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21. Islam
The mambila speaking peoples, numbering approximately 18,0001 live on the mambila The majority of the mambila cling to their indigenous religion,
http://lucy.kent.ac.uk/Gallery/rssite/irss/lucy.ukc.ac.uk/Fdtl/Rehf/Fieldnotes/i
Islam
Footnotes for fnotes.html
Islam
Footnotes for fnotes.html Islam Return to the Ethnographics Gallery

22. Why Words Are Biotic
“During fieldwork in the mambila region of Cameroon’s Adawawa region in Over the ages, indigenous peoples have developed innumer­able technologies.
http://www.swaraj.org/shikshantar/bioticwords.htm
From Down to Earth , December 31, 2002
Why Words Are Biotic: Knowledges Vanish When Languages Die
When metaphors die, ideas pass away and a way of thinking is buried,” says Sakar Khan. He is not a lin­guist. He is a musician. He plays the khamaicha — a four-string instru­ment. Somewhere in his eighties, he is arguably the most revered of the musicians in his tribe — the langas of Rajasthan. Reticently he shares his feelings, “I see today’s generation ignore the khamaicha. I can’t help it. Music, like language, can provide only a metaphor for a way of life. When people lose a way of life, their language struggles to survive.” In a similar vein, linguists remember Tefvik Esenc, the last speaker of Ubykh, a language once spoken in the northwestern Caucasus. Some years ago they scampered to his village of Haci Osman in Turkey to meet him. He had three sons, all of them unable to understand his tongue, preferring Turkish instead. He had already decided upon his epitaph. “This is the grave of Tefvik Esenc. He was the last person able to speak the language they called Ubykh.” He died in 1992. The language passed away with him. Then there is what linguist Bruce Connel recorded in a newsletter of the UK Foundation for Endangered Languages, under the heading ‘obituaries’. “During fieldwork in the Mambila region of Cameroon’s Adawawa region in 1994-95,1 came across a number of moribund languages. . . one of these, Kasabe.. .had only one remaining speaker, Bogon. In November 1996 I returned to the Mambila region. Bogon had died on November 5, 1995 taking Kasabe with him. He is sur­vived by a sister, who reportedly could understand Kasabe, but not speak it, and several children and grandchi1dren none of whom know the language.”

23. SOSIG: Ethnographic Studies Of Peoples And Communities
Browse this resource Virtual Institute of mambila Studies Browse thisresource Open Directory Project (DMOZ) indigenous People
http://www.sosig.ac.uk/roads/subject-listing/World-cat/ethnostud.html
Ethnographic Studies of Peoples and Communities Editor: Centre for Social Anthropology and Computing, Manchester University Library You are here : Home Anthropology > Ethnographic Studies of Peoples and Communities
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Resource Type Search in whole catalogue current section Top 50 sites in Anthropology Advanced Search Thesauri Map of the Anthropology section Browse Related Sections Community Research, inc. Urban and Rural Internet Resources Listed By Type alphabetically Europe UK For a short description click the title. To access the resource directly click Editor's Choice (key resources in this subject) Lonely Islands, The Andamanese: an On-line Documentation, by George Weber Maintaining Diversity: an Ethnographic Study of Oak Park, Illinois - Progress Reports Virtual Institute of Mambila Studies Bibliographic Databases Up Scott Polar Research Institute Library (SPRILIB) - Russian North Bibliographies Up Anthropological Studies on the Middle East: a Basic Bibliography Anthropological Survey of India Publications Anthropology of German Studies: A Working Bibliography ... Bibliography of Acta Borealia: a Nordic Journal of Circumpolar Societies, 1984-1996

24. SOSIG: Ethnographic Studies Of Peoples And Communities
Browse this resource Virtual Institute of mambila Studies. All Resources Browse this resource Lanic indigenous peoples
http://www.sosig.ac.uk/roads/subject-listing/World/ethnostud.html
Ethnographic Studies of Peoples and Communities Editor: Centre for Social Anthropology and Computing, Manchester University Library You are here : Home Anthropology > Ethnographic Studies of Peoples and Communities
in Anthropology
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Member: Login
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Search in whole catalogue current section Top 50 sites in Anthropology Advanced Search Thesauri Map of the Anthropology section Browse Related Sections Community Research, inc. Urban and Rural Internet Resources Listed Alphabetically Sort: by resource type Europe UK For a short description click the title. To access the resource directly click Editor's Choice (key resources in this subject) Lonely Islands, The Andamanese: an On-line Documentation, by George Weber Maintaining Diversity: an Ethnographic Study of Oak Park, Illinois - Progress Reports Virtual Institute of Mambila Studies All Resources "Daily Life in Sierra Leone: The Sherbro in 1936-37": African photographs from the University of Pennsylvania Museum Archives 45 Years in the Turkish Village 1949-1994:Paul Stirling's Ethnographic Data Archives African Anthropology/The African Anthropologist African Online Digital Library ... 2005 SOSIG

