1979. Dialectical Societies: The Gê and Bororo of
Transcrição
1979. Dialectical Societies: The Gê and Bororo of
MACRO-GE COLLECTIONS Maybury-Lewis, David (ed.) 1979. Dialectical Societies: The Gê and Bororo of Central Brazil. Cambridge and London: Harvard University Press. Reviews: Rivière 1980; Kensinger 1981; Overing Kaplan 1981; Young 1981. GENERAL Carneiro Da Cunha, Manuela. 1993. Les études Gé. L’Homme 33 (126-128): 77-94. HAVE Maybury-Lewis, David. 1989. Social Theory and Social Practice: Binary Systems in Central Brazil. In The Attraction of Opposites: Thought and Society in the Dualistic Mode, edited by David Maybury-Lewis and Uri Almagor. Pp. 97-116. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press. BOTOCUDO Henry, Jules. (Blumensohn, J. H.) HAVE 1936. A Preliminary Sketch of the Kinship and Social Organization of the Botokudo Indians. Boletim do Museu Nacional, Antropologia 12: 49-58. Rio de Janeiro. CARAJA Dietschy, Hans. 1958. Zur Sozialorganisation der Karajá. Korrespondenzblatt. Geographisch-Ethnologische Gesellschaft Basel 8: 6-16. Dietschy, Hans. 1959. Zur Sozialorganisation der Karajá. Anthropos 54: 996. Dietschy, Hans. HAVE 1963. Le système de parenté et la structure sociale des Indiens Carajá. In VIe Congrès International des Sciences Anthropologiques et Ethnologiques, Paris 30 juillet – 6 août. T. 2. Ethnologie (Premiere Volume). Pp. 43-47. Paris: Musée de l’Homme. Translated as “The Kinship System and Social Structure of the Caraja Indians” in Human Relations Area Files; SP9, Caraja 3. Donahue, George R. 1982. A Contribution to the Ethnography of the Karaja Indians of Central Brazil. Ph.D. dissertation. University of Virginia. [Pp. 190-193: kin terminology.] HAVE Palha, Luiz. HAVE 1942. Ensaio de Gramática e Vocabulario da Lingua Karajá: Falada Pelos Indios Remeiros do Rio “Araguaia.” Rio de Janeiro : Gráfica Olímpica. [Pp. 28-29: kin terms.] Pétesch, Nathalie. 1992. La Pirogue de Sable: Modes de Représentation et d’Organisation d’une Société du Fleuve : Les Karajá de l’Araguaia (Brésil Central). Université Paris X, Nanterre Pétesch, Nathalie. HAVE 1993. L’enfant-maître et le bien-enfant. A propos de la possession-filiation chez les Indiens Karajá d’Amazonie brésilienne. Annales de la Fondation Fyssen 8: 83-90. [Cultural significance of inalienable possession.] Pétesch, Nathalie. 2000. La Pirogue de Sable: Pérennité Cosmique et Mutation Sociale chez les Karajá du Brésil Central. Paris: Peeters. [Pp. 192-228: kin terminology, marriage alliances, descent and residence.] HAVE CHIQUITO CHIQUITANO Galeote Tormo, Jesús 1993. Manitana Auqui Besüro: Gramática Moderna de la Lengua Chiquitana y Vocabulario. Santa Cruz de la Sierra: Centro de Estudios Chiquitanos. Riester, J. 2005. Inventario de la Cultura Intangible del Pueblo Chiquitano. Ficha No 900 e 918. Publicación electrónica. Santa Cruz de la Sierra. [Includes kin terms.] Santana, Á. 2005. Transnacionalidade Lingüística: A Língua Chiquitano no Brasil. M.A. thesis. Goiânia: UFGO. [Includes kin terms.] Silva, Renata B. HAVE 2008. Os Chiquitano de Mato Grosso: Estudo das Classificações Sociais em um Grupo Indígena da Fronteira Brasil-Bolívia. Ph.D. dissertation. Universidade de São Paulo. [Pp. 155-180: “The Place of Kinship,” including kin terminology.] FULNIO Pinto, Estevão. 1956. Etnologia Brasileira (Fulnio – Os Últimos Tapuias). São Paulo: Companhia Editora Nacional. [Pp. 116-134: kinship and social organization, including kin terminology.] HAVE GE-KAINGANG KAINGANG Baldus, Herbert. 