22 research outputs found
Debates sobre matrimonios interétnicos : ¿asimilación o integración? La perspectiva turca
Este artículo abre un nuevo debate sobre los matrimonios interétnicos entre kurdos y turcos en Turquía. Trata sobre la transformación de la institución del matrimonio en un tema político tras la fundación de la república, y clasifica estos matrimonios según su entorno sociocultural. Para poder entender este fenómeno se inicia una investigación sociológica sobre los procesos de asimilación, integración e hibridación implicados en el matrimonio entre kurdos y turcos. Se analiza el idioma hablado como instrumento de continuidad cultural y como vector de transferencia a las generaciones futuras de las instituciones culturales en una sociedad patriarcal tradicional. Además, se establece una conexión entre asimilación, integración e hibridación, y los matrimonios interétnicos y el idioma.This paper opens a new debate on ethnic intermarriage between Kurdish and Turkish people in Turkey. It addresses how the institution of marriage has become a political subject in the wake of the foundation of the republic and classifies these marriages according to their social and cultural environment. In order to understand the phenomenon, it opens a sociological investigation into the assimilation, integration and hybridisation processes involved in intermarriage between Kurdish and Turkish people. This paper looks at spoken language as an instrument of cultural continuity and a vector for the transfer of cultural institutions to future generations within a traditional-patriarchal society. It establishes a connection between the subjects of assimilation, integration and hybridisation with those of intermarriage and language
Debates on inter-ethnic marriages : assimilation or integration? The Turkish perspective
This paper opens a new debate on ethnic intermarriage between Kurdish and Turkish people in Turkey. It addresses how the institution of marriage has become a political subject in the wake of the foundation of the republic and classifies these marriages according to their social and cultural environment. In order to understand the phenomenon, it opens a sociological investigation into the assimilation, integration and hybridisation processes involved in intermarriage between Kurdish and Turkish people. This paper looks at spoken language as an instrument of cultural continuity and a vector for the transfer of cultural institutions to future generations within a traditional-patriarchal society. It establishes a connection between the subjects of assimilation, integration and hybridisation with those of intermarriage and language.Este artículo abre un nuevo debate sobre los matrimonios interétnicos entre kurdos y turcos en Turquía. Trata sobre la transformación de la institución del matrimonio en un tema político tras la fundación de la república, y clasifica estos matrimonios según su entorno sociocultural. Para poder entender este fenómeno se inicia una investigación sociológica sobre los procesos de asimilación, integración e hibridación implicados en el matrimonio entre kurdos y turcos. Se analiza el idioma hablado como instrumento de continuidad cultural y como vector de transferencia a las generaciones futuras de las instituciones culturales en una sociedad patriarcal tradicional. Además, se establece una conexión entre asimilación, integración e hibridación, y los matrimonios interétnicos y el idioma
“Not as the Gentiles”: Sexual Issues at the Interface between Judaism and Its Greco-Roman World
Sexual issues played a significant role in Judaism’s engagement with its Greco-Roman world. This paper will examine that engagement from the Hellenistic Greco-Roman era to the end of the first century CE. In part, sexual issues were a key element of the demarcation between Jews and the wider community, alongside such matters as circumcision, food laws, the sabbath keeping, and idolatry. Jewish writers, such as Philo of Alexandria, made much of the alleged sexual profligacy of their Gentile contemporaries, not least in association with wild drunken parties, same-sex relations, and pederasty. Jews, including the emerging Christian movement, claimed the moral high ground. In part, however, matters of sexuality were also areas where intercultural influence was evident, such as in the shift in the Jewish tradition from polygyny to monogyny, but also in the way Jewish and Christian writers adapted the suspicion, and sometimes rejection, of the passions that were characteristic of some of the popular philosophies of their day, seeing each other as allies in their moral crusade
The Negroes of Nebraska
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Preface:
The Negroes of Nebraska, though a book arbitrarily limited as to length, nevertheless is an attempt to highlight the entire picture of Negro life in this State. It represents the efforts of several persons. If the book has achieved its intended purpose it has done so because these persons have consulted every available source in collecting and verifying the material from which it was written.
The State\u27s Negro citizens comprise, numerically, a minority group, and much of the colorful side of their story, in the absence of written records, is irretrievably lost. Yet much more that would have been lost has found permanence in this account, through the diligent research of two Negro employees of the Nebraska Writers\u27 Project, Fred D. Dixon and Albert J. Burks. The fact remains that there are gaps in the story, and because of incomplete records inaccuracies may appear in the text. If such are noted the editors will appreciate having these brought to their attention.
The editors wish to acknowledge their gratitude for valuable aid and criticism to the University. of Nebraska, the Nebraska State Historical Society, and to Raymond R. Brown and Millard F. Wood, Executive Secretaries respectively of the Urban Leagues of Omaha and Lincoln. Drawings are by Paul Gibson, Omaha Negro artist.
Sponsored by The Omaha Urban League Community Center. Written and compiled by workers of the Writers\u27 Program, Work Projects Administration in the state of Nebraska. Drawings by Paul Gibson.
OCLC Number: 123134673https://openspaces.unk.edu/spec-coll/1006/thumbnail.jp
The Eastern Mail (Vol. 07, No. 19): November 24, 1853
Continues The Waterville Union (April-July 1847).Published weekly, July 19, 1847-Aug. 28, 1863.Publishers: E. Maxham, 1847-1849; Maxham & Wing, 1849-1863. Independent, 1847-1856; Republican, 1856-1863.Editors: E. Maxham & D.R. Wing, 1849-1863.Continued by The Waterville Mail (September 1863-May 1906). See Gerould, W.G.: American newspapers, 1821-1836; Whittemore, E.C.: Centennial history of Waterville.Colby Libraries catalog record (CBBcat): http://cbbcat.net/record=b1228542~S19WorldCat record (OCLC): http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/1048691
A survey of the Seminole freedmen
Thesis (M.A.)--University of Oklahoma, 1951.Includes bibliographical references (leaves 147-148
