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The Araucanians America's early resistance movement.Reber, Vera Blinn, January 1967 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--University of Wisconsin--Madison, 1967. / eContent provider-neutral record in process. Description based on print version record. Includes bibliographical references.
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The regional system of the Devil's Lake Sioux its structure, composition, development, and functions.Albers, Patricia. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Wisconsin--Madison, 1974. / Typescript. Vita. eContent provider-neutral record in process. Description based on print version record. Includes bibliography (leaves [516]-527).
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Folkloric and linguistic analyses of Cashibo narrative proseRobinson, Lila Wistrand, January 1969 (has links)
Thesis--University of Texas, Austin. / Vita. Photocopy of typescript. eContent provider-neutral record in process. Description based on print version record. Bibliography: leaves 352-359.
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East Indian coolies in the West Indies, 1838-1870Erickson, Edgar L. January 1930 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Wisconsin--Madison, 1930. / Typescript. eContent provider-neutral record in process. Description based on print version record. Includes bibliographical references.
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Ojibwa (Chippewa) Indian dress in Wisconsin and Minnesota forms and functions from 1820 to 1980 /Jasper, Cynthia Rose. January 1982 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--University of Wisconsin--Madison, 1982. / Typescript. eContent provider-neutral record in process. Description based on print version record. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 84-89).
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Warriors of the skyline a gendered study of Mohawk warrior culture /Curtis, Anthony Patrick. January 2005 (has links)
Theses (M.A.)--Marshall University, 2005. / Title from document title page. Includes abstract. Document formatted into pages: contains v, 70 p. Bibliography: p. 64-70.
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The role of moral outrage in the Northern Paiute wars of the mid-19th century /Gualtieri, Michael Allen. January 2006 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Oregon, 2006. / Typescript. Includes vita and abstract. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 372-398). Also available for download via the World Wide Web; free to University of Oregon users.
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Changing social and economic organization among the Rupert House CreeKnight, Rolf January 1962 (has links)
This thesis is based mainly upon field work among the Cree community at Rupert House, Quebec, in the summer of 1961.
I have documented the present range in the composition and activity of production and consumption groups and indicated change over the last sixty years. This description is set in the frame of major changes that have occurred in the habitat and the external social environment. The nature of the transitional taiga-tundra biome is delineated. Changes in the manner and extent of its exploitation are described. Certain changes in the plant community have led to the replacement of herd caribou by solitary moose; this in conjunction with new tools has allowed for decrease in the size of trapping-hunting groups. Nevertheless, trapping-groups have remained larger, on the average, than the nuclear family. This is due to the still desirable aid and cooperation of more than one adult man while trapping.
Country foods are shown to play a major role in consumption despite the decline in the utilization of certain resources. It is suggested that the importance of country food has been underestimated by some writers who have not fully appreciated the use of fur animals for food.
The Rupert House community retains the features of a trapping society despite the fact that this source provides the smallest proportion of community income. The reason for this is
that trapping still is the major source of income for close to half of the commensal groups. This situation serves to emphasise the unequal distribution of wage labour and the differential income within the community. Yet, even those families which do receive significant amounts of wage income are dependent upon trapping for necessary additional increments. Furthermore, by far the largest amount of country food and nearly all of the strategic meat is taken while trapping. During late fall and winter, trapping is the only important productive activity that can be undertaken.
There are two features which characterise Rupert House social groups today: 1. the smallness of consumption groups, which ideally and most usually are limited to a nuclear family, and 2. the relative fluidity in membership of trapping groups. The effects and demands of ecology are not uniformly reflected in all facets of community life or social organization. The organization of production groups shows the necessary adjustment to the economy and environment much more clearly than does the organization of consumption groups. A third distinct grouping intermediate to commensal and productive groups exists in the form of spring and summer residential units. These units arise when people are most free to arrange themselves as they wish and not as it is economically necessary to. Summer residence units show more clearly than any other the extra commensal arrangements which families would like to maintain. A few extensions through post marital residence or through sibling coresidence does not affect the basically nuclear character of even summer residential groups.
The establishment of virtual band endogamy from an earlier condition of a 20%+ rate of inter band marriage is traced through parish records. It is suggested that the seeming unimportance and disappearance of extended kin relations at Rupert House today may be an adjustment to endogamy. No findings were made in the mechanisms or adaptive advantage in the establishment of endogamy.
A very marked difference in the income and standard of living of Rupert House commensal groups was found to exist. A common administrative belief that some sort of parity between such groups is established by the variable exploitation of different resources and through extensive sharing was found to be untrue.
