Karl G. Heider has done extensive field research in New Guinea, at the Mayan site of Tikal in Guatemala, and in Thailand, France, Arizona, and South Dakota. He was a member of the Harvard-Peabody Expedition in 1961 that documented the Dani in the film Dead Birds and was co-author of the bookGardens of War: Life and Death in the New Guinea Stone Age. Professor Heider has contributed articles to theSouthwestern Journal of Anthropology, Man, Anthropos, and American Anthropologist. He is currently Associate provost and Dean of Undergraduate Studies at the University of South Carolina. He has served as Chair on the committee of ethics for the American Anthropological Association as well as President of the general Anthropology division of AAA.
-This descriptive ethnography contributes to the already
considerable literature on the peoples of the Grand Valley of the
Balim River. The term -Dugum- refers to a 350 population cluster
associated with the Dani name for the local hill around which they
interact and cluster... [This book] is a useful statement of a
Highland New Guinea culture.- --David G. Bettison, Pacific Affairs
-This attractively produced ethnography of a neighbourhood of 350
persons among the 50,000 Dani-speakers of Indonesian-controlled
West New Guinea is presented as 'a holistic study', to the memory
of Clyde Kluckhohn... [The] present study gives the non-specialist
reader a kaleidoscopic introduction to a wide range of New Guinea
behaviours that too often go unreported.- --R. F. Salisbury,
Man
"This descriptive ethnography contributes to the already
considerable literature on the peoples of the Grand Valley of the
Balim River. The term "Dugum" refers to a 350 population cluster
associated with the Dani name for the local hill around which they
interact and cluster... [This book] is a useful statement of a
Highland New Guinea culture." --David G. Bettison, Pacific Affairs
"This attractively produced ethnography of a neighbourhood of 350
persons among the 50,000 Dani-speakers of Indonesian-controlled
West New Guinea is presented as 'a holistic study', to the memory
of Clyde Kluckhohn... [The] present study gives the non-specialist
reader a kaleidoscopic introduction to a wide range of New Guinea
behaviours that too often go unreported." --R. F. Salisbury,
Man
"This descriptive ethnography contributes to the already
considerable literature on the peoples of the Grand Valley of the
Balim River. The term "Dugum" refers to a 350 population cluster
associated with the Dani name for the local hill around which they
interact and cluster... [This book] is a useful statement of a
Highland New Guinea culture." --David G. Bettison, Pacific Affairs
"This attractively produced ethnography of a neighbourhood of 350
persons among the 50,000 Dani-speakers of Indonesian-controlled
West New Guinea is presented as 'a holistic study', to the memory
of Clyde Kluckhohn... [The] present study gives the non-specialist
reader a kaleidoscopic introduction to a wide range of New Guinea
behaviours that too often go unreported." --R. F. Salisbury, Man
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