Results 91 to 100 of about 201 (116)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.

La novela del indio Tupinamba. Madrid

World Literature Today, 1983
Philip W. Silver, Eugenio F. Granell
exaly   +2 more sources

La guerre et le sacrifice humain chez les Tupinamba.

open access: yesJournal De La Societe Des Americanistes, 1952
Fernandes Florestan. La guerre et le sacrifice humain chez les Tupinamba.. In: Journal de la Société des Américanistes. Tome 41 n°1, 1952. pp. 139-220.
exaly   +3 more sources

French Views of Native American Women in the Early Modern Era: The Tupinamba of Brazil

Terrae Incognitae, 1994
European travelers to the New World in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries provided their contemporaries with numerous, richly detailed accounts of Native American societies. Both the writers and the readers of this literature regarded its contents as factual, eyewitness reportage of newly discovered peoples.
exaly   +4 more sources

La Salutation larmoyante. Jean de Léry et ses traductions du Tupinamba / The ‘Welcome of Tears’. Jean de Léry and his Translations from the Tupinamba

ASDIWAL Revue Genevoise D Anthropologie Et D Histoire Des Religions, 2009
Monnier Alain. La Salutation larmoyante. Jean de Léry et ses traductions du Tupinamba / The ‘Welcome of Tears’. Jean de Léry and his Translations from the Tupinamba. In: ASDIWAL. Revue genevoise d'anthropologie et d'histoire des religions, n°4, 2009. pp. 63-73.
exaly   +3 more sources

L’anthropophagie tupinamba : quasi-potlatch de chair humaine et fait social total

Revue Du MAUSS, 2020
Marquée du sceau de l’infamie en Occident, l’anthropophagie s’avère pourtant, à l’historien comme à l’ethnographe, une pratique ayant été partout répandue, avec des patries de prédilection : ainsi l’Amérique du Sud. En celle-ci, cette pratique organisait si bien nombre de sociétés – ainsi, celle tupinamba des côtes brésiliennes – qu’elle y apparaît ...
Monique Trevisan-Bucaille   +1 more
exaly   +2 more sources

The Beginnings of Brazilian Anthropology: Jesuits and Tupinamba Cannibalism

Journal of Anthropological Research, 1983
Jesuit missionaries who lived and worked among the Tupian-speaking Indians of sixteenth-century coastal Brazil have provided valuable information on the customs and practices of these Indians. The contributions to Brazilian ethnography of such Jesuits as Nobrega, Anchieta, Cardim, Soares, and others is illustrated by translations from their writings ...
openaire   +1 more source

Home - About - Disclaimer - Privacy