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21. African Art On The Internet
Mossi, Pende, Suku, Tabwa, Woyo, yaka, Yoruba. twostory architecture, Islam and indigenous African cultures permanent displays from 20 major peoples from West
http://www.artisandesigngroup.ws/museums/africa/africa.htm
Topics : Art Search: Countries Topics Africa Guide Suggest a Site ... Africa Home See also: South African Art Photographs
Adire African Textiles - Duncan Clarke
History, background, and photographs of adire, adinkra, kente, bogolan, Yoruba aso-oke, akwete, ewe, kuba, and nupe textiles. The symbolism of images is often provided. One can purchase textiles as well. Clarke's Ph.D. dissertation (School of Oriental and African Studies) is on Yoruba men's weaving. Based in London. http://www.adire.clara.net
Afribilia
London-based dealer offers for sale African coins, military medals, bank notes, documents, badges, postcards, and other historical / political artifacts. Site of David Saffery. http://www.afribilia.com/
Africa e Mediterraneo (Roma : Istituto sindacale per la cooperazione allo sviluppo)
In Italian. A quarterly magazine about African culture and society. Has the table of contents. Topics covered: literature and theatre, music and dance, visual arts (painting, sculpture, photography) , cinema, immigration. Owned by Lai-momo, a non-profit co-operative. Contact:

22. Joshua Project - Peoples By Country Profiles
People Name General Aka, yaka. Language. Primary Language Teke, Western. Primary Dialect yaka. Dialect Code (ROL4) TEZ07. indigenous Fellowship of 100+
http://www.joshuaproject.net/peopctry.php?rop3=200359&rog3=CT

23. Joshua Project - Peoples By Country Profiles
People Name General Kaka, Kako, yaka. Language. Primary Language Kako. Engaged / Targeted Onsite Church Planting Team indigenous Fellowship of 100+
http://www.joshuaproject.net/peopctry.php?rop3=104439&rog3=CT

24. SIRIS Image Gallary
Sotho Basuto, South africa South africa, Swahili Swahili. width= Xosa Kaffir, yaka Bayaka yaka Bayaka, Yombe the earliest images of indigenous people worldwide; and
http://sirismm.si.edu/siris/naaLot97africaculture.htm

Photograph Collection ca. 1860-1960
Africa Culture Groups:
African
Afrikander Boer
Afrikanders
Ambo Ovambo
Angola
Angolan
Antandroy
Antanosy
Anyi-Baule Ashanti Asante Bakota Bambara Bamileke Bangi Bantu Bantu, Interlacustrine Bara Ibara Bateke Baule Boers Boki Nki Bolki Bushmen Cameroon Chagga Wadschagga Chokwe Comoros Congo Democratic Republic Dan Dogon Habe Edo Bini Equatorial Guinea Fang Fan Fang Mpangwe Fang Pahuin Fon Dahomean Gabon Ganda Baganda Gcaleka Ge Gio Gola Hausa (African People) Haya (African People)" Herero Hottentot HottentotGrigriqua HottentotKorana Hura Ibo Igbo Ivory Coast Kalanga Makalaka Kamba (African People) Kissi Kisi Koba Kuba Kongo Konkomba Kota Kru Kru (African People) Kuba Bakuba Kuba Bushongo Kwangare Li Bali Liberia Lika Walika Lori, Barotse Luhya Bantu Kavirondo Lumbo Balumbo" Malagasy Rebulic Malinke Mandingo Mangbetu (African People) Masaka Mbundu Mbweni Namba Ndebele Manala Ndebele Matabele Ngere Ngwaketse Bangwaketse Nigeria Nusani Sarwa Masarwa Owerri Ibo Pelle Pessi Pende Bapende Pondo Mpondo Pygmies Rega Rhodesia Rolong Baralong Ruanda Senufo Shaangan Shangama Shona Mashona Siena Sierra Leone Soho Soko Soko Basoko Sotho Basuto South Africa Swahili Swazi Swazi Amaswazi Syrian Teke Thonga Shangana Tonga Togo Transvaal Ndebele Transval Ndebele Tswana Tswana Bechuana Tuareg Vai Vili Loango Viye Bihe West (African People)s Xosa Kaffir Yaka Bayaka Yombe, Bayombe

