Africa, المجلد 48Oxford University Press, 1978 Includes Proceedings of the Executive council and List of members, also section "Review of books". |
من داخل الكتاب
النتائج 1-3 من 88
الصفحة 72
II . WOMEN IN WAN SOCIETY A. Women and Corporate Groups Let us leave aside for a moment the examination of female initiation and look instead at the more general picture of the place of women in Wan society . Wan men readily acknowledge ...
II . WOMEN IN WAN SOCIETY A. Women and Corporate Groups Let us leave aside for a moment the examination of female initiation and look instead at the more general picture of the place of women in Wan society . Wan men readily acknowledge ...
الصفحة 388
... women . Since it is the woman who will experience the loss of children , the likelihood of her leaving is small . Men experience no comparable loss . Therefore , it is possible for a man to send his wife away if relations become too ...
... women . Since it is the woman who will experience the loss of children , the likelihood of her leaving is small . Men experience no comparable loss . Therefore , it is possible for a man to send his wife away if relations become too ...
الصفحة 394
... woman . From the above data it is evident that the pressures which maintain marital stability fall largely on women . It is the woman who must leave her children ; it is the woman's reputation that suffers most in cases of divorce ; and ...
... woman . From the above data it is evident that the pressures which maintain marital stability fall largely on women . It is the woman who must leave her children ; it is the woman's reputation that suffers most in cases of divorce ; and ...
المحتوى
PHILIP BURNHAM | 99 |
Kinship Descent and Marriage in Luapula | 205 |
Contributors to this Number | 219 |
6 من الأقسام الأخرى غير ظاهرة
طبعات أخرى - عرض جميع المقتطفات
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
activities age-sets agnates agricultural Akan analysis animals Anthropology associated Atuot Bamileke Banjal Bantu Beattie behavior bridewealth brother Bunyoro cattle central clan colonial conflict context culture discussion divorce economic eland elders ethnic ethnographic evidence exogamous Fante farming father female Gasumay Ghana Giriama groups household husband ideology Igbo important individual initiation Iteso Jamaa kambi Kashikishi kaya Kenya kinship Kirao Kung labour land language lineage linguistic London Luapula Luguru male marriage married matrilineal mediumship migration Mijikenda mother Mpuga myth Needham Nguni Nigeria Nyakatura Nyoro paper pattern period political popular painting population problems reference relations relationship residence rika ritual rivers role Rukuba rule rural Rwanda social society Southern spouses status structure sub-rika symbolic Taido traditional University Press urban village wealth West Africa wife wives woman women Yoruba youth Zambia Ziguinchor