1935. Sprachproben des Kaingang von Palmas. Anthropos 30: 191-202. [Pp. 197-198: family and kinship.] Baldus, Herbert. 1937. O culto aos mortos entre os Kiangang de Palmas. In Ensaios de Etnologia Brasileira. Pp. 29-69. São Paulo, Creatini da Rocha, Cinthia. HAVE 2011. From Socio-Politics to Kinship Dynamics Among the Kaingang. Vibrant: Virtual Brazilian Anthropology 8 (2): 359-374. Brasília. (Special Issue: “Dossier «Anthropology of Kinship».”) Fernandes, Ricardo C. 2003. Política e Parentesco entre os Kaingang: Uma Análise Etnológica. Ph.D. dissertation. Universidade de São Paulo. HAVE Henry, Jules. 1941. Jungle People: A Kaingáng Tribe of the Highlands of Brazil. Richmond, VA: William Bird Press. 215 P. [Pp. 175-179: kinship system and terminology.] HAVE Review: Gillin 1942. Hicks, David. 1971. A Comparative Analysis of the Kaingang and Aweikoma Relationship Terminologies (Brazil). Anthropos 66 (5-6): 931-935. Hicks, David. HAVE 1982. “Jungle People”: A Problem of Identity. In Structural Analysis in Anthropology: Case Studies from Indonesia and Brazil, by David Hicks. Pp. 15-25. St.Augustin bei Bonn: Verlag des Anthropos-Instituts. [Differences in kinship structures between Kaingang and Xokleng/Aweikoma.] Metraux, Alfred. 1946. The Caingang. In Handbook of South American Indians, edited by Julian Steward. Vol. 1. Marginal Tribes. Pp. 445-476. Washington: Government Printing Office. [Pp. 461-462: social organization, marriage and kinship.] Tempski, Edwino D. 1986. Caingângues: Gente do Mato. Curitiba: Imprensa Oficial. Urban, Gregory P. 1978. A Model of Shokleng Social Reality. Ph.D. dissertation. University of Chicago. [Pp. 287-304: kin terminology in Xokleng and Kaingang.] HAVE Urban, Gregory P. 1996. Metaphysical Community: The Interplay of the Senses and the Intellect. Austin: University of Texas Press. [Pp. 99-133: Kaingang kinship.] Veiga, Juracilda. 1994. Organização Social e Cosmovisão Kaingang: Uma Introdução ao Parentesco, Casamento e Nominação em uma Sociedade Jê Meridional. M.A. thesis. Campinas: IFCH-UNICAMP. Wiesemann, Ursula. 1972. Die Phonologische und Grammatische Struktur der Kaingáng-Sprache. The Hague: Mouton. [PP. 112-113: kin terms as part of nominal classes 1 and 2.] Weisemann, Ursula. 1978. Os dialetos da língua Kaingáng e o Xokléng. Arquivos de Anatomia e Antropologia 3: 197-217. [Includes data on kin terms.] GE GENERAL Lowie, Robert H. HAVE 1941. A Note on the Northern Ge Tribes of Brazil. American Anthropologist 43 (2, pt. 1): 188-196. [Pp. 190-195: kinship and social organization.] Maybury-Lewis, David. 1958. Kinship and Social Organization in Central Brazil. In Proceedings of the 32d International Congress of Americanists, Copenhagen, 8-14 August 1956. Pp. 123-135. Copenhagen: Munksgaard. [Gê, and specifically Serente kinship. Nimuendaju’s data and Levi-Strauss’s theory.] Maybury-Lewis, David. 1971. Some Principles of Social Organization among the Central Gê. In Verhandlungen des XXXVIII. Internationalen Amerikanistenkongresses, Stuttgart-München, 12 bis. 18. August 1968. Bd. 3. Ss. 381-386. München: Klaus Renner. Maybury-Lewis, David C. 1979. Cultural Categories of the Central Gê. In Dialectical Societies: The Gê and Bororo of Central Brazil, edited by David Maybury-Lewis. Pp. 218-246. Cambridge and London: Harvard University Press. BORORO Brüggemann, Wolf. 1986. Die Verwandtschaftsterminologie der Bororó-Indianer: Rekonstruktion und Analyse mit Methoden der Kognitiven Anthropologie. Münster: Lit. 500 S. Crocker, J. Christopher 1967. The Social Organization of the Eastern Bororo. Ph.D. dissertation. Harvard University. Crocker, J. Christopher. 