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This provocative selection of the late Darrell A Posey's work concentrates on the dispersal and threatened extinction of the famous Brazilian indigenous people, the Kayap'o.
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This provocative selection of the late Darrell A Posey's work concentrates on the dispersal and threatened extinction of the famous Brazilian indigenous people, the Kayap'o.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Studies in Environmental Anthropology
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Seitenzahl: 304
- Erscheinungstermin: 4. Dezember 2015
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 16mm
- Gewicht: 472g
- ISBN-13: 9780415753784
- ISBN-10: 0415753783
- Artikelnr.: 39700897
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Books on Demand GmbH
- In de Tarpen 42
- 22848 Norderstedt
- info@bod.de
- 040 53433511
- Studies in Environmental Anthropology
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Seitenzahl: 304
- Erscheinungstermin: 4. Dezember 2015
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 16mm
- Gewicht: 472g
- ISBN-13: 9780415753784
- ISBN-10: 0415753783
- Artikelnr.: 39700897
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Books on Demand GmbH
- In de Tarpen 42
- 22848 Norderstedt
- info@bod.de
- 040 53433511
Darrell A. Posey died in March 2001 after a long and distinguished career in anthropology and ecology. Edited by Kristina Plenderleith.
PART I Kayapó history and culture 1 The science of the Mebêngôkre 2 Contact
before contact: typology of post-Colombian interaction with the Northern
Kayapó of the Amazon 3 Environmental and social implications of pre- and
post-contact situations on Brazilian Indians 4 Time, space, and the
interface of divergent cultures: the Kayapó Indians of the Amazon face the
future 5 The Kayapó origin of night 6 The journey to become a shaman: a
narrative of sacred transition of the Kayapó Indians of Brazil PART II
Ethnobiology and the Kayapó Project 7 Report from Gorotire: will Kayapó
traditions survive? 8 Indigenous knowledge and development: an ideological
bridge to the future 9 Wasps, warriors and fearless men: ethnoentomology of
the Kayapó Indians of Central Brazil 10 Hierarchy and utility in a folk
biological taxonomic system: patterns in classification of arthropods by
the Kayapó Indians of Brazil 11 Additional notes on the classification and
knowledge of stingless bees (Meliponinae, Apidae, Hymenoptera) by the
Kayapó Indians of Gorotire, Pará, Brazil 12 Keeping of stingless bees by
the Kayapó Indians of Brazil 13 Ethnopharmacological search for antiviral
compounds: treatment of gastrointestinal disorders by Kayapó medical
specialists 14 Use of contraceptive and related plants by the Kayapó
Indians (Brazil) PART III Kayapó land management 15 Preliminary results on
soil management techniques of the Kayapó Indians 16 Indigenous soil
management in the Latin American tropics: some implications of
ethnopedology for the Amazon Basin 17 The keepers of the forest 18
Indigenous management of tropical forest ecosystems: the case of the Kayapó
Indians of the Brazilian Amazon 19 The continuum of Kayapó resource
management PART IV Continuing adaptation by the Kayapó 20 From warclubs to
words 21 The Kayapó Indian protests against Amazonian dams: successes,
alliances, and unending battles
before contact: typology of post-Colombian interaction with the Northern
Kayapó of the Amazon 3 Environmental and social implications of pre- and
post-contact situations on Brazilian Indians 4 Time, space, and the
interface of divergent cultures: the Kayapó Indians of the Amazon face the
future 5 The Kayapó origin of night 6 The journey to become a shaman: a
narrative of sacred transition of the Kayapó Indians of Brazil PART II
Ethnobiology and the Kayapó Project 7 Report from Gorotire: will Kayapó
traditions survive? 8 Indigenous knowledge and development: an ideological
bridge to the future 9 Wasps, warriors and fearless men: ethnoentomology of
the Kayapó Indians of Central Brazil 10 Hierarchy and utility in a folk
biological taxonomic system: patterns in classification of arthropods by
the Kayapó Indians of Brazil 11 Additional notes on the classification and
knowledge of stingless bees (Meliponinae, Apidae, Hymenoptera) by the
Kayapó Indians of Gorotire, Pará, Brazil 12 Keeping of stingless bees by
the Kayapó Indians of Brazil 13 Ethnopharmacological search for antiviral