25. Sticks, Stones, Roots And Bones Hoodoo- An American Magical Tradition
Kongo, Suku, and yaka people of Central africa create some excellent examples of these sculptures. indigenous people are vary adaptable.
http://altreligion.about.com/library/weekly/aa091603b.htm
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Ashe, Mojo, everyday Hoodoo You describe Ashe as the power of nature. Can you elaborate? Ashe is a Yoruban term; Yoruba are a group of people who originated in and around Nigeria. Ashe is the invisible power of nature represented in all natural products and organic objects.

26. Africa Direct-Ethnographic Art, Trade Beads, Masks, Carvings, Artifacts, Textile
Cracked side has indigenous repair. Bottom has rusted metal base. Two faces, rat on top. The yaka diviner has a position of power within th. . . Pende People.
http://www.africadirect.com/specials2.html?category=Specials&pagenum=20&start=57

27. Teaching Africa For K-12
ssrg/africa/history/hisk12.html african indigenous Knowledge Systems Mossi, Pende, Suku, Tabwa, Woyo, yaka, Yoruba two year fieldtrip for young people to africa
http://www-sul.stanford.edu/depts/ssrg/africa/africaneducation/teaching-africa-K
Topics Education : Teaching about Africa for K-12 Search: Countries Topics Africa Guide Suggest a Site ... Africa Home See also:
Absolutely Whootie
The stories, for K-12, are taken from books and are revised by children's comments "to best please the audience." Includes stories from Africa. http://hazel.forest.net/whootie/default.html
Africa - PBS / National Geographic / Thirteen/WNET NY Television Series, Sept. 9 - Oct. 28, 2001
Eight episodes cover the Savanna and a woman moving from the city to rural life (Serengeti, Tanzania), the Sahara (a 9 year old boy from Niger crosses the desert on camel to collect and sell salt, etc. Each episode has a slide shows, video clips (requires sound card, speakers). Photoscopes cover AIDS, urban life, conflict, women. There is an African Challenge quiz and teachers' guide (in Adobe PDF).
In the Africa for Kids section , spend a day with kids from Ghana and e-mail them, play the thumb piano / record your tune, (requires Flash, sound card), listen to a Swahili tale or read it yourself, make a Dogon mask. http://www.pbs.org/wnet/africa/
Africa Access
Guide to children's literature on Africa. Reviews are written by univ. faculty, librarians, and teachers many of whom are in African studies or have lived in Africa. Use the Search to locate, for ex., Swahili culture. Edited by Brenda Randolph. http://filemaker.mcps.k12.md.us/aad/

28. African Tribes
yaka. The ndako gboya appears to be indigenous; a spirit that affords protection There is a great diversity of sculptural tradition among peoples inhabiting the
http://users.pandora.be/african-shop/tribe_info.htm

Home
Up African-Antiques site map masks ... tribes Hear the news and discuss it, join African art goup in English or Discussions AntiquesAfricaines Français Join also our free monthly newsletter packed with auction news, fairs, exhibitions, recent items, new websites, stolen items, buying tips,... We Respect Your Email Privacy
David Norden. Sint Katelijnevest 27. B2000 Antwerp. Belgium. Tel: +32 3 2273540
African tribes in African art.
A complete African tribes art list, african sculptures and masks description. The visual, performing, and literary arts of native Africa, particularly of sub-Saharan, or black, Africa. The arts include the media of sculpture, painting, textiles, costume, jewelry, architecture, music, dance, drama, and poetry. visit Central Africa South Africa Madagascar Art West Africa Join our FREE MONTHLY NEWSLETTER packed with auction news, fairs, exhibitions, items descriptions, new websites, stolen items, buying tips,...
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A free group related on African art with more than 450 members. Share your love for African art.