25. Internet African History Sourcebook
WEB Islam and indigenous African Culture At Harvard with an interest inthe mambila people of the Nigeria Cameroon borderland and their neighbours;
http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/africa/africasbook.html
Halsall Home Ancient History Sourcebook Medieval Sourcebook Modern History Sourcebook
Other History Sourcebooks: East Asian Indian Islamic Jewish ... Science Internet
African History
Sourcebook Africa is both the most clearly defined of continents - in its geography - and the hardest to pin down in historical terms. Human beings originated in Africa and, as a result, there is more diversity of human types and societies than anywhere else. It is not possible, in any non-ideological way, to claim any one of these peoples or societies as more essentially "African" than others; nor is it possible to exclude a given society as "not really African". On this site historical sources on the history of human societies in the continent of Africa are presented, when available, without making prejudgements about what is "African". This page is a subset of texts derived from the three major online Sourcebooks listed below. For more contextual information, for instance about the Islamic world, check out these web sites. Notes: In addition to direct links to documents, links are made to a number of other web resources.

26. Anthro.Net: Africa
Yoruba Gurus indigenous Production of Knowledge in africa by Toyin Falola 1998 mambila people of the Nigeria Cameroon borderland and their neighbors;
http://home1.gte.net/ericjw1/africa.html
This guide contains bibliographic references and links to internet resources for African Archaeology and Ethnography. Recommended Reading: African-American Pioneers in Anthropology An African Classical Age: Eastern and Southern Africa in World History, 1000 B.C. to A.D. 400 by Christopher Ehret 1998 African Identities: Race, Nation and Culture in Ethnography, Pan-Africanism and Black Literatures by Kadiatu Kanneh 1998 Afrocentrism: Mythical Pasts and Imagined Homes by Stephen Howe 1998 Dancing skeletons: Life and Death in West Africa by Katherine Dettwyler, 1994 Freedom in Fulani Social Life: An Introspective Ethnography by Paul Riesman, et al 1998 Kinship and Marriage Among the Anlo Ewe by G. K. Nukunya 1999 Manhood and Morality: Sex, Violence, and Ritual in Gisu Society by Suzette Heald 1999 Maroon Arts: Cultural Vitality in the African Diaspora Yoruba Gurus: Indigenous Production of Knowledge in Africa by Toyin Falola 1998 Links:
  • African Archaeology: The ultimate reference set for the continent's prehistory.
  • African Art and Anthropology A comprehensive resource collection of new and used books on the subject of the African experience and art from an anthropological perspective.
  • 27. Dz_bib
    In Cultural diversity and indigenous peoples Oral, written expressions and newtechnologies ‘mambila Bibliography’ The Nigerian Field 1989 54 6576
    http://lucy.ukc.ac.uk/dz/dzbib.html
    David Zeitlyn
    Publications
    Editorship
    Anthropological Index Online (Royal Anthropological Institute) from 1995
    Monographs
    Talking Mambila Kinship 2004 in press Lexington Books USA
    Reading in the Modern World: Anthropological Perspectives on Writing and the Virtual World (CSAC Monographs Online 17) 2001
    with Mike Fischer Experience Rich Anthropology. Resource Guide and Sampler CD for teachers and Students . Canterbury: CSAC, 1999
    Knowledge Lost in Information, Oxford and London: Office for Humanities Communication, 1999
    Collectanea Instituti Anthropos v. 41. Sankt Augustin: Academia Verlag, 1994
    Edited collections - jointly with Dr Ian Fowler 1) A special issue of the Journal of the Anthropological Society of Oxford JASO ) 23(1), October 1996 2) Half of Paideuma (the Journal of the Frobenius Institute) 41 1995 Guest Editor (with Jane Bex*) Special issue of Education for Information Special issue of Education for Information Articles Single-authored History in Africa Anthropos Cultural diversity and indigenous peoples: Oral, written expressions and new technologies (CD) (ed.) L. Pourchez. Paris: UNESCO Publishing