1969. Reciprocity and Hierarchy among the Eastern Bororo. Man 4 (1): 44-58. HAVE Crocker, J. Christopher. 1971. The Dialectics of Bororo Social Inversions. In Verhandlungen des XXXVIII. Internationalen Amerikanistenkongresses, Stuttgart-München, 12 bis. 18. August 1968. Bd. 3. Ss. 387-391. München: Klaus Renner. Crocker, J. Christopher 1976a. Reciprocidade e hierarquia entre os Bororo Orietais. In Leituras de Etnologia Brasileira, edited by Egon Schaden. Pp. 164-185. Sao Paulo: Companhia Editora Nacional. Crocker, J. Christopher HAVE 1976b. Why Are Bororo Matrilineal? In Actes du XLIIe Congrè International des Américanistes. Paris, 2-9 Septembre 1976. Vol. 2. Social Time and Social Space in Lowland South American Societies. Pp. 245-258. Paris: Société des Américanistes. Crocker, J. Christopher 1979. Selves and Alters among the Eastern Bororo. In Dialectical Societies: The Gê and Bororo of Central Brazil, edited by David Maybury-Lewis. Pp. 249-300. Cambridge and London: Harvard University Press. Dupire, Marguerite. 1962. Des nomades et leur bétail. L’Homme 2 (1): 22-39. [The role of cattle in two nomadic societies – Bororo and Tuareg – in the context of the differences in their lineage structure. Cross-listed in AFROASIATIC.] Levak, Zarko D. 1973. Kinship System and Social Structure of the Bororo of Pobojari. Ph.D. dissertation. Yale University. Lévi-Strauss, Claude. 1936. Contribution a l’étude de l’organisation sociale des Indiens Bororo. Journal de la Société des Américanistes 28 (2): 269-304. Lévi-Strauss, Claude. 1944. Reciprocity and Hierarchy. American Anthropologist 46 (2): 266-268. HAVE Lévi-Strauss, Claude. 1984. État actuel des études Bororo (année 1972-1973). In Paroles Données, par Claude Lévi-Strauss. Pp. 181-188. Paris: Plon. Montenegro, Olmar P. HAVE 1963. Estrutura e ritmo da sociedade Boróro. Boletim do Museu Nacional 22: 1-26. Oosten, Jarich G. HAVE 1981. Filiation and Alliance in Three Bororo Myths: A Reconsideration of the Social Code in the First Chapters of “The Raw and the Cooked.” Bijdragen tot de Taal-, Landen Volkenkunde 137 (1): 106-125. Viertler, R. 1976. As Aldeias Bororo: Algunos Aspectos de Sua Organizacao Social. Sao Paulo: Museu Paulista. CENTRAL ACUA XAVANTE Maybury-Lewis, David. 1967. Akwẽ-Shavante Society. Oxford: Clarendon Press. 356 P. [Pp. 214-239: kin terminology.] HAVE Reviews: Ortiz 1967; Leacock 1968; Shapiro, W. 1971. XERENTE Farias, A. 1996. An Anthropological Approach to the Demography of Central Brazil Gê Societies. International Journal of Anthropology 11 (2-4): 43-55. [Akwen Xerente.] Nimuendajú, Curt. 1942. The Šerente, translated from the manuscript by Robert H. Lowie. Los Angeles: Southwest Museum (Southwest Museum Publications 4). [Pp. 23-25: kin terms.] HAVE Reviews: Steward 1943; Long 1945. NORTHWEST GENERAL Fisher, William H. 1998. The Teleology of Kinship and Village Formation: Community, Ideal and Practice among the Northern Ge of Central Brazil. South American Studies 5: 52-59. KAYAPO Bamberger, Joan. 1974. Naming and the Transmission of Status in a Central Brazilian Society. Ethnology 13: 363-378. Bamberger, Joan. 1979. Exit and Voice in Central Brazil: The Politics of Flight in Kayapó Society. In Dialectical Societies: The Gê and Bororo of Central Brazil, edited by David MayburyLewis. Pp. 130-146. Cambridge and London: Harvard University Press. Dreyfus, Simone. 