1. Babaev, K.V. 2012. Traditsionnye kul’ty i khristianstvo v vospriiatii sovremennykh zhitelei Zapadnoi Afriki [Traditional Cults and Christianity in the Perception of Modern Residents]. Istoricheskaia psikhologiia i sotsiologiia istorii 2: 28–37.
2. Blystad, A. 2004. On HIV, Sex and Respect: Local-Global Discourse Encounters among the Datoga of Tanzania. African Sociological Review 8 (1): 47–66.
3. Bondarenko, D.M. 2014. Obshchinnost’: pervoosnova istoriko-kul’turnoi i sotsial’no-politicheskoi traditsii subsakharskoi Afriki [Community: A Fundamental Principle of the Historical, Cultural and Socio-Political Tradition of Sub-Saharan Africa History]. Vostok 2: 10–22.
4. Butovskaya, M., V. Burkova, D. Karelin, and B. Fink. 2015. Digit Ratio (2D:4D), Aggression and Dominance in the Hadza and the Datoga of Tanzania. American Journal of Human Biology 27: 620–627. https://doi.org/10.1002/ajhb.2271
5. Butovskaya, M.L. 2011. Reproduktivnyi uspekh i ekonomicheskii status u datoga — poluosedlykh skotovodov Severnoi Tanzanii [Reproductive Success and Economic Status of Datog-Semi-Sedentary Pastoralists of Northern Tanzania]. Etnograficheskoe obozrenie 4: 85–99.
6. Butovskaya, M.L. 2012. Wife-Battering and Traditional Methods of Its Control in Contemporary Da- toga Pastoralists of Tanzania. Journal of Aggression, Conflict and Peace Research 4 (1): 28–44.
7. Butovskaya, M.L. 2013. Aggression and Conflict Resolution among the Nomadic Hadza of Tanzania as Compared with Their Pastoralist Neighbors. In War, Peace, and Human Nature The Convergence of Evolutionary and Cultural Views, edited by D.P. Fry, 278–296. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
8. Butovskaya, M.L., D.V. Karelin, and V.N. Burkova. 2012. Datoga Tanzanii segodnia: ekologiia i kul’turnye ustanovki [The Datoga of Tanzania Today: Ecology and Cultural Attitudes]. Aziia i Afrika segodnia 11: 51–55.
9. Butovskaya, M.L., D.V. Karelin, and V.N. Burkova. 2012. Traditsionnye skotovody Vostochnoi Afriki segodnia: reproduktivnyi uspekh, plodovitost’, detskaia smertnost’ i blagosostoianie datoga Severnoi Tanzanii [Traditional Pastoralists of East Africa Today: Reproductive Success, Fertility, Infant Mortality and the Welfare of the North Tanzania]. Vestnik MGU. Seriia XXIII: Antropologiia 4: 70–83.
10. Caldwell, J.C., and P. Caldwell. 1987. The Cultural Context of High Fertility in Sub-Saharan Africa. Population and Development Review 13 (3): 409–437.
11. Chugaeva, S.V. 2010. Semik — den’ pominoveniia umershikh u komi-permiakov [Semik — the Remembrance Day in the Komi-Permiak Culture]. Vestnik VGU. Seriia: Lingvistika i mezhkul’turnaia kommunikatsiia 1: 200–204.
12. Dyer, S.J. 2007. The Value of Children in African Countries — Insights from Studies on Infertility. Journal of Psychosomatic, Obstetrics and Gynecology 28 (2): 69–77.
13. Frazer, J. 1998. Zolotaia vetv’: issledovanie magii i religii [The Golden Bough: A Study in Magic and Religion]. Moscow: AST.
14. Galieva, F.G. 2015. Pokhoronno-pominal’naia obriadnost’ [Funeral and Memorial Rites]. In Bashkiry [The Bashkirs], edited by R.G. Kuzeev and E.S. Danilko, 383–396. Moscow: Nauka.
15. Hollos, M. 2003. Profiles of Infertility in Southern Nigeria: Women’s Voices from Amakiri. African Journal of Reproductive Health 7 (2): 46–56.
16. Imasogie, O. 1985. African Traditional Religion. Ibadan: University Press Limited.
17. Kaniki, M.H.Y. 1976. Religious Conflict and Cultural Accommodation: The Impact of Islam on Some Aspects of African Societies. Utafiti Journal 1 (1): 87–98.
18. Lebaka, M.E.K. 2018. The Art of Establishing and Maintaining Contact with Ancestors: A Study of Bapedi Tradition. HTS Teologiese Studies / Theological Studies 74 (1): 4871. https://doi. org/10.4102/hts.v74i1.4871
19. Leonard, L. 2002. “Looking for Children”: The Search for Fertility among the Sara of Southern Chad. Medical Anthropology 21 (1): 79–112.
20. Malinowski, B. 1961. The Dynamics of Culture Change: An Inquiry into Race Relations in Africa. New Haven: Yale University Press.
21. Mannhardt, J.W.E. 1875. Wald und Feldkulte [Forest and Field Cults], 1. Berlin: Gebrüder Borntraeger.
22. Mannhardt, J.W.E. 1877. Wald und Feldkulte [Forest and Field Cults], 2. Berlin: Gebrüder Borntraeger.
23. Mokhoathi, J. 2018. Jesus Christ as an Ancestor: A Critique of Ancestor Christology in Bantu Communities. Pharos Journal of Theology 99: 1–16. https://www.pharosjot.com/uploads/7/1/6/3/7163688/article_8_vol_99_2018_mokoathi_-_ufs.pdf
24. Mugovhani, N.G. 2015. Emerging Trends from Indigenous Music and Dance Practices: A Glimpse into Contemporary Malende and Tshigombela. Southern Africa Journal for Folklore Studies 25 (1): 81–96.
25. Oborji, F.A. 2002. In Dialogue with African Traditional Religion: New Horizons. Mission Studies 19: 1–37.
26. Silva, S. 2009. Mother of Solilude: Childlessness and Intersubjectivity in the Upper Zambezi. Anthropology and Humanism 34 (2): 179–202.
27. Sokolova, Z.P. 2005. Pogrebal’nye obriady [Funeral Rites]. In Narody Zapadnoi Sibiri. Khanty. Man si. Sel’kupy. Nentsy. Entsy. Nganasany. Kety [The Peoples of Western Siberia: The Khanty. The Mansi. The Selkup. The Nenets. The Enets People. The Nganasans. The Kets], edited by I.N. Gemuev, V.I. Molodin, and Z.P. Sokolova. 152–165. Moscow: Nauka.
28. Tatarovskaia, I.G. 2014. Zmeia kak simvol zhizni i smerti v afrikanskoi mifologii [Snake as a Symbol of Life and Death in African Mythology]. Gumanitarnye, sotsial’noekonomicheskie i obshchestvennye nauki 12: 110–114.
29. Triebel, J. 2002. Living Together with the Ancestors: Ancestor Veneration in Africa as a Challenge for Missiology. Missiology: An International Review 30 (2): 187–197.
30. Tylor, E.B. 1989. Pervobytnaia kul’tura [Primitive Culture]. Moscow: Politizdat.
Comments
No posts found