    28. Web Page Roger Blench (Africa, Languages, Biodiversity, Ethnoscience)
    Sponsored by indigenous peoples Organisation to give invited presentation toRound Table (1999c) Why are there so many pastoral peoples in East africa ?
    http://homepage.ntlworld.com/roger_blench/Personal Website.htm
    ROGER BLENCH
    Personal Web Site CONTACT DETAILS Roger Blench Mallam Dendo Guest Road Cambridge United Kingdom Voice/ Answerphone /Fax. 0044-(0)1223-560687 E-mail R.Blench@odi.org.uk This page last updated: Wednesday, 30 July 2003
    Website Guide
    1. Professional Activities Relating to Development Professional Activities 2. Academic Career Academic Career 3. Publications Publications Published papers Papers Books Books Papers in Press Papers in Press Documents posted electronically Posted Electronically Unpublished documents Unpublished Documents Reports Reports Websites Websites 4. New Benue-Congo Comparative Wordlist Contents Page 5. Unpublished Field Materials Unpublished Field Materials 6. Hot off the press Hot off the press 7. Recent and projected travel, contact details etc. Movement Schedule 8. Images Images
    PROFESSIONAL SUMMARY Full Name: Roger Marsh Blench Date of Birth: 1st August, 1953 Marital Status: Single Academic Titles: M.A., Ph.D University of Cambridge Present Occupation: Research Fellow, Overseas Development Institute

    29. MSN Encarta - Print Preview - Africa
    For example, the Ahaggar, Tibesti, Ennedi, and mambila mountains, together with Scientific research has demonstrated that indigenous African farming and
    http://encarta.msn.com/text_761572628___2/Africa.html
    Print Print Preview Africa Article View On the File menu, click Print to print the information. Africa II. Natural Environment The great diversity of the African environment makes it difficult to generalize about the continent. While much of the continent consists of vast plains with little relief, there are also towering volcanic peaks and the largest rift valley system in the world. The climate ranges from the year-round heat and humidity of equatorial regions to the dryness of the world’s largest desert to mountaintop conditions cold enough to support glaciers. It contains regions of biological significance due to their biodiversity and huge numbers of species found nowhere else. The African environment has long been mistakenly seen as hostile, foreboding, and tragically in decline. Popular descriptions of Africa such as “the dark continent,” images of untamed wilderness in nature publications, and sensationalized press coverage of disasters such as droughts and famines have shaped these perceptions of Africa. Geographers’ accounts of Africa used to attribute the underdevelopment of the continent to its unfavorable environment—its oppressive climate, infertile soil, polluted water, and exotic diseases. These days have begun to wane. Increased scientific research on the African environment has done much to dispel old misconceptions and to provide insights into the physical processes that give shape to the landscape. The relationship of African societies to the environment is also much better understood. Yet much remains to be done before this huge and complex continent is well known and appreciated, especially by the general public.

    30. Islam
    The mambila speaking peoples, numbering approximately 180001 live on the mambilaplateau The majority of the mambila cling to their indigenous religion,
    http://www.era.anthropology.ac.uk/Era_Resources/Era/Rehfisch/Papers/islam.html
    FACTORS INHIBITING THE SPREAD OF ISLAM AMONG THE PAGAN MAMBILA
    In this essay I shall discuss some of the reasons why so few of the Mambila speaking people have adopted the Muslim creed. Islam has spread very rapidly throughout many parts of West Africa as well as in other regions of the African continent in the past few decades, but has made but little progress among the Mambila. There are three types of factors that explain this. The first and most important stems from the relations existing between the pagans and their Muslim Neighbours, the Fulani. The second and third are on the one hand those stemming from the social and political structure of Mambila society itself and on the other ecological and economic factors. The Mambila speaking peoples, numbering approximately 18,000 Islam has made almost no converts in the villages investigated. The majority of the Mambila cling to their indigenous religion, a few having opted for Christianity. There are no reliable statistics for the region as a whole on this matter so I must confine myself to the two villages on which I found adequate information. In the one with a population of 605 persons there was one Mambila Muslim and in a neighbouring settlement with approximately 350 residents there were none. Christianity has attracted approximately thirty-five followers in the first and ten in the second village. The history of Fulani-Mambila relations is little known. In the literature are to be found mentions of frequent skirmishes between the two groups, for the most parts resulting from slave raids on the part of the Banyo Fulani into Mambila territory. As late as 1892, the Emir of Banyo was killed by the Mambila while on a slave raid.