The overall picture of local social organization is one of marked simplification during the last forty years due to new productive techniques and new Hudson's Bay Company transport and operation policies. A former elaborate social hierarchy of White Hudson's Bay Company officers, Metis artisans and intermediaries, Indian workers, and trappers has given way to a clear-cut division of White administrators and Indian trappers. / Arts, Faculty of / Sociology, Department of / Graduate Read more
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The effects of culture contact on the Tsimshian system of land tenure during the nineteenth centuryDarling, John Davidson January 1956 (has links)
To understand the system under which land
rights are held in any pre—literate society, one must refer
to the cultural background since primitive tenure is usually
tied in with other aspects of culture. Thus, because a
person may hold rights in land according to his social,
political and economic status, it is necessary to obtain a
clear picture of the social, political, and economic structure,
Because a person may obtain or lose his rights according to a
change in status, one must be familiar with the rules of succession and inheritance, marriage customs and lineage ties.
Public ceremony and tribal mythology are often instruments for
the validation of claims, while the means of guaranteeing rights
in land are related to the system of social control. Moreover,
the reasons for desiring land can only be fully explained by
referring to cultural values.
It follows that because of this relationship between
land tenure and the rest of culture, a system of tenure will be
affected by change occurring in cultural aspects with which it is
linked. For instance, when a person holds rights in land by virtue
of his membership in tribe and family, a breakdown of these groups
will tend to invaliaate his claims. Again, when a shift in
the political structure leads to new concentrations of authority,
different means of controlling land may arise. A changing
economy may free people from dependence upon the old social group
and thus lead to the individualization of title. When ceremonialism plays an important part in the validation of land rights, its
submergence tends to cause confusion of claims.
In studying the effects of culture contact upon the
Tsimshian system of land tenure during the nineteenth century) the
writer began by examining the traditional system of tenure and its
relationship to other aspects of culture. The place of the social, political and economic structure in the land tenure scheme
was determined, as was the part played by ceremonialism, mythology
and the system of social control. The nature of culture contact
and its influence upon these aspects of culture was then reviewed.
Finally, the writer attempted to determine to what extent the system
of tenure was itself affected. / Arts, Faculty of / Sociology, Department of / Graduate Read more
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Ethnohistory and ceremonial representation of carrier social structureKobrinsky, Vernon Harris January 1973 (has links)
The dissertation is in two parts. The first part develops
a largely conjectural reconstruction of the social history of the
Carrier Indians of north-central B.C. in three stages. The history
commences with the Carrier in what is believed to be their original
setting amid fellow Athapaskan-speakers of the Yukon-Mackenzie woodlands.
A hypothetical system of composite bands is ascribed to the
Carrier at this stage, as the underlying social form out of which more
recent forms have arisen. Following their move to their present location in the salmon-spawning headwaters of the Skeena and Fraser systems,
a salmon-promoted segmentary elaboration of the bands (termed
the sept system) is envisioned. The sept stage is then succeeded by
a system involving the overlaying of the sept structure, to a considerable
extent under the impetus of the burgeoning fur-trade at the
turn of the 18th Century, by a system of coast-derived, territory-claiming, matrilineal crest-divisions, classes, ranks, and a potlatch
cycle which ceremonially articulate these various categories of social
structure. This last stage, designated the sept/phratry stage, represents
the Carrier social structure described by a number of research
scholars who have worked among the Carrier from the turn of the 19th
Century (the Oblate missionary-scholar Father A.G. Morice) to the present
(notably Jenness, Goldman, Hackler and myself).
The second part of the essay is a close analysis of the seating
and prestation-distribution orders of the protocols of the Carrier potlatch. The central thesis of Part II is that the ceremonial seating
and distribution arrangement of the major parameters of Carrier
society (chiefs, nobles, commons, clans, phratries, septs) is motivated
in consideration of the epi-ceremonial connotations of these categories;
especially by connotations proper to the diachronic perspective, i.e.,
by both ideologies of continuity, and folk-historic aspects of social
structure. The spatial/temporal arrangements of the potlatch are
treated, following the linguistic model, as "surface" structures which
manifest meanings out of principles of motivated syntax operating at
"deep" (i.e., unconscious) levels of structure. The "deep" level principles of space/time syntax are expressed as simple analogies, and it
is suggested that the motivation behind these patterns may derive from
certain givens of perceptual experience.
Thus, inasmuch as seating and prestation distribution s render
a symbolic expression of both historic and synchronic aspects of
epi-ceremonial social structure, Part I of the essay provides a foundation
for Part II by representing current Carrier social structure in
light of its reconstructed historic sources.
The conclusion discusses some of the mechanisms, elucidated
by the dissertation, which contribute to the cybernetic relations between
ritual and social structure. / Arts, Faculty of / Anthropology, Department of / Graduate Read more
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