstam i Venezuela och Brasilien |
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Page 18
... chapter . The Physical Environment Kaobawä's village1 is Upper Bisaasi - teri , located at the confluence of the Mavaca and Orinoco Rivers . Like most of the villages in this area , it lies at an altitude of about 450 feet . While some ...
... chapter . The Physical Environment Kaobawä's village1 is Upper Bisaasi - teri , located at the confluence of the Mavaca and Orinoco Rivers . Like most of the villages in this area , it lies at an altitude of about 450 feet . While some ...
Page 76
... Chapter 5. ) Still another factor leads to breeches of the marriage rule : chance . In some villages there are disproportionately more males ( or females ) of the same lineage because of the way in which the group split from a different ...
... Chapter 5. ) Still another factor leads to breeches of the marriage rule : chance . In some villages there are disproportionately more males ( or females ) of the same lineage because of the way in which the group split from a different ...
Page 97
... Chapter 2 how the members of independent villages cultivated friendships with each other in the process of establishing themselves in a loose network of allied villages . I then showed in Chapter 3 how Kaobawä's followers were related ...
... Chapter 2 how the members of independent villages cultivated friendships with each other in the process of establishing themselves in a loose network of allied villages . I then showed in Chapter 3 how Kaobawä's followers were related ...
Contents
Foreword | 1 |
Discrepancies in the Marriage Pattern | 72 |
Political Alliance Trading and Feasting | 97 |
Copyright | |
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activities alliance allies arrow asked attempt become began behavior Bisaasi-teri blood blow brothers called Chapter child club fight collect continue daughter dead descent groups develop drug eating enemies entered establish example exchange fact father feast females fight Finally fire fissioning followers forced frequently fruit garden genealogies give given ground guests hammock hand head headman hosts hunting husband important individual jungle Kaobawä's group keep killed kind kinship later leaves lineage live located Lower Bisaasi-teri Mahekodo-teri males marriage married means Monou-teri mother moved obligations older particular Patanowä-teri plant plantains political present produce raid raiders relationship relatively remain respect result River rules Shamatari short shown single sister social took trade tree trip turn usually village visitors wife woman women Yanomamö young younger