    31. Anthropology Links
    A version of a mambila transcript with digitized recordings indigenous peoples Documents from Melanesia, Polynesia the Pacific
    http://chemlab.pc.maricopa.edu/anthro.html

    32. Cultural Anthropology - Social Anthropology - Academic Info
    peoples and Cultures of africa (Anthropology 267) dedicated to furtheringthe rights of all indigenous and local communities embodying traditional
    http://www.academicinfo.net/anthcultural.html
    Academic Info
    Cultural Anthropology - Social Anthropology - Directory of Online Resources

    Home
    Search Index Contact ... Anthropology Cultural Huge Savings on Scholarly and General Books at our Bookstore *See also Women's Studies International African Centered Rites of Passage
    By the Mawasi Company African Voices
    "African Voices is a permanent exhibition that examines the diversity, dynamism, and global influence of Africa’s peoples and cultures over time in the realms of family, work, community, and the natural environment."
    National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Anthropology Tutorials
    Includes 16 physical (biological) anthropology and 7 cultural (social) anthropology online tutorials.
    Behavioral Sciences Dept., Palomar College Arctic Circle
    "For the purposes of this electronic circle, we have selected three themes that we feel are crucial to the future of the people, land, and waters of the Arctic and Subarctic region: natural resources, history and culture; social equity and environmental justice. In the following presentations you will find a broad range of textual materials, art, photographic exhibits, and in the future, sound and short video recordings." AusAnthrop: Anthropology and Aboriginal Australia
    "This site is dedicated to research and resources in anthropology, for academics as well as the layman. Special accent is on Aboriginal Australia, and more specifically on the Western Desert cultural bloc. However, other resources are, and future resources will be, of interest to a wider public, whether anthropologists or not."

    33. AFRICAN LUCY
    mambila masks, museums, CmedicinesD and the meaning of Sùàgà Paper presented at The culture of the peoples of Mediterranean africa, the Sahara,
    http://www.greatdreams.com/african-lucy.htm
    AFRICAN LUCY compiled by Dee Finney
    2-20-04 - DREAM - IT'S STARTING - I was in Wisconsin, near Eau Claire. I went to visit my mother-in-law Lucy B. at her farmhouse. We were having a nice chat and then she told me that five of her sons had spun themselves to death to commit suicide the week before. There were no funerals for them because it was a sin to commit suicide. I thought that was atrocious. I went out for a walk and when I came back, the house was full of people who were all standing around crying. I was really puzzled, so I started asking people why everyone was crying. Nobody would tell me and that was making me angry. Finally I saw a priest standing in the midst of the crowd and he had tears in his eyes too. I said "Why is everyone standing around like somebody died? He didn't answer either, but more or less looked towards the other room. So I looked into the other room and there was my mother-in-law laying on her back with her eyes closed on top of the dining room table. People were sitting and standing around her seemingly dead body.

    34. MOTHERLAND NIGERIA: PEOPLES (by Boomie O.)
    People and Culture, in Nigeria. mambila, mambila Info Art Life in africa mambila Ethnologue Nigeria. Mandara (Wandala), Mandara Prayer profile
    http://www.motherlandnigeria.com/people.html
    PEOPLES
    SITE AWARDS

