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Articles 114001 - 114030 of 115539
Full-Text Articles in Social and Behavioral Sciences
Socialization Of Children, Linda Davis
Socialization Of Children, Linda Davis
Nebraska Anthropologist
The children of a culture represent its greatest asset and responsibility. They insure the survival of a culture if its members can accomplish the formidable task of socialization. Americans are acutely aware of this responsibility. This concern is reflected in the tremendous amount of literature about children. For this reason, I used a familiar type of American literature, the comic strip, for an analysis of socialization in the United States. I chose to study "Dennis the Menace" and Peanuts" because they deal specifically with children from a white, middle class neighborhood.
Socialization, as defined by Hartley and Hartley (In HSU …
The Relationship Of Economy To Community, Kathy Long Holland
The Relationship Of Economy To Community, Kathy Long Holland
Nebraska Anthropologist
The value system of a society defines and grades the ends actors seek. The ends sought in the economic sphere must be consonant with, or complementary to, goals in other spheres. Economic activity derives its meaning from the norms of the society, and people engage in economic activity for rewards often extrinsic to the economy itself. In any community (society) the norms and values used to define a resource, a commodity, control over certain goods and services, the distributive process, and standards of economic behavior are norms governing most social interaction. The economy is not so structurally differentiated that one …
Book Review: The Dynamics Of Stylistic Change In Arikara Ceramics By James Deetz., Craig Johnson
Book Review: The Dynamics Of Stylistic Change In Arikara Ceramics By James Deetz., Craig Johnson
Nebraska Anthropologist
In his conclusion, Deetz attempts. to, establish a link between the changes in residence and ceramic patterning in a more systematic way. He points out that, there can be three possible relationships between the two. First, there is no relationship between changes in social organization and ceramics. This denies the relationship between social structure and ceramic design in general. If true, other examples of this articulation would not be found in archaeological contexts. But there are two cases which Deetz cites to refute this hypothesis. One is the similarity of his Lower Loup sample and component C pottery at Medicine …
The Joking Relationship In An Urban Voluntary Association, Cristy Stevens
The Joking Relationship In An Urban Voluntary Association, Cristy Stevens
Nebraska Anthropologist
The Miainstreet club is a small voluntary association located in a small Midwestern city. It is a formally-chartered corporation and part of a large international federation of clubs designed to provide economic and social services to the communities in which they are located. It is characterized by membership criteria and a stated purpose of service to community. The Mainstreet club presently lists twenty-four active members, a small size in comparison with other similar service clubs in the city where it is located. In the course of my research, I became aware of a rather formalized pattern of joking and banter …
Opportunities For Museum Research In Anthropology: Are They Really Dead Or Were They Only Sleeping?, Arthur H. Wolf
Opportunities For Museum Research In Anthropology: Are They Really Dead Or Were They Only Sleeping?, Arthur H. Wolf
Nebraska Anthropologist
The decline of anthropological research in museums has been in part attributed to the changing goals of anthropology and the increase in the numbers of university anthropology departments. In recent years many suggestions for increasing museum research potentials have been put forward by Anthropologists interested in its resurgence. An increasing cooperation between museums and university departments is seen as a necessary condition for this resurgence and could lead to more programs which include and train museum anthropologists.
Site Abandonment And The Archaeological Record: An Empirical Case For Anticipated Return, Charles M. Baker
Site Abandonment And The Archaeological Record: An Empirical Case For Anticipated Return, Charles M. Baker
Journal of the Arkansas Academy of Science
Cultural formation processes of abandonment are examined in light of recently discovered hammerstone caches at an aboriginal novaculite quarry site. De facto refuse formation is shown to vary according to the conditions under which site abandonment took place.
An Archaeological Survey Of P.H. Lewis Property, Skidaway Island, Chatham County, Georgia, Chester B. Depratter
An Archaeological Survey Of P.H. Lewis Property, Skidaway Island, Chatham County, Georgia, Chester B. Depratter
Faculty & Staff Publications
No abstract provided.
Anthropology And The Academy Of Science: The Need For A New Role, Timothy C. Klinger
Anthropology And The Academy Of Science: The Need For A New Role, Timothy C. Klinger
Journal of the Arkansas Academy of Science
Few anthropology papers were presented at the Annual Meetings of the Arkansas Academy of Science before 1968. Establishment of the Arkansas Archeological Survey in 1967 brought an influx of professional anthropologists to the state and a subsequent increase in the number of anthropology papers published. However, the growth in number of active anthropologists has created a need for more information channels within the state. The time is right for the Anthropology Section of the Academy to become a formal base for interaction and information dissemination among anthropologists.