29. In The Presence Of Spirits
and sculptural inventiveness of the cultures indigenous to these These objects come from the yaka, Nkanu, Zombo of objects from the Bidjogo peoples who live on
http://www.africans-art.com/index.php3?action=page&id_art=534

30. »»Reviews For Africa««
Toro, Turkana, Tutsi, Twa, yaka, Yoombe, Zezuru Fractals Modern Computing and indigenous Design. Published be handy to business people, expatriates, tourists
http://www.booksunderreview.com/Home/Consumer_Information/Ski_Resorts/Africa/Afr
Africa Reviews
Related Subjects:
More Pages: Africa Page 1 Book reviews for "Africa" sorted by average review score: African Ethnics and Personal Names Published in Paperback by Ariko Publications (01 June, 2000) Authors: Jonathan Musere and Christopher Odhiambo Amazon base price:
Used price:
Buy one from zShops for: Average review score:
A Major Book on African Names, Groups, Culture, and Proverbs Journal Review Excerpt"African Ethnics and Personal Names" African Fractals: Modern Computing and Indigenous Design Published in Hardcover by Rutgers University Press (June, 1999) Author: Ron Eglash Amazon base price: Average review score: This book helps to render obsolete long-held myths. Ron Eglash's brilliant work on Afrikan fractals helps to shatter long-held myths and misconceptions about Afrikans, the most pervasive and pernicious of which is the notion of Afrikans (both on the Motherland and in the Diaspora) as inactive agents in history. This work motivated me to complete mine on chaos theory and Afrikan fractals. My longer reviews of Eglash's book appear in the Nexus Network Journal (vol. 2, 2000:165-168) and the Journal of Third World Studies (vol. xviii, no. 1, 2001:237-239), each reflecting the publication's genre and disciplinary focus. Dr. Abdul Karim Bangura is a researcher-in-residence at the Center for Global Peace and a professor of International Relations in the School of International Service at American University, and the director of The African Institution in Washington, DC. He is the author of 21 books and more than 200 scholarly articles.

31. The First Masks
Over thirty thousand years ago, somewhere in africa, an indigenous Hunter the Latin, persona, which means mask. For early indigenous peoples, masks were a
http://www.webzinemaker.net/africans-art/index.php3?action=page&id_art=28378

32. Many Paths
therefore, they are multicultural and reflect strong links between various indigenous groups, the Kongo, Suku, and yaka people of Central africa create some
http://groups.msn.com/ManyPaths/hoodoo.msnw
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33. Africa (tw4)(afr1Page2)
people). western corner of Namibia live the Himba, one of africa s geatest indigenous tribes. Ethnology, Central africa, yaka, Pende, Kuba, Ngongo, Wongo, Mbala
http://www.tribalworldbooks.com.au/afr1Page2.html
Africa page links Page 2 of 3 TRIBAL WORLD BOOKS
index

Davidson , Basil. THE STORY OF AFRICA . A history of powerful
empires and kingdoms. BNo. 0-85533-648-X. Reprint Edition, 1986
(1984) (pb). Pp: 288; 250mm x 175mm; 0.70kg. 65 col, num b/w,
fig, maps. Foreword, chronology, bibliography, index,
acknowledgments. A very good paperback copy. Wrp: vg. Mitchell
Beazley International Limited, London, 1986. (A compelling history
of the peoples who make up Africa today: where they came from,
how they developed, and what they produced) (Keywords: History,
Africa, myths, art, Egypt, Ethopia, Nok, Benin, Asante, Kilwa, slavery, colonial period). Book Code: AU index Evans-Pritchard , E.E. THE NUER . A Description of the Modes of Livelihood and Political Institutions of a Nilotic People. BNo. 19-874001. Reprint Edition, 1968 (1940) (pb). Pp: xii, 272; 215mm x 140mm; 0.52kg. 29 b/w, 15 fig, 7 maps. Preface, introductory, index. A good paperback copy. Wrp: g. Oxford University Press, London, 1968. (This book describes the life of the Nuer who are predominantly a pastoral people and the first part deals with their life as herdsmen, fishermen, and gardeners. The