    NIGERIAN ORGANIZATIONS

    SEND FREE WEBCARD

    IMMIGRATION
    ...
    SCAM INFORMATION

    TABLE OF CONTENTS
    INTRO

    THE GEOGRAPHY
  • LOCATION
  • MAP
  • RIVERS

  • PATRIOTIC STUFF
  • FLAG
  • COAT OF ARMS
  • NATIONAL ANTHEM
  • NATIONAL PLEDGE
  • MOTTO
    PEOPLES
  • POPULATION
  • RELIGION -CHRISTIANITY -ISLAM -TRADITIONAL -INFLUENCE
  • ETHNIC GROUPS -YORUBA -IBO (or IGBO) -OTHERS
  • LANGUAGES -YORUBA ALPHABET -HAUSA ALPHABET -LINKS TO OTHERS
  • LANGUAGE RESOURCES -GENERAL RESOURCES -YORUBA RESOURCES -IBO RESOURCES -HAUSA RESOURCES -OTHERS MORE ON LANGUAGES -NUMBERS -PEOPLE -BODY PARTS -HOUSE PARTS -PLACES -OTHER WORDS ADDITIONAL LANGUAGES
  • YORUBA NAMES -THE NAMING CEREMONY -COMMON PARTS -CIRCUMSTANTIAL NAMES
  • IGBO NAMES
  • HAUSA NAMES
  • LINKS ON NAMES
  • THE WEDDING
  • MARRIAGE TIDBITS
  • FAMILY TIDBITS
  • OTHER SOURCES FOODS AND DRINKS
  • INTRO
  • SOME MEALS
  • SOME DRINKS RECIPES
  • RECIPES
  • LINKS
  • BUYING (ingredients and food)
  • DINING (restaurants) HEALTHCARE
  • TRADITIONAL HEALTH
  • CURRENT HEALTH POLICY
  • INFO FOR TRAVELERS
  • OTHER LINKS
  • HEALTH ORGANIZATIONS EDUCATION
  • SCHOOL LANGUAGES
  • SCHOOL YEAR
  • SCHOOL LEVELS
  • SCHOOL ATTIRE
  • SCHOOL TRANSPORTATION
  • SCHOOL LINKS HOLIDAYS FESTIVALS ATTIRE TRANSPORTATION
  • AIR
  • LAND
  • WATER SPORTS
  • SPORTS PLAYED
  • SPORTS HISTORY
  • RECORDS
  • SPORTS ASSOCIATIONS
  • SITES ON SPORTS THE ARTS
  • ART
  • LITERATURE
  • MEDIA -RADIO -TELEVISION -INTERNET
  • JUJU MUSIC
  • FUJI MUSIC
  • AFRO-BEAT MUSIC
  • OTHER MUSIC TYPES
  • OTHER SITES WITH SAMPLES
  • 35. Pastoralism In The New Millennium
    Contemporary nomadic and pastoral peoples africa and Latin America. The indigenous livestock of eastern and southern africa. Technical Communication No
    http://www.fao.org/DOCREP/005/Y2647E/y2647e18.htm
    Bibliography
    Abbink, J. 1993. Ethnic conflict in the "tribal zone": the Dizi and Suri in southern Ethiopia. Journal of Modern African Studies Abu-Rabia, A. The Negev Bedouin and livestock rearing. Oxford, UK, Berg. Adams, M. When is ecosystem change land degradation? Comments on "land degradation and grazing in the Kalahari" (paper 38c) by Dougill and Cox. Network Paper No. 39e. London, Overseas Development Institute. 1979. The indigenous sheep of Nigeria. World Review of Animal Production, Agrawal, A. The grass is greener on the other side: a study of the Raikas, migrant pastoralists of Rajasthan . London, IIED. 35 pp. Agrawal, A. Greener pastures: politics, markets, and community among a migrant pastoral people . Durham, North Carolina, USA and London, Duke University Press. Ahmed, A.S. Pukthun economy and society: traditional structures and economic development in a tribal society . London, Routledge and Kegan Paul. Ahrens, J.D. Cessation of livestock exports severely affects the pastoralist economy of Somali region . Unpublished report to UNDP Emergencies Unit. Akabwai, D.

    36. Integrating Crops And Livestock In West Africa
    Some peoples whose ancestors were cultivators often move to other professions antiquity of indigenous agricultural production systems in West africa,
    http://www.fao.org/DOCREP/004/X6543E/X6543E03.htm
    CHAPTER III
    THE PROGRESSION FROM ARABLE CROPPING TO
    INTEGRATED CROP AND LIVESTOCK PRODUCTION
    Current Agricultural Production Systems in West Africa
    The existing agricultural or farming systems in different ecological zones of West Africa are designed to produce subsistence food, cash sales and materials for local or industrial use. There is no generally accepted classification of farming systems in tropical Africa, but for convenience a classification which is based on intensity of cultivation and/or animal rearing is presented in Table 11. The various production systems are grouped under (i) traditional and transitional systems, and (ii) modern systems and their local adaptations. Traditional and Transitional Agricultural Systems In classical shifting cultivation, the homestead of the farmer is relocated near the cultivated fields after each cultivation phase. In practice the situation varies from where the farmer may never return to the same piece of land to situations where cultivation is repeated on the same plots. This cultivation system is ecologically viable in frontier situations where population density is low and fallow periods are long enough to restore soil fertility. Shifting cultivation in the classical sense has all but disappeared in West Africa and Morgan (1980) reported it to be restricted to parts of Ivory Coast and small areas between Nigeria and Cameroon (Figure 10). Nomadic herding is the extensive animal rearing counterpart of shifting cultivation in the savannah and more arid areas is discussed separately.