compounds: treatment of gastrointestinal disorders by Kayapó medical
specialists 14 Use of contraceptive and related plants by the Kayapó
Indians (Brazil) PART III Kayapó land management 15 Preliminary results on
soil management techniques of the Kayapó Indians 16 Indigenous soil
management in the Latin American tropics: some implications of
ethnopedology for the Amazon Basin 17 The keepers of the forest 18
Indigenous management of tropical forest ecosystems: the case of the Kayapó
Indians of the Brazilian Amazon 19 The continuum of Kayapó resource
management PART IV Continuing adaptation by the Kayapó 20 From warclubs to
words 21 The Kayapó Indian protests against Amazonian dams: successes,
alliances, and unending battles
PART I Kayapó history and culture 1 The science of the Mebêngôkre 2 Contact
before contact: typology of post-Colombian interaction with the Northern
Kayapó of the Amazon 3 Environmental and social implications of pre- and
post-contact situations on Brazilian Indians 4 Time, space, and the
interface of divergent cultures: the Kayapó Indians of the Amazon face the
future 5 The Kayapó origin of night 6 The journey to become a shaman: a
narrative of sacred transition of the Kayapó Indians of Brazil PART II
Ethnobiology and the Kayapó Project 7 Report from Gorotire: will Kayapó
traditions survive? 8 Indigenous knowledge and development: an ideological
bridge to the future 9 Wasps, warriors and fearless men: ethnoentomology of
the Kayapó Indians of Central Brazil 10 Hierarchy and utility in a folk
biological taxonomic system: patterns in classification of arthropods by
the Kayapó Indians of Brazil 11 Additional notes on the classification and
knowledge of stingless bees (Meliponinae, Apidae, Hymenoptera) by the
Kayapó Indians of Gorotire, Pará, Brazil 12 Keeping of stingless bees by
the Kayapó Indians of Brazil 13 Ethnopharmacological search for antiviral
compounds: treatment of gastrointestinal disorders by Kayapó medical
specialists 14 Use of contraceptive and related plants by the Kayapó
Indians (Brazil) PART III Kayapó land management 15 Preliminary results on
soil management techniques of the Kayapó Indians 16 Indigenous soil
management in the Latin American tropics: some implications of
ethnopedology for the Amazon Basin 17 The keepers of the forest 18
Indigenous management of tropical forest ecosystems: the case of the Kayapó
Indians of the Brazilian Amazon 19 The continuum of Kayapó resource
management PART IV Continuing adaptation by the Kayapó 20 From warclubs to
words 21 The Kayapó Indian protests against Amazonian dams: successes,
alliances, and unending battles
before contact: typology of post-Colombian interaction with the Northern
Kayapó of the Amazon 3 Environmental and social implications of pre- and
post-contact situations on Brazilian Indians 4 Time, space, and the
interface of divergent cultures: the Kayapó Indians of the Amazon face the
future 5 The Kayapó origin of night 6 The journey to become a shaman: a
narrative of sacred transition of the Kayapó Indians of Brazil PART II
Ethnobiology and the Kayapó Project 7 Report from Gorotire: will Kayapó
traditions survive? 8 Indigenous knowledge and development: an ideological
bridge to the future 9 Wasps, warriors and fearless men: ethnoentomology of
the Kayapó Indians of Central Brazil 10 Hierarchy and utility in a folk
biological taxonomic system: patterns in classification of arthropods by
the Kayapó Indians of Brazil 11 Additional notes on the classification and
knowledge of stingless bees (Meliponinae, Apidae, Hymenoptera) by the
Kayapó Indians of Gorotire, Pará, Brazil 12 Keeping of stingless bees by
the Kayapó Indians of Brazil 13 Ethnopharmacological search for antiviral
compounds: treatment of gastrointestinal disorders by Kayapó medical
specialists 14 Use of contraceptive and related plants by the Kayapó
Indians (Brazil) PART III Kayapó land management 15 Preliminary results on
soil management techniques of the Kayapó Indians 16 Indigenous soil
management in the Latin American tropics: some implications of
ethnopedology for the Amazon Basin 17 The keepers of the forest 18
Indigenous management of tropical forest ecosystems: the case of the Kayapó
Indians of the Brazilian Amazon 19 The continuum of Kayapó resource
management PART IV Continuing adaptation by the Kayapó 20 From warclubs to
words 21 The Kayapó Indian protests against Amazonian dams: successes,
alliances, and unending battles