1963. Les Kayapo du Nord, État de Para-Brésil: Contribution à l’Étude des Indiens Gé. Paris: Mouton. Reviews: A.A. 1965; Turner, T. 1965. Fisher, William H. 2001. Age-Based Genders among the Kayapo. In Gender in Melanesia and Amazonia: An Exploration of the Comparative Method, edited by T. Gregor and D. Tuzin. Pp. 115140. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press. Fisher, William H. HAVE 2003. Name Rituals and Acts of Feeling among the Kayapo (Mebengokre). Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute 9: 117-135. [Naming, kinship, residence, ritual.] Lea, Vanessa. 1986. Nomes e Nekrets Kayapó: Uma Concepçao de Riqueza. Ph.D. dissertation. Museu Nacional, Universidade Federal de Rio de Janeiro. Lea, Vanessa. HAVE 1992. Mẽbengokre (Kayapó) Onomastics: A Facet of Houses as Total Social Facts in Central Brazil. Man 27: 129-153. Lea, Vanessa. HAVE 1995a. Casa-Se do Outro Lado: Um Modelo Simulado da Aliança Mẽbengokre (Jê). In Antropologia do Parentesco: Estudos Ameríndios, edited by Eduardo Viveiros de Castro. Pp. 321-359. Rio de Janeiro: Editora UFRJ. Lea, Vanessa. 1995b. The Houses of the Mebengokre (Kayapó) of Central Brazil: A New Door to Their Social Organization. In About the House: Lévi-Strauss and Beyond, edited by Jane Carsten and Stephen Hugh-Jones. Pp. 206-225. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Lea, Vanessa. 2002. Multiple Paternity among the Mẽbengokre (Kayapó , Jê) of Central Brazil. In Cultures of Multiple Fathers: The Theory and Practice of Partible Paternity in Lowland South America, edited by S. Beckerman and P. Valentine. Pp. 105-122. Gainesville, FL: University of Florida Press. Lea, Vanessa. HAVE 2004. Aguçando o entendimento dos termos triádicos Mẽbengokre via aborigines australianos: Dialogando com Merlan e outros. Liames 4: 29-42. Murphy, Isabel. HAVE 1997. Kayapó Kinship and Two-Way Radios. Notes on Anthropology and Intercultural Community Work 27: 3-16. Soarez-Diniz, Edson. HAVE 1962. Os Kayapo-Gorotĩre: Aspectos sócio-culturais do momento atual. Boletim do Museu Paraense Emilio Goeldi 18: 1-39. [Pp. 36-38: kin terminology.] Turner, Terrence S. 1965. Social Structure and Political Organization among the Northern Cayapo. Ph.D. dissertation. Harvard University. Turner, Terrence S. 1971. Northern Kayapó Social Structure. In Verhandlungen des XXXVIII. Internationalen Amerikanistenkongresses, Stuttgart-München, 12 bis. 18. August 1968. Bd. 3. Ss. 365372. München: Klaus Renner. Turner, Terrence S. HAVE 1979. Kinship, Household, and Community Structure among the Kayapó. In Dialectical Societies: The Gê and Bororo of Central Brazil, edited by David Maybury-Lewis. Pp. 179-217. Cambridge and London: Harvard University Press. Verswijer, G. 1982. ‘Les femmes peintes’: Une cérémonie d’imposition de nom chez les KayapóMekragnotí du Brésil central. Bulletin de la Société Suisse de Américanistes 46: 41-59. Verswijer, G. 1983. Cycles in Kaiapo Naming Practices. Communication and Cognition 16: 301-323. Vidal, Lux B. 1977. Morte e Vida de uma Sociedade Indígena Brasileira: Os Kayapó-Xikrin do Rio Cateté. São Paulo: Editora HUCITEC. [Pp. 51-59: kin terminology. Also an extensive discussion of naming and triadic kin terms.] HAVE KREEN-AKARORE (PANARÁ) Ewart, Elizabeth J. 2000. Living with Each Other: Selves and Alters amongst the Panará of Central Brazil. Ph.D. dissertation. London School of Economics. 