Africa, المجلد 69،الأعداد 1-2Oxford University Press, 1999 Includes Proceedings of the Executive council and List of members, also section "Review of books". |
من داخل الكتاب
النتائج 1-3 من 15
الصفحة 263
... Kwanja people explain why they converted . I heard many explanations such as ' We converted because we saw that modernity had arrived and because we could no longer live in the traditional way . ' To analyse the role played by ...
... Kwanja people explain why they converted . I heard many explanations such as ' We converted because we saw that modernity had arrived and because we could no longer live in the traditional way . ' To analyse the role played by ...
الصفحة 266
... Kwanja rituals when he defines himself as Kwanja in relation to , for example , a Wawa . When two Kwanja meet , they define themselves according to their participation in local rituals to emphasise their Twendi or Sundane identity ( two ...
... Kwanja rituals when he defines himself as Kwanja in relation to , for example , a Wawa . When two Kwanja meet , they define themselves according to their participation in local rituals to emphasise their Twendi or Sundane identity ( two ...
الصفحة 271
... Kwanja , who are ill at ease with the other Kwanja because they are supposed to Fulbeise and reject their traditional identity but cannot do so completely when staying within their village . Although it is possible to assume a Kwanja ...
... Kwanja , who are ill at ease with the other Kwanja because they are supposed to Fulbeise and reject their traditional identity but cannot do so completely when staying within their village . Although it is possible to assume a Kwanja ...
المحتوى
Current | 2 |
Decentralisation participation and accountability in Sahelian forestr | 23 |
Negotiating Asante family survival in Kumasi Ghana Gracia Clark | 66 |
حقوق النشر | |
6 من الأقسام الأخرى غير ظاهرة
طبعات أخرى - عرض جميع المقتطفات
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
accountable Accra administrative African Studies agricultural Akon Akyeampong Anthropology Asante Asantehene authorities bridewealth British Bulsa Burkina Faso Cambridge Cameroon cattle raiders cent central CFMA chiefs Chisupe Christian colonial context conversion cult culture decentralisation Dedza District Dedza villagers Dinka District doglieba economic ethnic forest management forestry Fulbe Gambia ganyu gender GGFP Ghana Golden Stool groups homesteads household husband identity income International African Institute interview ISBN Islam Kenya kinship Kumase Kuria Kwanja labour land Lele lineage London maize Malawi Mali marriage married mchape 95 missionaries modernity Mozambique Muslim Nyaheiya organised Oxford participation participatory political population pregnancy Prempeh production raiding relations religion religious reproductive ritual role rural sample Senegal sexual Seychelles sibling sisters social society sorcery structure Tanzania tobacco traditional University Press uterine Wawa West Africa witchcraft wives woman women young Zulu