Documents
eHRAF is comprised of thousands of ethnographic sources including monographs, journal articles, dissertations and manuscripts. Use this page to find relevant documents by searching or filtering. Each document in eHRAF also contains a Publication Information page with added metadata including brief abstracts written by HRAF analysts who have subject-indexed the file.
!Kung womenessay 1975 • Draper, Patricia
San • Africa > Southern Africa
This source examines and compares female and male status among !Kung who continue to live a hunting and gathering way of life and others who have recently adopted a settled way of life. The au...Social and economic constraints on child life among the !Kungessay 1976 • Draper, Patricia
San • Africa > Southern Africa
This document is primarily a study of !Kung childhood and personality development. Much of the material in this work focuses on the effects of subsistence ecology on later childhood developmen...Room to maneuveressay 1992 • Draper, Patricia
San • Africa > Southern Africa
Among the !Kung San of Botswana, women are sometimes beaten by their husbands and coerced by other men, particularly their fathers. The factors that contribute to this form of aggression are v...Technological change and child behavior among the !Kungarticle 1988 • Draper, Patricia & Cashdan, Elizabeth A.
San • Africa > Southern Africa
The source examines how changes in subsistence economy has affected child behavior and relations between parents and children among the !Kung San of Western Botswana. The authors' investigatio...Coming in from the Busharticle 1990 • Draper, Patricia & Kranichfeld, Marion
San • Africa > Southern Africa
Fieldwork done in the late 1980s shows that !Kung San are living in settled villages with subsistence based on stock keeping, gardening, government distribution of surplus foods, foraging, and...If you have a child you have a lifeessay 1992 • Draper, Patricia & Buchanan, Anne
San • Africa > Southern Africa
This document focuses on the ties between older parents (particularly fathers) and their adult children among the !Kung San. The authors point out that unlike other ethnic populations in the T...