364 P. [Moieties, names, clans. No kin classification. Theoretical discussion of dual organizations.] Heelas, Richard H. 1979. The Social Organisation of the Panara, a Ge Tribe of Central Brazil. Ph.D. dissertation. Oxford: University of Oxford. 405 P. Schwartzman, Stephan. 1988. The Panara of the Xingu National Park: The Transformation of a Society. Ph.D. dissertation. University of Chicago. [Pp. 103-170: “Clan, Kinship, and Naming: Relations of Production in Panara Society.”] SUYA Seeger, Anthony. 1974. Nature and Culture and Their Transformations in the Cosmology and Social Organization of the Suya, a Ge-Speaking Tribe in Central Brazil. Ph.D. dissertation. University of Chicago. Seeger, Anthony. 1981. Nature and Society in Central Brazil. The Suya Indians of Mato Grosso. Cambridge, MA, and London: Harvard University Press. [Pp. 121-145: kin terminology and naming.] HAVE Reviews: Rivière 1982b; Shapiro 1982d. Seeger, Anthony. 1989. Dualism: Fuzzy Thinking or Fuzzy Sets. In The Attraction of Opposites: Thought and Society in the Dualistic Mode, edited by David Maybury-Lewis and Uri Almagor. Pp. 191-208. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press. [A theoretical discussion of dualism with a defense of structuralism against Marxism; Suya examples; cross-listed in KIN-BASED GROUPS.] TIMBIRA GENERAL Coelho de Souza, Marcela. 2004. Parentes de sangue: Incesto, substância e relação no pensamento Timbira. Mana: Estudos de Antropologia Social 10 (1): 25-60. Ladeira, Maria E. 1982. A Troca de Nomes e a Troca de Cônjuges: Uma Contribução ao Estudio do Parentesco Timbira. M.A. thesis. São Paulo: Universidade de São Paulo. Lave, Jean C. 1971. Some Suggestions for the Interpretation of Residence, Descent and Exogamy among the Eastern Timbira. In Verhandlungen des XXXVIII. Internationalen Amerikanistenkongresses, Stuttgart-München, 12 bis. 18. August 1968. Bd. 3. Ss. 341346. München: Klaus Renner. Nimuendajú, Curt. 1946. The Eastern Timbira. University of California Publications in American Archaeology and Ethnology 41: 1-358. [P. 105: kin terminology.] HAVE APINAYE DaMatta, Roberto. 1971. Uma breve reconsideração da morfologia social Apinayé. In Verhandlungen des XXXVIII. Internationalen Amerikanistenkongresses, Stuttgart-München, 12 bis. 18. August 1968. Bd. 3. Ss. 355-364. München: Klaus Renner. DaMatta, Roberto C. 1979. The Apinayé Kinship System: Terminology and Ideology. In Dialectical Societies: The Gê and Bororo of Central Brazil, edited by David Maybury-Lewis. Pp. 83-127. Cambridge and London: Harvard University Press. Da Matta, Roberto. 1976. Uma reconsideração da morphologia social Apinayé. In Leituras de Etnologia Brasileira, edited by Egon Schaden. Pp. 164-185. Sao Paulo: Companhia Editora Nacional. DaMatta, Roberto. HAVE 1976. Um Mundo Dividido: A Estrutura Social dos Indios Apinaye. Petrópolis: Editora Vozes. Review: Rivière 1978. Translated into English as A Divided World: Apinayé Social Structure. