Results 131 to 140 of about 311 (167)
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Humor in Ethnohistory

Ethnohistory, 1990
Abstract The Occasions When A Scholar Can Publicly “Let It all hang out,” can write about the subjects closest to his heart with relative disregard for the niceties and proscriptions of scholarly discourse, are rare. We simply don’t expect our button-down scholars to operate with the abandon of poets, novelists, and satirists, to drop ...
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Archaeology and Ethnohistory

The Latin American Anthropology Review, 1992
New World Archaeology and Culture History: Collected Essays and Articles. Gordon R. Willey. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 1990. 436 pp. $39.95 (cloth). ISBN 0–8263–1184–9.
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ETHNOHISTORY

2023
Bradley Benton   +2 more
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Ethnohistory of speaking

2014
Because most non-European pidgins-creoles have not survived into modern times, their study requires alternative, complementary historical analyses under the heading of the ethnohistory of speaking: philology (or the systematic reconstitution of early attestations by triangulation with contemporaneous or modern comparative linguistic data) and ...
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Ethnohistory.

Man, 1987
Michael E. Smith   +2 more
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Humanism and Ethnohistory

Abstract In the mid-1500s, some native governors lodged appeals, in Latin, for the restoration of territory, reduction of tribute, coats of arms, and other privileges for their polities. This chapter examines three little-known Latin texts in detail: a short official report by the native judge Juan de Tlaxcala about a claim Pedro de ...
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Performance and Ethnohistory

1998
Abstract As already stated in the Introduction, the broader processes responsible for language shift and their structural outcomes do not give a complete picture of speakers’ competence and the ways in which their use of Arvanítika and Greek enters into their daily interactions.
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Crimes of Ethnohistory

2008
Chapter 4 suggested that the production of proto-anthropological knowledge must be related to other macro-social changes taking place in Europe during the nineteenth century. The uneven development of academic ‘disciplines’ in non-academic environments betrays an increasing differentiation of social organization (Alexander, 1982) through which imagined-
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