Women and Colonization: Anthropological PerspectivesPaper by D. Bell separately annotated. |
Contents
Montagnais Women and the Jesuit Program | 25 |
Middle | 43 |
Seneca Resistance | 63 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
Abidjan Aboriginal activities African agricultural Alaska American Andean Anthropology authority ayllu Aztec Baoulé Bari Baule Bouaké brother bundles cash century changes chiefly women chiefs cloth Coast Coastal Algonkian colonial commodity conquest Côte d'Ivoire cotton crops culture curacas Cuzco dala economic egalitarian Euro-American European exchange female fishing force hunting husband important Inca Inca Empire Indian indigenous individual inheritance Iroquois jilimi Joluo Kenya kinship Kiriwina land tenure Leacock lineage living Luoland male marriage married matrilineal matrilocality men's mestizo mission missionaries Montagnais Montagnais-Naskapi mother native nonchiefly organization participation Pinton political polygyny population position production Quakers rank relations relationship religious reproduction rights to land ritual role Seneca settlement sexual Silverblatt sisters social society Spanish status structure subsistence tion Tlingit Tongan trade traditional Trobriand University village Warlpiri Warrabri Western wife wives woman women's wealth Yalata York



