KAFAINA: FEMALE WEALTH AND POWER IN CHUAVE, PAPUA NEW GUINEA
1986; Wiley; Volume: 57; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1002/j.1834-4461.1986.tb02168.x
ISSN1834-4461
Autores Tópico(s)Pacific and Southeast Asian Studies
ResumoOceaniaVolume 57, Issue 1 p. 4-21 Article KAFAINA: FEMALE WEALTH AND POWER IN CHUAVE, PAPUA NEW GUINEA Wayne Warry, Wayne Warry Ontario Native Council on JusticeSearch for more papers by this author Wayne Warry, Wayne Warry Ontario Native Council on JusticeSearch for more papers by this author First published: September 1986 https://doi.org/10.1002/j.1834-4461.1986.tb02168.xCitations: 7AboutPDF ToolsRequest permissionExport citationAdd to favoritesTrack citation ShareShare Give accessShare full text accessShare full-text accessPlease review our Terms and Conditions of Use and check box below to share full-text version of article.I have read and accept the Wiley Online Library Terms and Conditions of UseShareable LinkUse the link below to share a full-text version of this article with your friends and colleagues. Learn more.Copy URL References Administration Reports. 1970. Simbu Provincial Local Government Office, File 42-35-2. Administration Reports. 1966–1967. Chimbu Patrol Report No. 4. Administration Reports. 1968–1969. Chimbu Patrol Report No. 2. Administration Reports. 1968–1969. Chimbu Patrol Report No. 8. Administration Reports. 1973. Chimbu Patrol Report No. 13. Anggo, D. 1975. Kafaina: group action by women in Chuave. Yagl-Ambu 2: 207– 223. Bergmann, W. 1971–72. The Kamanuku: the Culture of the Chimbu Tribes. Vols. I–IV. Australia: J.F.W. Bergmann. Brown, P. 1977. Kumo Witchcraft at Mintima, Chimbu Province, Papua New Guinea. Oceania Vol. 48: 27– 29. Feil, D.K. 1978. Women and Men in the Enga Tee. American Ethnologist 5: 263– 279. Hide, R. 1980. Aspects of Pig Production and Use in colonial Sinasina. PhD thesis. Columbia University. Howlett, D., Hide, R., Young, E., with Arba, J. Bt H., and Kaman, B. 1976. Chimbu Issues in Development Monograph No. 4, Development Studies Centre, Australian National University. Munster, J. 1975. A band of hope, Wok Meri. Point 2: 132– 146. Newman, P.L. 1965. Knowing the Gurururumba. New York: Holt, Rhinehart and Winston. Pascoe, N. 1975. ‘Women power’ hits the Highlands. Papua New Guinea Post Courier July 25, p. 8. Read, K.E. 1952. Nama Cult Of The Central Highlands, New Guinea. Oceania 23: 1– 25. Reay, M. 1975. Politics, development and women in the rural Highlands. Administration for Development 5: 4– 12. Reay, M. 1976. The Politics of a Witch-Killing. Oceania 47: 1– 19. Reay, M. 1975–76. When A Group Of Men Takes A Husband. Anthropological Forum 4: 77– 96. Sexton, L. 1980. From Pigs and Pearlshells to Coffee and Cash: Socioeconomic Change and Sex Roles in the Daulo Region, Papua New Guinea. PhD thesis, University of Michigan. Sexton, L 1982. Wok Meri: A Women's Savings and Exchange System in Highlands Papua New Guinea. Oceania 52: 167– 198. Salisbury, R.F. 1958. An ‘Indigenous’ New Guinea Cult. Kroeber Anthropological Papers 18: 67– 78. Salisbury, R.F. 1965. The Siane of the Eastern Highlands. In: P. Lawrence and M.J. Meggitt (eds) Gods, Ghosts, and Men in Melanesia. Melbourne: Oxford University Press. Strathern, Marilyn. 1972. Women in Between. London: Seminar Press. Warry, W. 1985. Politics of a new order: the Kafaina movement. Paper In Women and Politics in Papua New Guinea. Australian National University. Warry, W. 1985. ‘Politics of a New Order’, Women and Politics in Papua New Guinea Working Paper Number 6. Canberra: Department of Political and Social Change, The Australian National University, 26–38. Citing Literature Volume57, Issue1September 1986Pages 4-21 ReferencesRelatedInformation
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