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.
Culture summaryessay 2001 • Sharp, Henry S.
Chipewyans • North America > Arctic and Subarctic
This is a culture summary of the Chipewyans....The transformation of BigfootBook 1988 • Sharp, Henry S.
Chipewyans • North America > Arctic and Subarctic
Sharp presents a microsociological study of power in interpersonal relations within a single kin group of Chipewyan Indians living in a bush camp in the Northwest Territories of Canada. This s...Giant fish, giant otters, and dinosaursarticle 1987 • Sharp, Henry S.
Chipewyans • North America > Arctic and Subarctic
In response to recent formulations of rationalism this paper investigates several nonexistent beings -- giant fish, giant otters, and dinosaurs -- in detail. From the analysis of the material ...Introducing the sororate to a northern Saskatchewan Chipewyan villagearticle 1975 • Sharp, Henry S.
Chipewyans • North America > Arctic and Subarctic
Lacking evidence to the contrary, anthropologists have assumed that essentially all Chipewyan groups had the same kinship system. Recent studies have shown that this is not necessarily true. T...Shared experience and magical deatharticle 1986 • Sharp, Henry S.
Chipewyans • North America > Arctic and Subarctic
This source examines the pan-Chipewyan system of supernatural knowledge, power, and thought encompassed by the concept of INKOZE; a system, in the minds of the Chipewyan, closely allied to ins...Memory, meaning, and imaginary timearticle 1991 • Sharp, Henry S.
Chipewyans • North America > Arctic and Subarctic
This is an account of the events surrounding a scuffle that broke out between a white teacher and Chipewyan Indian, 'Charley,' in a northern Saskatchewan town. The teacher was attempting to br...Inverted sacrificeessay 1994 • Sharp, Henry S.
Chipewyans • North America > Arctic and Subarctic
In this paper, Sharp examines Chipewyan hunting practices and beliefs as a form of 'inverted' sacrifice, in which the animal offers itself to the human hunter. The Chipewyans believe that a su...The power of weaknessessay 1994 • Sharp, Henry S.
Chipewyans • North America > Arctic and Subarctic
In this paper, Sharp interprets the behavior surrounding a marital dispute in terms of gender complimentarity, rather than male dominance. The dispute is between a husband, who pours himself a...Man : wolf : woman : dogarticle 1976 • Sharp, Henry S.
Chipewyans • North America > Arctic and Subarctic
Using Levi-Strauss's structural analysis of myths to analyze non-mythical behavior, Sharp interprets the symbolism of dogs and wolves in Chipewyan thought. According to Sharp, dogs and wolves ...The Caribou-eater Chipewyanarticle 1977 • Sharp, Henry S.
Chipewyans • North America > Arctic and Subarctic
In this paper, Sharp discusses the adjustments Chipewyan made in their subsistence strategies to accommodate the fur trade. He argues that in spite of these changes, the Chipewyan remained lar...The null caseessay 1981 • Sharp, Henry S.
Chipewyans • North America > Arctic and Subarctic
This article is part of a collective volume, 'Woman the Gatherer.' Here Sharp argues that Chipewyan women's low-status and 'oppression' is part of a symbolic system that enables the smooth ope...Dry meat and genderessay 1991 • Sharp, Henry S.
Chipewyans • North America > Arctic and Subarctic
In this article, Sharp takes issue with the conventional depiction of hunter-gatherers in which Chipewyans are singled out for their lack of ritual, i.e., hunting magic. Sharp immediately disc...The Chipewyan hunting unitarticle 1977 • Sharp, Henry S.
Chipewyans • North America > Arctic and Subarctic
In this paper, Sharp argues that the basic Chipewyan social unit is a restricted cognatic descent group, which he calls a 'hunting unit,' and not a composite band as classified by Steward and ...