Bøger af Mbeleck Mandenge
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368,95 kr. In ¿Contexts and choices: Tuareg begging in west African cities,¿ our focus is on migrant Tuareg people who are in alms soliciting in cities of West Africa, away from their own natural spaces. The question we sought an answer to, was whether Tuareg begging, in the manner in which it is done, implicitly or otherwise, draws from their erstwhile nomadic life, history and identity. For individuals, and for the group, one may hypothesize on how the decision to become beggars was made, on whether there is a folk lore into which they may have been socialized towards begging in the specific way they do it. We posit that, challenges of the climate, wider relations with other inhabitants of the Sahel and the Sahara, the way the Tuareg people have always lived in terms of social order and organization, informed their decision to resort to begging as their sole means of livelihood, and their specific way of begging, when they moved away from their natural spaces.
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- 368,95 kr.
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337,95 kr. Among the Basaa people, the term ¿¿yandom¿ is a reciprocal term of address for offspring on the one hand, and members of their mother¿s patriclan on the other. A ¿yandom is an offspring of a sister in marriage. ¿Bä¿yandom¿ (plural) designates the entire clan of mother¿s origin. The term ¿¿yandom ni bä¿yandom¿ expresses a specifiable set of attitudes in the relations among these two categories of individuals, and claims of rights in one another.Social anthropologists have examined these relations under various rubrics namely, ¿the mother right,¿ ¿the mother¿s brother,¿ ¿the sister¿s son,¿ ¿the daughter¿s child,¿ and ¿avuncular relationships.¿ We retain the term, ¿avuncular relationships.¿ The Basaa term ¿¿yandom ni bä¿yandom¿ would be the corresponding term. In this study, we examine avuncular relationships in the purview of the Basaa ideology of descent.
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- 337,95 kr.
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- Bog
- 337,95 kr.
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268,95 kr. - Bog
- 268,95 kr.