    37. Africa Direct-Ethnographic Art, Trade Beads, Masks, Carvings
    Neck has indigenous repair of a crack, and head has sustained old mambila medicinemale figure on custom baseOLD European collection $350.00. Senufo People.
    http://www.africadirect.com/ccproducts2.php?category=11&pagenum=15&start=420&aff

    38. Anthropology Internet Page
    indigenous peoples Linguistic Anthropology, Physical Anthropology Collates andconnects research focused on the mambila people of the NigeriaCameroon
    http://wwwsju.stjohns.edu/library/staugustine/anthropo.html
    Anthropology Databases: Journal Storage (JSTOR) Contents Anthropology Resources General
    Archaeology

    Ethnomusicology

    Indigenous Peoples
    ...
    Links to Other Libraries
    Visits to this page since 6/25/01:
    FastCounter by bCentral
    Compiled by: Jay Bernstein, Ph.D. Related Areas: Biological Sciences e-Books/e-Texts Environmental Studies Geography and Earth Sciences ... Theology and Religious Studies Anthropology Resources General American Anthropological Association Homepage
    News; announcements of job openings and meetings; information about minority issues, ethics, and government affairs; and resources. Ancient MesoAmerican Civilizations
    Primary groups covered here are the Mayan, Mixtec, Zapotec, and Aztec. (University of Minnesota) ANTHAP: The Applied Anthropology Computer Network
    Resources for anthropologists as professional consultants to industry, government, and education. Includes working papers, guidelines, FAQ, discussion channels, etc. Anthropological Index Online
    Searchable index to current periodicals in the Museum of Mankind Library (incorporating the former Royal Anthropological Institute Library). Anthropology in the News
    Collection of news reports on anthropological issues.

    39. Colonial History Of Africa
    African indigenous Knowledge Systems Dr. Gloria Emeagwali, Professor of in the mambila people of the NigeriaCameroon borderland and their neighbours.
    http://www.empereur.com/Africa/history/hiscolonial.html
    Welcome to Africa
    Colonial History of Africa Adam Matthew Publications
    Microfilm publisher. Sells 19th and 20th century journals and archival collections for African studies and other areas. Has a search engine. Search OCLC's World Catalog and/or RLIN to locate libraries with holdings of these microforms. http://www.adam-matthew-publications.co.uk/
    Examples -
    Aequatoria Archives Research Project
    Based at the Research Center of the International Pragmatics Association, University of Antwerp, and works with the Centre Æquatoria , Mbandaka, Congo (DRC). "Its goal is to make extensively annotated editions as well as systematic interpretive analyses of documents from the archives of the Centre Æquatoria — in particular those documents that are relevant to the historiographic study of linguistics and ethnology in colonial times ." The Archives have, on microfiche, the proceedings of the Conférence Nationale Souveraine. The

    40. Thomson Nelson - Cultural Anthropology: 1st Canadian Edition
    on ancestor worship in africa, commentary, and case material on the mambila . NativeWeb contains information and links relating to indigenous people
    http://www.haviland.nelson.com/links.html
    browserdetect('highered') About Us Contact Us Customer Support Site Map ... Rep Locator Higher Education Instructors
    Students

    Bookstores
    Authors ... Cultural Anthropology 1st Edition toTitleCase('Web Links')
    Web Links
    Chapter 1: The Nature of Anthropology
    Chapter 2: The Nature of Culture

    Chapter 3: The Beginnings of Human Culture

    Chapter 4: Language and Communication
    ...
    Chapter 16: Anthropology and the Future
    Chapter 1: The Nature of Anthropology
  • To find web sites relating to anthropology , your first stop should be the World Wide Web Virtual Library (WWW VL) for Anthropology. This site includes archaeology as well, but another comprehensive guide is the WWW VL for Archaeology (also known as ArchNet). Both sites are huge with links to hundreds of pages arranged by subject or geographically.
    Another good index is Anthropology Resources on the Internet , originally started by Allen Lutins, but now maintained by Bernard Clist. He also includes web sites, usenet news groups and other Internet resources.
    About.com has guides who collect useful web sites and provide reviews and commentary about them. Alexander Christensen is your guide at
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