The Primitive Hunter Culture, Pleistocene Extinction, And The Rise Of Agriculture, Vernon L. Smith
The Primitive Hunter Culture, Pleistocene Extinction, And The Rise Of Agriculture, Vernon L. Smith
Economics Faculty Articles and Research
The hypothesis that megafauna extinction some 10,000 years ago was due to "overkill" by Paleolithic hunters is examined using an economic model of a replenishable resource. The large herding animals that became extinct, such as mammoth, bison, camel, and mastodon, presented low hunting cost and high kill value. The absence of appropriation provided incentives for the wastage killing evident in some kill sites, while the slow growth, long lives, and long maturation of large animals increased their vulnerability to extinction. Free-access hunting is compared with socially optimal hunting and used to interpret the development of conservationist ethics, and controls, in …
First Families: Woodland People Of Maine And The Canadian Maritimes, Edith Favour
First Families: Woodland People Of Maine And The Canadian Maritimes, Edith Favour
Maine Collection
First Families: Woodland People of Maine and the Canadian Maritimes
by Edith Favour, with illustrations by Alice Dengler
Published and edited by the State of Maine, Department of Educational and Cultural Services, Division of Curriculum, 1975.
Sibyl 1975, Otterbein University
Folklore: A Study And Tales From The Ozarks, Sharon Hibbard
Folklore: A Study And Tales From The Ozarks, Sharon Hibbard
Honors Theses
From its inception, folktale research has had a two-pronged aim: it has been interested, on the one hand, in the nature and origins of oral narration not fixed in writing; and it has been interested in folk culture as expressed in the content and form of the folktale. These two points of view have resulted in two different kinds of research methods. One has sprung essentially from comparative literature and has been established as a new branch of that discipline; the other has developed from the French sociological and the British anthropological schools, which consider of folk tradition--to which the …
The Nature Of Archaeological Fieldwork: Implications And Limitations For Research Procedure And Organization, Mary B. Struever
The Nature Of Archaeological Fieldwork: Implications And Limitations For Research Procedure And Organization, Mary B. Struever
Master's Theses
No abstract provided.
The Nebraska Anthropologist: Volume 2 (1975) Contents, Charles D. Zeier, Cristy J. Stevens, Arthur H. Wolf, David T. Jones
The Nebraska Anthropologist: Volume 2 (1975) Contents, Charles D. Zeier, Cristy J. Stevens, Arthur H. Wolf, David T. Jones
Nebraska Anthropologist
Introduction ............... ii
Paleo-Indian Lifeways in the American Southwest; 12000 to 10,000 BP (Robert E. Warren) ............... 1
The Joking Relationship in an Urban Voluntary Association (Cristy Stevens) .......... 19
Socialization of Children ............... 25
Opportunities for Museum Research in Anthropology: Are They Really Dead or Were They Only Sleeping? (Arthur Wolf) ............... 33
The Relationship of Economy to Community (Kathy Long Holland) ............... 41
Modes of Allocation and the Acculturation (David T. Jones) ............... 47
Beware- Your Sins Will Find You Out! (Betty McCormick) ............... 51
Review of The Dynamics of Stylistic Change in Arikara Ceramics by James Deetz …
Paleo-Indian Lifeways In The American Southwest; 12,000 To 10,000 Bp, Robert E. Warren
Paleo-Indian Lifeways In The American Southwest; 12,000 To 10,000 Bp, Robert E. Warren
Nebraska Anthropologist
This paper deals with the lifeways of prehistoric populations inhabiting the North American Southwest from 12,000 to 10,000 years ago. Included is a brief delimitation and description of the Southwest area, a review of several current concepts regarding the environmental conditions in existence during the temporal span under concern, a series of brief descriptions of sites and site materials involved, and a concluding section wherein interpretation and inferences are drawn from both internal and external data. Three distinct complexes are recognized which appear to represent sequential cultural adaptations to shifting environmental conditions.
Beware - Your Sins Will Find You Out!, Betty Mccormick
Beware - Your Sins Will Find You Out!, Betty Mccormick
Nebraska Anthropologist
The village, surrounded by the seemingly infinite flatlands of central America, is an agricultural community with a population of approximately 1000 people. The town, itself, is 12 blocks square and is laid out with spacious lots and wide paved streets. The main street is on the west side of the village and is wide also, with stores lining either side of four blocks. It's an impressive town, clean, neat, new but plain. The majority of homes are 20 years old or newer and are ranch-style. The older homes are small two story-white frame houses. Yards. are well kept, neat, and …
Pvn-005-Urban-Field Notes-1975-79, Patricia Urban
Pvn-005-Urban-Field Notes-1975-79, Patricia Urban
Four Valleys Archive
No abstract provided.
Pvn-005-Urban-Field Notes-1975, Patricia Urban
Pvn-005-Urban-Field Notes-1975, Patricia Urban
Four Valleys Archive
No abstract provided.
