Anthropology Videos At The University Of Arizona Library tribe v. 3. Stealing beauty; the wodaabe and Tuareg images that illustrate howthe indigenous people were SUBJECTS Prehistoric peoples Easter Island. http://www.library.arizona.edu/library/teams/sst/anthro/guide/films/
Extractions: SUMMARY "Scholars have typically interpreted a Dead Sea Scroll document called 4QMMT as contrary to the teachings of Paul. It seems to advocate justification by acts, whereas Paul teaches justification by faith alone. Wright demonstrates that while the arguments in 4QMMT seem to contradict Paul, that is not necessarily the case."Container.
Africana At The Media Center Of UIUC and beauty that they do in their indigenous environments The wodaabe say their livesare shaped by joy Diaya, Haddad, OmarArab, Hemat- Arab, and Tikar peoples. http://www.afrst.uiuc.edu/Library/media.html
Native Peoples be from there from which will be born the Liberation of the indigenous peoples. HegoAfrika South africa Jako Olivier's page http//www.cyberserv.co.za/users http://www.agarthaconnection.org/native.html
Florida Atlantic University Libraries Videographies e world of these warrior peoples through their movement, the warrior tradition ofindigenous africa, the jihad VH 7151 wodaabe and Tureg Nomads, The Stealing http://www.library.fau.edu/depts/media/visub04.htm
Extractions: Summary: Trek inland to the remote site of Great Zimbabwe, a fabulous "lost city, " which reached the height of its glory in the 14th century. Then, sift through the sands of time to uncover the equally splendid culture of Africa's Swahili Coast. The fabulously wealthy center of the thriving gold and ivory trades until the 16th century, its cities now lie all but forgotten, buried under centuries of indifference. Reclaiming their past from a long tradition of racial prejudice and neglect, the descendants of these lost cultures are only now discovering the extraordinary achievements of Africa's indigenous civilization. 048 Min. VIDEO 1995 Subject: ANTHROPOLOGY, EARLY CIVILIZATION Series: LOST CIVILIZATION VH 7608 Africa, Africas
Florida Atlantic University Libraries Videographies Travel to the wodaabe tribe of Niger and the still pillage the continent of Africaare foreshadowed. policy with regard to indigenous peoples destruction and http://www.library.fau.edu/depts/media/visub08.htm
Extractions: Summary: Set in a village outside the Hungarian town of Gyongyos, this program follows two Gypsy families struggling to maintain their traditions in a modern communist state. Despite the romantic image, Gypsy life is harsh and often brutal. The Gypsies live in semi-slums, and they are forced by law to work, often for very low wages. 052 Min. VIDEO 1988 Subject: ANTHROPOLOGY Series: DISAPPEARING WORLD VH 5216 Advertising Missionaries
Useful Websites The Igbo Home Page; wodaabe Fulani; Web Pulaaku The Relationship between IndigenousPastoralist Resource Tenure and among the Okavango Delta peoples of Botswana; http://homepages.isunet.net/dafarnham/africa/useful.htm
Extractions: Southern Africa African News Sources Contents African Studies Contents General Resources Contents Individual Cultures Contents Social Organization Contents Sex, Marriage, and Family Contents Kinship and Descent Contents Descent, Clans and Territorial Organization in the Tikar Chiefdom of Ngambe, Cameroon (David Price
Film And Video Resources For African Studies: Catalogue Keywords Niger, wodaabe, pastoralists, ritual, dance, drought. mineral resources,while the indigenous people have social problems which the peoples of South http://www.emory.edu/COLLEGE/IAS/filmcat.htm
Extractions: Film and Video Catalogue This section of the catalogue lists titles from the main Film and Video Catalogue of Emory's holdings for African Studies. The catalogue also includes sections that list New Acquisitions to Emory's collections since September 1999 and titles that are currently On Order Film and Video Catalogue About the United Nations (videocassette: 15 min.) [1990] Abstract: An overview summarizing the other six programs in this series, particularly noting the westernization of some tribal cultures and a new awakening of ancient tradition among many tribes. Includes material on Dogon. Keywords: overview, social change, history. Africa (4 videocassettes: 114 minutes/ea) [1984]
Box 8. Value Conflicts The Ban On Ivory Trade The Present Fulani, wodaabe and Maasai all vaccinate against bovine the Shona and some other peoplesof central and africa, the ancestors of the indigenous inhabitants of http://www.bsponline.org/bsp/publications/africa/issues_3/afbiodiv2.html
Extractions: PART II CRITICAL ISSUES IN BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION IN AFRICA CHAPTER THREE VALUES IN BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION The Issue People value biological resources in different ways: spiritually, economically, aesthetically, culturally, and scientifically. Values may also be influenced by the different perspectives found at the local, national, or international levels. Collective and individual values in turn, can significantly influence patterns of natural resource use to form the foundation of biodiversity conservation. The concept of values encompasses a constellation of social norms and individual attitudes, all of which may play a role in the conservation of biodiversity. Planners and policy-makers need to have techniques for clarifying and assessing differences in values as they relate to biodiversity conservation. However, the empirical study of biodiversity conservation values is generally limited at present to microeconomic analysis, as other disciplines have been slow to develop suitable techniques. Values and Levels of Analysis Differences in values often depend on the relationship to the resource in question. For local residents, a given biological resource may represent an essential economic activity and may also be important for cultural or religious reasons. Where other options or substitutes are not readily available, too expensive, or unacceptable, local resource users may defend their right of access vigorously (see Box 8).
