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 257
... Wawa and the Kwanja , two neighbouring groups living in Banyo District ( See Fig . 1 ) and numbering about 4,000 and 9,000 people respectively . Although the Wawa chose Islam while most Kwanja preferred Christianity , the conversions ...
... Wawa and the Kwanja , two neighbouring groups living in Banyo District ( See Fig . 1 ) and numbering about 4,000 and 9,000 people respectively . Although the Wawa chose Islam while most Kwanja preferred Christianity , the conversions ...
الصفحة 261
... Wawa continue to drink alcohol and to practise a discreet ancestor cult . Moreover , Wawa homesteads are very scattered . Many Wawa do not gather together to pray , but do so at home as and when they please . They follow the main ...
... Wawa continue to drink alcohol and to practise a discreet ancestor cult . Moreover , Wawa homesteads are very scattered . Many Wawa do not gather together to pray , but do so at home as and when they please . They follow the main ...
الصفحة 266
... Wawa . When two Kwanja meet , they define themselves according to their participation in local rituals to emphasise their Twendi or Sundane identity ( two sub - groups among the Kwanja ) . As with any other identity , religious identity ...
... Wawa . When two Kwanja meet , they define themselves according to their participation in local rituals to emphasise their Twendi or Sundane identity ( two sub - groups among the Kwanja ) . As with any other identity , religious identity ...
المحتوى
Community forestry and conditionality in The Gambia | 1 |
Negotiating Asante family survival in Kumasi Ghana Gracia Clark | 66 |
an institutionalised relationship between women among | 87 |
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 Niger 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