34. Llewellyn Journal - Conjur Craft: Hoodoo, Rootwork And Conjuring For The 21st Ce
Kongo, Suku, and yaka people of Central africa create some magical and divination traditions of indigenous people around the world with a focus on africa.
http://www.llewellynjournal.com/article/504

journal home

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Conjur Craft: Hoodoo, Rootwork and Conjuring for the 21st Century
Date: By: Stephanie Rose Bird
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Hoodoo History
Once upon a time, we were Africans, involved in a unique lexicon of beliefs, lore, stories, and customs designed to help integrate us into an environment filled with plants, animals, elements, and a complex array of spirits. With the advent of slavery, those who had stayed the longest severed the physical bond with the Motherland, but like seeds lifted from a flower by wind, we found fertile ground in distant lands. The freshly sown seeds took strongest hold in sunny climes reminiscent of our Motherland.
Separated physically, we remained united as brothers and sisters in spirit. The various hybrids of traditional African-based religions continue to thrive in coastal Brazil, the Dominican Republic, and Cuba in the form of Candomble, Shango, Lucumi, Umbanda, and Santeria. In Louisiana and Haiti, our spirituality thrives in the form of Vodoun. In the southern United States, Hoodoo took root in Alabama, Mississippi, Georgia, Florida, North Carolina, and South Carolina. Hoodoo was established during slavery using the types of plants available in the United States. Our knowledge of African herbalism was enhanced through the generosity of Native American tribes such as the Cherokee, Chickasaw, Chocktaw, and Seminole who understood our suffering intimately. Many Black Indians were the result of this interchange. The proof to this is within our recipes, appearance, and of course within Hoodoo.

35. Remnants Of Ritual - The David Gelbard Collection Of African Art And Culture
found it interesting that among the yaka the performance Understanding the indigenous language and its nuances opens among the Dan and related peoples of West
http://www.remnantsofritual.com/dialog.html

Understanding Narrative
The Praise Song Cultural Borrowing Objects of Power ... In and Out of Context The second part of this introductory essay consists of conversations between the authors. Bourgeois and Rodolitz have team-taught a web-based course on this subject for more than five years utilizing a dialogue medium that lends itself to immediacy and informality. Essays in the usual sense speak TO the reader; dialogue, however, allows the reader to participate, if only in an imaginary sense. Additionally, in the medium of dialogue, the evolution of thought is more apparent than in an edited essay. Often, the journey to a conclusion is as important as the conclusion itself. The reader is encouraged to join in this ongoing exploration. AB: Why don't we begin by considering a group of related objects, not necessarily related by culture but by function?

36. Reviews Of H-Net Africana
yaka. Prasse, KarlG. The Tuaregs The Blue People. Pretorius, HL Historiography and Historical Sources Regarding african indigenous Churches in South africa
http://www.h-net.org/~africa/reviews/