Stockholms Universitetsbibliotek and demand two essays on indigenous peoples and tourism Owusu, Heike Symbols ofAfrica / Heike Owusu Mette Nomads who cultivate beauty wodaabe dances and http://www.sub.su.se/nyfrv/Okt2001/sub/index013.htm
Untitled responses to drought among the wodaabe of Niger and Oswald Weiner (eds.), Indigenousknowledge systems of Tanout Arrondissement, Niger , Nomadic peoples 11,2660 http://csac.anthropology.ac.uk/CSACMonog/Waldie/bibilog.html
Extractions: Baxter, P.T.W. 1984. "Butter for barley and barley for cash: petty transactions and small transformations in an Arssi market", in Sven Rubenson (ed.) Proceedings of the seventh international conference of Ethiopian societies; University of Lund, 26-29 April 1982. Addis Abeba: Institute of Ethiopian studies.
WWF Newsroom Peul (wodaabe) lady filling waterskins in temporary pool of engaging local and indigenouspeoples in conservation be held in Johannesburg, South africa, from 26 http://www.panda.org/news_facts/newsroom/opinions/news.cfm?uNewsID=2628
Guide To The Collections Of The Human Studies Film Archives scenes in Cape Town and indigenous dwellings along the African Sahel, Niger, theWodaabe are seen the continued independence of these peoples, Reverend Scott http://www.nmnh.si.edu/naa/guide/hsfa_africa.htm
Untitled Milk Consumption, Diet and Health in Herding peoples. KT MORAN Compensating IndigenousPeople for the and Subsistence Among Fulani Nomads (wodaabe) in Niger. http://www.wm.edu/ICAES/program/icaesprog.html
Extractions: GENETICS AND DERMATOGLYPHICS Organizer/Chair: NORRIS M. DURHAM (University of Northern Iowa) and KATHLEEN M. FOX Blair Hall 201 NISHI SINGH, B.V. BHANU (University of Pune) A Major Gene for Radial Pattern Inheritance? KOSETTE LAMBERT, MACIEJ HENNEBERG (University of Adelaide) Relationship of Dermatoglyphic Patterns to Finger Proportions EKATRINA PECHONKINA, ROBERT A. BENFER, JR. (University of Missouri) Heritability of Fluctuating Asymmetry of Dermatoglyphic Traits RADOMIR PAVICEVIC (Clinic for Thoracic Surgery) Analysis of Quantitative Dermatoglyphic Traits of the Digito-Palmar Complex in Carcinomas YVES LACASSIE, P.F. STAHLS, III (Louisiana State University and Children's Hospital) Chromosomal Abnormalities Predicted by the Absence of the "d" Triradius
Vet Initiative - 1996 pastoral herders of the Twareg and wodaabe were trained Yet the training of indigenouspeoples in basic veterinary In West africa, game farming of cane rats is http://www.grdodge.org/vet/content_vet96.html
Extractions: Mentor: Andrew Rowan The Use of Animals in Advertising and Educational Materials: Impact on Human Perception of the Animal Kingdom Ms. Fernald will examine the use of animals in advertising, which techniques are the most successful in conveying the advertisers message, and which generate the greatest amount of public support. Once the research is completed, results will be made available to animal health and welfare organizations to assist them in the development of more effective public awareness materials. Rebecca Ruch-Gallie Mentor: M. D. Salman Why Spot Became Unwanted: Characteristics of Relinquished Pets and Their Owners: An Epidemiological Approach Along with euthanasia and pet overpopulation, pet relinquishment is an epidemic problem. Many pet owners relinquish their pets to the local shelter because they no longer tolerate or understand their pets behavior. By studying and cataloging the behavior characteristics that put pets at greatest risk for relinquishment, and providing this information to veterinarians, the numbers of relinquished pets should decrease through veterinarian intervention. Morna Pixton
AFRICAN HISTORY terms of its triple heritage what is indigenous, what was For the polygynous Wodaabeit is the worso, a of water to the survival of both peoples is underscored http://www.wcc.co.westchester.ny.us/LIBRARY/rguides/media/behavioral/hist_africa
Extractions: History: African AFRICA: A VOYAGE OF DISCOVERY WITH BASIL DAVIDSON vc-592-595 Eight 57 minute programs on 4 videotapes 1984 Gives a history of Africa from many locations showing life as it is today, plus archive film and dramatized reconstruction. vc-592: Different But Equal - Mastering a Continent vc-593: Caravans of Gold - Kings and Cities vc-594: Bible and the Gun - Magnificent African Cake vc-595: The Rise of Nationalism - The Legacy AFRICAN INFLUENCE ON EARLY EUROPE VC-2549 20 min 1998 Explores the countless ways in which Africa influenced the development of early European trade, philosophy, and knowledge. From religion to science, from mathematics to medicine, African societies played a key role in Europes development. AFRICANS, THE vc-1574 (9 part telecourse) 60 min each part 1986 A controversial examination of contemporary Africa in terms of its triple heritage: what is indigenous, what was contributed by Islam, and what was acquired from the west? 1. The Nature of a Continent
