Unlike many ethnographers of Papua New Guinea societies who worked in Pidgin, Margaret worked in the vernacular. |
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This indicates a shift of emphasis among ethnographers as to what folk art meant. |
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Many ethnographers have noted the importance of food and drink for maintaining familiar forms and social networks among immigrant populations. |
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Russian ethnographers have frequently commented that among the Russian peasantry there was generally no fear of death or the dead. |
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The project will begin in earnest later this year, with three ethnographers tracking and videotaping one family every other week. |
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Ad agencies are hiring anthropologists and ethnographers to study and film consumers in their natural environments to see what they really eat, drink, and buy. |
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When ethnographers are asked to read their works to gatherings of Songhay, elders, they, too, are considered griots. |
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Effectively, the idea of the image is a primary tool for ethnographers to collect data. |
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Businesses, too, have found ethnographers helpful for understanding how people use products and services. |
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Early ethnographers treated Hinenuitepo as a threatening, chthonic death-deity who had lost any claim to benign femininity. |
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The authors, who are psychoanalysts and psychotherapists, ethnographers, and political scientists, present anthropological work based on psychoanalysis. |
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Ethnographers say that Baba Marta is the threshold between the end of the winter season and the approach of summer. |
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