Matches in Harvard for { <http://id.lib.harvard.edu/aleph/002458891/catalog> ?p ?o. }
Showing items 1 to 29 of
29
with 100 items per page.
- catalog abstract "In this book the author seeks to understand the deep and subtle frameworks of meaning in the disparate experiences of, on the one hand, migrant Peruvian highlanders settled in Lima and, on the other, the village community in the jungle region of Chanchamayo they have left. Focusing on traditional conceptions of separation and connectedness (frequent themes expressed in the thoughts and actions of migrants from the village of Matapuquio), this Andean ethnography addresses questions of general interest concerning individual identity in collectivities undergoing transformation.".
- catalog contributor b3546221.
- catalog created "c1994.".
- catalog date "1994".
- catalog date "c1994.".
- catalog dateCopyrighted "c1994.".
- catalog description "Ch. 1. Essential beginnings: A cultural map of parts and a whole. Peru's three regions. Matapuquio. The soup. Theory and method. The problem with "migration" -- Ch. 2. Leave-taking. Boundaries and boundary-breaking. Travel documents. Letters. The Apachakui -- commissions. Pledging the land. The Kachapari -- farewell feast. Illos and illaqkuna. Making the contract for Chanchamayo -- Ch. 3. Arrival as final boundary. Being received. Becoming accustomed -- a kind of knowledge. Learning new ways of work -- Ch. 4. Making the whole: Matapuquio as object. Lima settlements. Voluntary clubs. Sending gifts: a kind of tribute. Objectifying boundaries: spatial aspects of the whole. Division and the sense of separateness -- Ch. 5. The Eastern Forest and the Dilemma of Savagery. The jungle as antisocial. Trees. Bondage. Settlers. Isolation and gender relations -- Ch. 6. The here and there; transforming the spatial framework of the world. Quechua space/time. The village vista.".
- catalog description "In this book the author seeks to understand the deep and subtle frameworks of meaning in the disparate experiences of, on the one hand, migrant Peruvian highlanders settled in Lima and, on the other, the village community in the jungle region of Chanchamayo they have left. Focusing on traditional conceptions of separation and connectedness (frequent themes expressed in the thoughts and actions of migrants from the village of Matapuquio), this Andean ethnography addresses questions of general interest concerning individual identity in collectivities undergoing transformation.".
- catalog description "Includes bibliographical references (p. [272]-290) and index.".
- catalog extent "300 p., [8] p. of plates :".
- catalog hasFormat "Lives together--worlds apart.".
- catalog identifier "8200219577".
- catalog isFormatOf "Lives together--worlds apart.".
- catalog isPartOf "Oslo studies in social anthropology".
- catalog issued "1994".
- catalog issued "c1994.".
- catalog language "eng".
- catalog publisher "Oslo, Norway : Scandinavian University Press ; New York : Oxford University Press,".
- catalog relation "Lives together--worlds apart.".
- catalog subject "305.8983085 20".
- catalog subject "980.004/983 20".
- catalog subject "Ethnic groups Social life".
- catalog subject "F2230.2.K4 S58 1994".
- catalog subject "Indians of South America Social life and customs.".
- catalog subject "Peru".
- catalog subject "Quechua Indians Colonization.".
- catalog tableOfContents "Ch. 1. Essential beginnings: A cultural map of parts and a whole. Peru's three regions. Matapuquio. The soup. Theory and method. The problem with "migration" -- Ch. 2. Leave-taking. Boundaries and boundary-breaking. Travel documents. Letters. The Apachakui -- commissions. Pledging the land. The Kachapari -- farewell feast. Illos and illaqkuna. Making the contract for Chanchamayo -- Ch. 3. Arrival as final boundary. Being received. Becoming accustomed -- a kind of knowledge. Learning new ways of work -- Ch. 4. Making the whole: Matapuquio as object. Lima settlements. Voluntary clubs. Sending gifts: a kind of tribute. Objectifying boundaries: spatial aspects of the whole. Division and the sense of separateness -- Ch. 5. The Eastern Forest and the Dilemma of Savagery. The jungle as antisocial. Trees. Bondage. Settlers. Isolation and gender relations -- Ch. 6. The here and there; transforming the spatial framework of the world. Quechua space/time. The village vista.".
- catalog title "Lives together--worlds apart : Quechua colonization in jungle and city / Sarah Lund Skar.".
- catalog type "text".