Pvn-001-Schortman-Field Notes-1975, Edward Schortman
Pvn-001-Schortman-Field Notes-1975, Edward Schortman
Four Valleys Archive
No abstract provided.
A Family Affair: Pampangan Hukism, James P. Hardy
A Family Affair: Pampangan Hukism, James P. Hardy
Masters Theses
No abstract provided.
The Settlement And Development Of Wayne County, Utah, To 1900, Aldus Devon Chappell
The Settlement And Development Of Wayne County, Utah, To 1900, Aldus Devon Chappell
Theses and Dissertations
Although John C. Fremont had traveled through Wayne County, Utah, in the winter of 1853-54, it was not until 1874 that the first herd of cattle was introduced to Rabbit Valley. Reports soon circulated that here was a new land, conducive to the raising of livestock, and in 1876 about a dozen families entered the valley and began settlement. Families that moved into this area came from various places. Each settler came to make a new life, and came independently of the others. In 1895 the population was nearly 2,000, and by 1970 it had dropped to 1,486.
The Church …
Observation On Female Cooperation Among The Zapotecs, An Indigenous People Of Southern Mexico, J. M. Brueske
Observation On Female Cooperation Among The Zapotecs, An Indigenous People Of Southern Mexico, J. M. Brueske
Journal of the Arkansas Academy of Science
Cross-cultural study has suggested that the presence of an extradomestic market for women's produce is one precondition for the development of female solidarity groups, and that such groups seem to be antecedent to female public power and/or authority. If status is defined in these terms, then the Zapotec women of Asuncion, a village of the inland Isthmus of Tehuantepec in southern Mexico, have not attained the preconditions of public power and/or authority. The complementary nature of husband and wife in the economic sphere assures women of some domestic power, however, and women do not seem to perceive their status as …
Antiques - Objects Of Lateral Cycling?, Cheryl Claassen
Antiques - Objects Of Lateral Cycling?, Cheryl Claassen
Journal of the Arkansas Academy of Science
After a brief discussion of the various ways the use-life of an object can be prolonged, an additional method is illustrated, that of adjacent cycling, Antiques are used as examples. The role of antiques as status symbols is suggested to be the reason for their prolonged use-life. The archaeological implications of adjacent cycling also are discussed.
Mississippian Communities In The St. Francis Basin: A Central Place Model, Timothy C. Klinger
Mississippian Communities In The St. Francis Basin: A Central Place Model, Timothy C. Klinger
Journal of the Arkansas Academy of Science
The development of Mississippian settlement models for northeast Arkansas is reviewed. It is argued that a five-tier central place hierarchy best accounts for the variability currently known to exist among Mississippian communities in the St. Francis basin.
Ticcih Congress 1973, The International Committee For The Conservation Of The Industrial Heritage
Ticcih Congress 1973, The International Committee For The Conservation Of The Industrial Heritage
The International Committee for the Conservation of the Industrial Heritage
No abstract provided.
Ua12/2/78 Newsletter, Kappa Sigma
Ua12/2/78 Newsletter, Kappa Sigma
Student Organizations
Newsletter created by and about Kappa Sigma fraternity in 1974.
Nepal Studies Association Newsletter, Issue 7, Nepal Studies Association, John Scholz
Nepal Studies Association Newsletter, Issue 7, Nepal Studies Association, John Scholz
Nepal Studies Association Newsletter
No abstract provided.
Palmetto Parapets: Exploratory Archeology At Fort Moultrie, South Carolina, 38ch50, Stanley South
Palmetto Parapets: Exploratory Archeology At Fort Moultrie, South Carolina, 38ch50, Stanley South
Research Manuscript Series
No abstract provided.
Palmetto Parapets: Exploratory Archeology At Fort Moultrie, South Carolina, 38chso, Stanley South
Palmetto Parapets: Exploratory Archeology At Fort Moultrie, South Carolina, 38chso, Stanley South
Anthropological Studies
No abstract provided.
Displacement Of Persons By Major Public Works: Anthropological Analysis Of Social And Cultural Benefits And Costs From Stream Control Measures--Phase 5, Philip Drucker, Charles Robert Smith, Edward B. Reeves
Displacement Of Persons By Major Public Works: Anthropological Analysis Of Social And Cultural Benefits And Costs From Stream Control Measures--Phase 5, Philip Drucker, Charles Robert Smith, Edward B. Reeves
KWRRI Research Reports
This study is concerned with social change and social impact of a major public works project on the human population required to relocate the persons being forced to sell to the Federal Government or turn over through condemnation proceedings homes, farms, and/or businesses to facilitate completion of a Federally authorized stream control measure. It is intended to test the utility of anthropological method and concept in evaluating and explicating sociocultural impact, and in addition to check hypotheses concerning importance of impact on social and economic areas of culture of the persons to be displaced, on their emigration patterns, and their …