Olu Oguibe: Text On Many Thousand Gone apply to the apparel of the wodaabe described above. and long lasting impact on thepeoples and cultures and instead identified more with indigenous handwoven http://www.camwood.org/Olu_Oguibe_on_culture.html
Extractions: In the photograph initially mentioned, the above tableau is replicated in the Divine family group; four larger than life-size modeled figures of the goddess, her baby on her lap, her lover the thunder god to her right with a distinguished fedora hat on his head, and flanking them both, her daughter in polka dot blouse and blood-red mini-skirt with a fancy handbag on her lap, and on the opposite side, the goddess's son in a yellow polo dress and fashionable haircut with a three-knob transistor radio nestled on his lap. It is the figure of this young man, son of the earth goddess and prince of the heavens, sitting erect in this sacred family group sculpture with a transistor radio on his lap that stays with me: An Igbo god with a transistor radio. Other than the inevitable British Broadcasting Corporation from which my father and the rest of the Biafran citizenry gathered their news of the outside world and the progress of the war, and the local stations to which he turned every Sunday morning for songs by Jim Reeves and other American gospel singers, my father's favorite station was Radio Santa Isabel, a Spanish service which broadcast out of Santa Isabel, Fernando Poo in the tiny, newly independent African Republic of Equatorial Guinea. Although the strict Christian sect that my father ministered to forbade dancing, which he never engaged in, he and his friends nevertheless loved the fast, loopy Central and East African guitar music out of Santa Isabel which was far more exciting and danceable than the more sedate and philosophical war-time Biafran 'highlife' music.
Film Descriptions -- Page One narrator David MayburyLewis to the wodaabe tribe of outside world on an isolatedindigenous tribe, the he could record the plight of these endangered peoples. http://www.nd.edu/~anthro/films/film_descript.html
Extractions: 47 minutes, 2000, VHS Available in the Anthropology Office First brought to the western world at the turn of the century, African art was viewed as exotic and stance. Yet through the years these pieces had a major influence on Picasso, Matisse, Modigliani, and others, and changed the course of modern art. Students love the bold, colorful masks and sculptures! Travel to Africa to hear tribespeople comment on the function of art and the role of the artist in their society. Back to Film List
SOCIOLOGY REVIEW JANUARY 2002 the word is too hard to define color, cheek bones and genes do not sort thepeoples of the indigenous = local to the area wodaabe = a nomadic tribe in Niger http://hrsbstaff.ednet.ns.ca/waymac/Sociology/review__jan_2003.htm
Extractions: SOCIOLOGY REVIEW JANUARY 2003 You write on Tuesday, Jan 28, 1:00 P.M. Bring a calculator to class for your analysis assignment on the exam!! Also, bring something with a long straight edge to lay across the data sheet. Rituals: You are responsible for the information on the "Circle of Life" handout (three pages, six sides) you received in class (and on my webpage, the file is called " Rituals "). Sociological Theoretical Perspecitves: Know how to explain funcitonalism structuralism cultural materialism and sociobiology . Be able to explain explain some sociological behaiour by using one of these four theories. For instance, be prepared to explain prostitution from a functionalist perspective, or racism from a structuralist perspective. You are responsible for the Questions on Basic Sociology (handout, pp 17-27). This is the one that deals with the Nuer Ghost Marriage. The information is found on my website under the title "Aspects of Culture." The questions and answers to this section are on the webpage under the title "Basic Sociology pp 17-27."