home
news about search ...
Back
to H-Africa Books CDs and Web Sites Exhibits Films Reviews Listed : 27 March 1995 through 31 December 2003.
Books (by author)
  • Achebe, Chinua Things Fall Apart
    Reviewed for H-AfrTeach by Chris Conte, 11 March 1998.
  • Adams, Anne V. Janis A. Mayes, editors Mapping Intersections: African Literature and Africa's Development
    Reviewed for H-AfrLitCine by Dayna Oscherwitz, University of Texas, November 1998.
  • Adeleke, Tunde UnAfrican Americans: Nineteenth-Century Black Nationalists and the Civilizing Mission
    Reviewed for H-SHEAR by John Saillant, Western Michigan University, February, 1999.
  • Ahluwalia, Pal Politics and Post-Colonial Theory: African Inflections
    Reviewed for H-SAfrica by Chimuka T. Andrea, Department of Philosophy, University of Zimbabwe, January, 2002.
  • Akyeampong, Emmanuel Drink, Power and Cultural Change: A Social History of Alcohol in Ghana, c. 1800 to Recent Times.
    Reviewed for H-Africa by Martin Klein, University of Toronto, 30 September 1998.
  • Alexander, Peter and Rick Halpern, eds Racializing Class, Classifying Race: Labour and Difference in Britain, the USA and Africa.
    Reviewed for H-SAfrica by Derek Catsam, Contemporary History Institute, Ohio University, 1 May 2001.

37. Anthropology Books From The University Of Chicago Press
Jentoft, Svein indigenous peoples Resource Management and Global Rights; Culture and History of a South African People; EcoLogical Healing Cult among the yaka;
http://www.press.uchicago.edu/Subjects/virtual_anthropology.html
John M. Chernoff
Hustling Is Not Stealing: Stories of an African Bar Girl

Library Journal
Michael Taussig
My Cocaine Museum

My Cocaine Museum
Read an excerpt
Alma Gottlieb
The Afterlife Is Where We Come From

Read an excerpt
Michael Herzfeld The Body Impolitic: Artisans and Artifice in the Global Hierarchy of Value Ulf Hannerz Foreign News: Exploring the World of Foreign Correspondents Library Journal A. David Napier The Age of Immunology: Conceiving a Future in an Alienating World The Age of Immunology Lawrence Rosen The Culture of Islam: Changing Aspects of Contemporary Muslim Life Library Journal Jeremy MacClancy, editor Exotic No More: Anthropology on the Front Lines Times Higher Education Supplement Mary Weismantel Cholas and Pishtacos: Stories of Race and Sex in the Andes Times Literary Supplement Emiko Ohnuki-Tierney Kamikaze, Cherry Blossoms, and Nationalisms: The Militarization of Aesthetics in Japanese History Japan Times Jonah Blank Mullahs on the Mainframe: Islam and Modernity among the Daudi Bohras Library Journal Read an excerpt and interview with the author
Anthropology from the University of Chicago Press
The books in this subject catalog are not all the books published by the University of Chicago Press in this field, but only our most recent and important books. We recommend you start with this catalog. For a more extensive listing you may go to the

38. Search For Books: S
of Change in a Ghanaian indigenous Knowledge System. Kuba = Fotodokumente zur Kunst bei den yaka, Pende, Tshokwe Culture Black Kingdoms, Black peoples The West
http://bookstore.africanartbooks.us/search_s.htm
Searches 'S':
saar, alison
Body Politics: The Female Image in Luba Art and the Sculpture of Alison Saar

saar, betye
Betye Saar

sacred space
The Image of the Ordered World in Ancient Nubian Art: The Construction of the Kushite Mind, 800 Bc-300 Ad

sahel
The Grazing Land Ecosystems of the African Sahel

saint helena island (s.c.)
Local Heroes: Paintings and Sculpture by Sam Doyle
saint lucia sale adult - architecture Great Works of African Art Harlem Renaissance: Art of Black America African Art African Hats and Jewelry sale adult - pop arts Afropop: An Illustrated Guide to Contemporary African Music sale books The Art of African Textiles Great Works of African Art African Art: Sculpture Harlem Renaissance: Art of Black America African Hats and Jewelry ... James Van Derzee: The Picture-Takin' Man sale books - adult African Art: Sculpture African Textiles/Library of Style and Design sally hemings, an american sca Sally Hemings: An American Scandal: The Struggle to Tell the Controversial True Story Sally Hemings: An American Scandal: The Struggle to Tell the Controversial True Story samba, cheri, Cheri Samba: The Hybridity of Art san (african people) The stone age in Rhodesia Reality and non-reality in San rock art : twenty-fifth Raymond Dart lecture delivered 6 October 1987 The Bushman art of Southern Africa The Drakensberg Bushmen and their art : with a guide to the rock painting sites People of the Eland : rock paintings of the Drakensberg Bushmen as a reflection of their life and thought ... Art rupestre des Sans : Université de Pretoria, Exposition Woodhouse

