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الصفحة 34
YORUBA RESPONSES TO THE FEAR OF DEATH PETER MORTON - WILLIAMS TH HE certainty of the individual's extinction as a human being contradicts so outrageously the value and effort of living that most cultures minimize the confrontation with ...
YORUBA RESPONSES TO THE FEAR OF DEATH PETER MORTON - WILLIAMS TH HE certainty of the individual's extinction as a human being contradicts so outrageously the value and effort of living that most cultures minimize the confrontation with ...
الصفحة 35
The death of the latter is believed to be due generally to witchcraft — a topic we shall return to . But a series of dying infants is held to be qualitatively different from ordinary children , and to be indeed the same child born again ...
The death of the latter is believed to be due generally to witchcraft — a topic we shall return to . But a series of dying infants is held to be qualitatively different from ordinary children , and to be indeed the same child born again ...
الصفحة 36
A victim may succumb to more slowly acting forms of death through witchcraft or sorcery ; but the fear aroused by a sign of the attack may be enough to prompt the victim , if young and comparatively weak , to perform placatory acts ...
A victim may succumb to more slowly acting forms of death through witchcraft or sorcery ; but the fear aroused by a sign of the attack may be enough to prompt the victim , if young and comparatively weak , to perform placatory acts ...
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المحتوى
From Tribute to Tax in a Tikar Chiefdom E M Chilver and P M Kaberry | 20 |
39 | 23 |
Yoruba Responses to the Fear of Death Peter MortonWilliams | 34 |
37 من الأقسام الأخرى غير ظاهرة
طبعات أخرى - عرض جميع المقتطفات
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
administrative Africa appear associated authority band become called chiefdom child collection court culture dans death District East economic established fact father field Ghana girl give given Government hand head husband important Institute interest International Kapr known Kolifa labour land language lineage live London marriage means migrants Mossi mother Mugwe native needs Nigeria notes Nsaw organization origin Paramount Chief parents period persons political possible present Press problems Professor publications received reference regarded relations relatives rule social society South structure symbolic Temne tion town traditional Tree University usually village West wife woman women Yoruba