article

Age as a source of differentiation within a Garifuna village in southern Belize

America Indígena47 • Published In 1987 • Pages: 97-118

By: Palacio, Joseph O..

Abstract
This is a study of the acculturative effects of outside contacts on the social organization of a village community in southern Belize, called Lisurnia (a pseudonym). As the basis of his study Palacio divides the population of this village into specific age groups and discusses in detail the various social interactions between them. The author notes that the '...salience of age as a group marker arises from the fact that persons enter the village to stay and leave at specific periods within their life cycle' (p. 98). This tendency of the Garifuna to live in a village for part of their life and away for another part indicates to the author the almost completely open orientation of the villagers to the outside world.
Subjects
Acculturation and culture contact
Age stratification
Community structure
Adolescent activities
Adulthood
Family relationships
Household
culture
Garifuna
HRAF PubDate
2005
Region
Middle America and the Caribbean
Sub Region
Central America
Document Type
article
Evaluation
Creator Types
Ethnologist
Indigenous Person
Document Rating
5: Excellent Primary Data
Analyst
John Beierle; 1989-1991
Field Date
1979-1980
Coverage Date
1950-1980
Coverage Place
'Lisurnia'[pseudonym], Belize
Notes
[by] Joseph O. Palacio
Includes bibliographical references (p. 117-118)
LCCN
44038531
LCSH
Garifuna (Caribbean people)