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Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Edward H. "Ned" Spicer (1906-1983) was an American anthropologist who specialized in studying American Indian tribes of the American Southwest as a participant-observer. Having much of his career at the University of Arizona, he had a lifelong conviction that "one goes to ordinary people for cultural essentials," and he learned about the native tribes by living among them, and becoming part of their lives, not merely visiting them to elicit information by questions.…mehr

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Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Edward H. "Ned" Spicer (1906-1983) was an American anthropologist who specialized in studying American Indian tribes of the American Southwest as a participant-observer. Having much of his career at the University of Arizona, he had a lifelong conviction that "one goes to ordinary people for cultural essentials," and he learned about the native tribes by living among them, and becoming part of their lives, not merely visiting them to elicit information by questions. Edward Spicer, called Ned, was born in 1906 in Spicer joined the University of Arizona faculty in 1946. He was part of a movement based on participant observation as the way to gain better comprehension of a people and their culture, and to gain data by living closely with a people. He specialized with the American Indians of the Southwest.