Africa, المجلد 75،الأعداد 1-2Oxford University Press, 2005 Includes Proceedings of the Executive council and List of members, also section "Review of books". |
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النتائج 1-3 من 10
الصفحة 176
... Uhero speak Luo ( Dholuo ) , a Nilotic language . Most of them settle in scattered patrilineal , virilocal family homesteads and live from subsistence agriculture , fishing and migrant labour ( Cohen and Odhiambo 1989 ) . The area is ...
... Uhero speak Luo ( Dholuo ) , a Nilotic language . Most of them settle in scattered patrilineal , virilocal family homesteads and live from subsistence agriculture , fishing and migrant labour ( Cohen and Odhiambo 1989 ) . The area is ...
الصفحة 190
... Uhero village lies , has been a preferred field site for medical research since colonial times . Sleeping sickness research and control during and immediately after the end of colonial occupation had a particular impact upon people's ...
... Uhero village lies , has been a preferred field site for medical research since colonial times . Sleeping sickness research and control during and immediately after the end of colonial occupation had a particular impact upon people's ...
الصفحة 191
... Uhero , blood ( of humans and of cattle ) is identified with people's relations and the ties between the living and the dead , and - since the land is the abode of the dead - between people and land . As food is thought of as being ...
... Uhero , blood ( of humans and of cattle ) is identified with people's relations and the ties between the living and the dead , and - since the land is the abode of the dead - between people and land . As food is thought of as being ...
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عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
African AIDS ancestors argument associated authors Bamileke become Beng Biafra blood body buried called central chiefs child Christian church collective memory colonial concerns connections context continued cultural death discussion economic ethnic examine example experience father fertility gender given groups husband ideas identity Igbo important individual Institute interest International interview issues iwofa kachinja Kenya kinship knowledge land living marriage means medicines Michigan mother networks Nigeria origin parents particular party past pawning period person political practices present processes question refer relations relationships religion religious remembering reproduction ritual ruling Samburu sense sexuality shared situations social society South stories suggest traditional troubles University Press village women York Zimbabwe Zulu