Chapter
Endogenous Research and Polyocular Anthropology
pp.:
89 – 91
Jívaro Headhunters in a Headless Time
pp.:
91 – 139
Opposition as a Component of Ethnic Self-Consciousness
pp.:
139 – 151
Ethnicity and the Family in the Soviet Union
pp.:
151 – 159
New Developments in Family Life in the Countryside in Belorussia
pp.:
159 – 169
Interethnic Families in the National Republics in the Middle Reaches of the Volga
pp.:
169 – 177
Trends in Marriages Between Negroes and Whites in Chicago
pp.:
177 – 185
Changing Patterns of Ethnic Identity and Prestige in East Africa
pp.:
185 – 223
SECTION THREE: CONTACT, ACCULTURATION, AND BOUNDARY MAINTENANCE
pp.:
223 – 233
Region, Religion, and Language: Parameters of Identity in the Process of Acculturation
pp.:
233 – 235
Contrasting Value Orientation of Peasant Communities and its Persistence into Modernization
pp.:
235 – 245
Nigeria’s 250 Ethnic Groups: Realities and Assumptions
pp.:
245 – 255
The Chinese Community in Canada before 1947 and Some Recent Developments
pp.:
255 – 297
The Tuli-Chinese Balk Line: Minimal Group Self-Identity
pp.:
297 – 317
Jewish Communities as Cultural Units
pp.:
317 – 343
Rājasthān and Rājasthāni: Switching over from Hindī to Rānī
pp.:
343 – 355
When Brokers Go Broke: Implications of Role Failure in Cultural Brokerage
pp.:
355 – 367
SECTION FOUR: ETHNICITY AND THE FUTURE
pp.:
367 – 389
Class and Ethnic Consciousness: The Case of the Mapuche Indians of Chile
pp.:
389 – 391
Problems of Identifying Ethnic Processes
pp.:
391 – 405
The Peculiarities of Ethnonational Development in the Polyethnic Liberated Countries
pp.:
405 – 413
Contemporary Ethnic Processes in Siberia
pp.:
413 – 427
Socialism and Ethnic Features of Nations: The Example of the Peoples of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics
pp.:
427 – 437
The Development of Interethnic Relations in the Ukraine
pp.:
437 – 445
Biographical Notes
pp.:
445 – 455
Index of Names
pp.:
455 – 461
Index of Subjects
pp.:
461 – 465