Showing 281 - 300 results of 310 for search '"ethnology"', query time: 0.05s Refine Results
  1. 281
  2. 282
  3. 283

    70 anos da guerreira: a mestiçagem brasileira na tradução musical de Clara Nunes by Expedito Leandro Silva

    Published 2014-01-01
    “…Among the songs that best represent the artist portrayal are “Canto das Três Raças” and “Brasil Mestiço Santuário da Fé”, sang by her in the 1980s, the lyrics and interpretation showed the social Brazilian ethnological context in great detail. However, the cries of the people and the musical manifestation reproduced in the songs present an ideology of nationhood whose identity is the Brazilian miscegenation which means the cultures of the native Indians, the white and the black people.…”
    Get full text
    Article
  4. 284
  5. 285

    ¿Tanto va el cántaro a la fuente que… encuentra un universal paremiológico? by Julia Sevilla Muñoz

    Published 2012-07-01
    “…Different approaches are currently considered for paremiological analysis (linguistic, literary, ethnological, or translation studies…).This article is focused on the study of the proverb «Tanto va el cántaro a la fuente que al final se rompe» («The pitcher goes so often to the well that it is broken at last») from several points of view. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  6. 286

    L’insaisissable religion des Taïnos. Esquisse d’anthropologie historique by Giuseppe A. Samonà

    Published 2003-06-01
    “…More specifically, the author analyzes the eyewitness accounts of Columbus and Pané and underscores their genuinely ethnological quality, particularly in the case of the latter. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  7. 287

    Transitivité de l’action et ses expressions en trumai (langue isolée du Haut Xingú, Brésil) by Aurore Monod Becquelin, Cédric Becquey

    Published 2013-12-01
    “…This exercise requires a consideration of the interface between language and culture, a place where the use of different meanings of the term “agency”—defined on linguistic, ethnologic and ethnolinguistic levels—constitute so many avenues for interpreting our data (transitivity and agents, the semantics of verbs, the position of the speaker in relation to the agents to whom he is speaking, the status of parameters as animacy or specificity).…”
    Get full text
    Article
  8. 288

    As galinhas incontáveis. Tupis, europeus e aves domésticas na conquista no Brasil by Felipe Ferreira Vander Velden

    Published 2012-12-01
    “…These reports, allied to the historical, ethnographic and ethnological knowledge accumulated on the colonial Tupians and other contemporary Tupi-speaking groups, would help us elucidate some questions about the cosmological meanings of domestic chickens among Tupians, as well as discuss a complex network which connected native and colonial villages in the first 200 years of the conquest. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  9. 289
  10. 290

    La thèse du « génocide indien » : guerre de position entre science et mémoire by Frédéric Dorel

    Published 2006-09-01
    “…One is justified by grief and memory; the other – more scientific and ethnological – explains that while crimes against humanity clearly occurred, the extinction of 90% of the pre-Columbian populations should more appropriately be termed ethnocide rather than genocide. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  11. 291

    Engaging Political Pentecostalism: A Probe into the Political Theology of a Post-Confessional Christian Network by Leandro Luis Bedin Fontana

    Published 2025-01-01
    “…Methodologically, this paper sets out to systematize the results of extensive ethnological studies about this phenomenon with the aim of reconstructing its genealogy, capturing its distinctive phenomenological traits, and distilling its central theological tenets. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  12. 292

    Architecture vernaculaire de terre et évacuation des eaux by Blandine Besnard

    Published 2020-12-01
    “…Gradually abandoned since the 1970s, the vernacular heritage of the interior region of Oman is experiencing its last fires and there is an urgent need to collect both ethnological and architectural data before they definitely fall into the domain of History and Archaeology.With this in mind, a survey aiming to identify water drainage installations in three traditional mud-brick neighbourhoods in the interior of Oman (Birkat al‑Mawz, Izkī and al‑Ḥamrā') was carried out in March 2020.This survey highlighted the techniques and facilities related to water drainage in traditional Omani neighbourhoods that had never been the subject of any particular attention, but also opened up ethnoarchaeological perspectives, a discipline that postulates that ethnography can enrich the interpretation of archaeological data, or even the absence of the latter.Out of 359 identified installations, gargoyles represent 99% of the sample. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  13. 293

    Les Karaboro et le rônier by Ali Bene, Anne Fournier

    Published 2024-06-01
    “…By cross-referencing oral tradition (our ethnological surveys) and the very rare archival data available, it describes what can be reconstructed of the modes of transmission of knowledge about this plant. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  14. 294

    Origines et étapes de la diversité des techniques sidérurgiques en Afrique de l’Ouest : le cas de la production du fer en pays bassar (nord du Togo) du XIIIe au XXe siècles by Caroline Robion-Brunner, Marie-Pierre Coustures, Stéphan Dugast, Assouman Tchetre-Gbandi, Didier Béziat

    Published 2022-11-01
    “…Thus, after establishing an exhaustive assessment of the geological, archaeological, archaeometric and ethnological data at our disposal, we evaluate the different possibilities that can explain the plurality of practices and then we propose different historical-cultural scenarios tracing the evolution of iron smelting technics in the Bassar region.…”
    Get full text
    Article
  15. 295
  16. 296

    Se suspendre aux lendemains de Fessenheim – une approche croisée sur les traces visibles et invisibles d’un territoire nucléaire en transformation. by Élise Alloin, Florence Fröhlig

    Published 2021-10-01
    “…However, regional and transnational debates about the site’s reconversion that flourished ever since have failed to consider this nuclear power plant's material and immaterial value for the region.We pursued an action-participatory research frame to address this gap, combining ethnological analytical methodology with artistic practices. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  17. 297

    Des tortues exotiques en ville : évaluation, perceptions et propositions de gestion à Strasbourg, France by Véronique Philippot, Sandrine Glatron, Adine Hector, Yves Meinard, Jean-Yves Georges

    Published 2019-10-01
    “…We studied exotical turtles found in two parks of Strasbourg with a double naturalistic and ethnological approach. More than 60 individuals from eight exotic turtle species have been contacted during the summers of 2017 and 2018. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  18. 298

    Obscuring Our Sense of Morality: Barry Hallen’s Yoruba Moral Epistemology and the Problem of Character Indeterminacy by Babalola J. Balogun, Aderonke A. Ajiboro

    Published 2024-05-01
    “…Built on his canonical distinction between knowledge (ìmọ) and belief (ìgbàgbọ) within the Yoruba linguistic framework, the Yoruba moral epistemology thesis suggests that knowledge of human character could be modelled alongside a similar pathway with knowledge of other propositional items where knowledge claims are made based on evidence obtained via first-hand information. Using Yoruba ethnological/linguistic resources as a methodological standpoint, our critique of Hallen’s Yoruba moral epistemology is primarily motivated by three fundamental observations: a. that the acclaimed distinction between ìmọ and ìgbàgbọ on which the thesis is based, is faulty; b. that the thesis does not agree to a certain conception of personhood within the Yoruba metaphysical worldview; and c. that the behaviourist implications engendered by Hallen’s Yoruba moral epistemology do not adequately represent the deeply spiritual essence of human conducts in Yoruba ethical system. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  19. 299
  20. 300