39. Universität Göttingen / Visuelle Anthropologie I - Photographie
Translate this page Fotodokumente zur Kunst bei den yaka, Pende, Tshokwind, Kuba of Missionary Photographers in West africa The Portrayal of indigenous People and Culture
http://www.iwf.de/easa/brd/ss99.html
Visuelle Antrhopologie Teil I: Photographie
Dr. Beate Engelbrecht SS 1999
SS 1999 Fotografie, WS 1999/2000 Theorie und Methoden des ethnographischen Films,
Termine mittwochs 18.15 - 20.30 Thema Referent/in 14. April Beate Engelbrecht 21. April Referat: 28. April Technik des Photographierens Beate Engelbrecht Erstellung eines Photoessays 5. Mai methodische Aspekte Referat: John Colliers Methodik
(Film: "John Collier Jr.") Thomas Stodulka 11.-16. Mai Freiburg: Filmforum Ethnologie + Dritte Welt Donnerstag
20. Mai
Erstellung eines Photoessays 26. Mai. Referat: Die Photographie als ethnographisches Dokument 2. Juni Referat: Historische Fotografien als Gegenstand der Forschung 9. Juni Referat: Fotografie als Methode der Forschung 30. Juni Referat:
(Film "Future Remembrance") Eva Knopf 2. Juli
Blockseminar von 9.15 Uhr an:
Vorstellung der Photoessays 7. Juli Referat:
(Film "Photo Whallas") Katrin Weiser Dr. Beate Engelbrecht
Nonnenstieg 72
Te.: 0551/5024-162, Fax: 0551/5024-400, Email: beate.engelbrecht@iwf.de Referatsthemen und Literatur: Banks, Marcus and Howard Morphy (eds.)

40. The Zaire Model - Dia Diafwila
the name of Eglise Indigene (indigenous Church). Basongye, Balunda, Banianga, Bahunde, yaka Holo, Bawoyo Church planting, Unreached peoples, Rural Evangelism
http://www.ad2000.org/gcowe95/diaf.html
The Zaire Model - Dia Diafwila
Brief History, Work, Objectives and Progress
Brief History Of All For Christ Movement
"All For Christ" as a mission movement in Congo started in 1978 when the first Protestant missionaries came to our jungles with the Good News of Christ. All missions societies that came to Congo since then have had one goal: to reach all Congo means all tribes, classes and persons for Christ. This first stage of Evangelism and mission work in Congo included a clear proclamation of the Gospel and church planting among hidden people groups. The "All For Christ" mission movement gave birth to a local church in which many Protestant denominations have been working together for one purpose: to win all Zaire with Christ. During the Jubilee Conference of 1928, Protestant denominations of Congo were given the name of "Eglise Indigene" (Indigenous Church). During the Conference of 1934, mission church leaders decided to change the name to "Church of Christ in Congo." All leaders were convinced that Christ has only one Church in the world with many diversities, so it was not necessary to build many denominations in Congo. The main objective of Christian mission in Congo was to build one Church in the heart of Africa: the "Church of Christ." Christ is not physically, psychologically, or spiritually divided. He is one Body. So is also His Church in the earth. From 1934 to 1960, the Church of Christ in Congo had two main institutions: The "Conseil Protestant du Congo" (CPC), and the Church of Christ, as a Body with many local churches or parishes. Each denomination was a section of the Unity. It was very easy to build and realize church growth programs for all the nation.

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