This book is an introduction to library research in anthropology written primarily for the undergraduate student about to begin a research project. It contains a summary description of the type of resource being discussed and its potential use in a research project.
Introduction to library research in women's studies
There is no single 'story of anthropology'. Taken together, these fundamental readings are evidence of a contemporary, vibrant subject that has much to tell us about all the worlds in which we live.
Gorotire people of Brazil 159 Graeber, David 207 Gray, Tom 8 Greece 255 Greenwood, Susan 93 Griaule, Marcel 201 Gringo Trails (film 2013) 182 Guaraní 111 Guatemala 366, 402 Gudeman, Stephen 381 The Guest (film, 2012) 78 guinea pigs 169 ...
... 168 Women and World Development: An Annotated Bibliography (Buvinic), 97 Women Artists: An Historical, Contemporary and Feminist Bibliography (Bachmann & Piland), 82 Woman Artists: A Resource and Research Guide (Chiarmonte, ed.) ...
This text has call-outs to the supplemental text, which allow for application and practice of the material learned.
(Gale, 1998) Worldmark Encyclopedia of the States (Gale Group, 2001) None of these sources is freely available on the ... Subject Encyclopedias: User Guide, Review Citations, and Keyword Index, by Allan N. Merwis (2 vols.; Oryx Press, ...
... 1590, 1996–1997, 2284–2285 Redistribution, 160 Redshift, 351 Rees, Martin, 81 Rees, William, 2255 Reflectionism, 604, 607 Reflexive anthropology, 277 Reflexivity, 188, 397,851,2341 Reform Judaism, 1343–1344 Refugees, 183 Registers, ...
Ember, C. R, with the assistance of H. Page, Jr., T. O'Leary, and M. M. Martin. ... Problems of measurement in cross-cultural research using secondary data. ... In Comparative studies by Harold E. Driver and essays in his honor, ed.
Titon, Jeff Todd, ed. 2002. Worlds of Music: An Introduction to the Music of the World's Peoples. 4th ed. New York: Schirmer Books. xix, 484 p., bibliog., discog., illus., photos., videog.+4 compact discs. ISBN 0534591035. ML3545.
I was also astonished by the common mention of word count. Was this a local peculiarity, or had a new location sharpened my senses so I might finally notice how academics everywhere had been counting words for a while?