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1982. [Pp. 100-130: kinship system and terminology.] HAVE Reviews: Seeger 1983; Shapiro 1983. Giraldin, Odair. HAVE 2011. Creating Affinity: Formal Friendship and Matrimonial Alliances Among the Jê People and the Apinaje Case. Vibrant: Virtual Brazilian Anthropology 8 (2): 403-426. Brasília. (Special Issue: “Dossier «Anthropology of Kinship».”) Maybury-Lewis, David. HAVE 1960. Parallel Descent and the Apinayé Anomaly. Southwestern Journal of Anthropology 16: 191-216. Nimuendajú, Curt. 1942. The Apinaye’, translated by Robert H. Lowie, edited by Robert H. Lowie and John M. Cooper. Washington: Catholic University of America Press (Anthropological Series 8). [Pp. 110-112: kin terms.] HAVE Trindade-Serra, Ordep J. 1978. Dualismo e harmonia: A propósito do caso Apinayé. Anuário Antropológico 77: 225-243. Zuidema, R. T. HAVE 1969. Hierarchy in Symmetric Alliance Systems. Bijdragen tot de Taal-, Land- en Volkenkunde 125 (1): 134-139. [Apinaye and Inca.] CANELA Crocker, William H. HAVE 1976. Canela “Group” Recruitment and Perpetuity: Incipient “Unilineality.” In Actes du XLIIe Congrè International des Américanistes. Paris, 2-9 Septembre 1976. Vol. 2. Social Time and Social Space in Lowland South American Societies. Pp. 259-275. Paris: Société des Américanistes. Crocker, William H. 1979. Canela Kinship and the Question of Matrilinearity. In Brazil: Anthropological Perspectives: Essays in Honor of Charles Wagley, edited by Maxine L. Margolis and William E. Carter. Pp. 225-249. New York: Columbia University Press. Crocker, William H. HAVE 2002. Canela “Other Fathers”: Partible Petrnity and Its Changing Practices. In Cultures of Multiple Fathers: The Theory and Practice of Partible Paternity in Lowland South America, edited by Stephen Beckerman and Paul Valentine. Pp. 86-104. Gainesville: University Press of Florida. Crocker, William H., and Jean Crocker. 1994. The Canela: Bonding Through Kinship, Ritual, and Sex. Fort Worth: Harcourt Brace College Publishers. 202 P. Crocker, William H., and Jean Crocker. 2004. The Canela: Kinship, Ritual, and Sex in an Amazonian Tribe. Belmont, CA: Wadsworth/Thomson Learning. 153 P. Nimuendajú, Curt. HAVE 1938. Review of The Social Structure of the Ramko’kamekra (Canella). American Anthropologist 40 (1): 51-74. Nimuendajú, Curt, and Robert H. Lowie. HAVE 1937. The Dual Organizations of the Ramko’kamekra (Canella) of Northern Brazil. American Anthropologist 39 (4, pt. 1): 565-582. KRAHO Chiara, V. 1981-1982. Parentesco Krahô: Espaço e dinâmica. Revista do Museu Paulista 28: 435444. Melatti, Julio C. 1971. Nominadores e genitores: Um aspecto do dualismo Krahó. In Verhandlungen Amerikanistenkongresses, Stuttgart - München, 12, bis 18, August 1968. Bd. 3. Pp. 347353. München. Melatti, Julio C. 1971. Nominadores e genitores: Um aspecto do dualismo Krahó. In Verhandlungen des XXXVIII. Internationalen Amerikanistenkongresses, Stuttgart-München, 12 bis. 18. August 1968. Bd. 3. Ss. 347-354. München: Klaus Renner. Melatti, Julio C. 1976. Nominadores e genitores: Um aspecto do dualismo Krahó. In Leituras de Etnologia Brasileira, edited by Egon Schaden. Pp. 139-148. Sao Paulo: Companhia Editora Nacional. Melatti, Julio C. 1979. The Relationship System of the Krahó. In Dialectical Societies: The Gê and Bororo of Central Brazil, edited by David Maybury-Lewis. Pp. 46-79. Cambridge and London: Harvard University Press. KRIKATI Lave, Jean C. 1979. Cycles and Trends in Krĩkatí Naming Practices. In Dialectical Societies: The Gê and Bororo of Central Brazil, edited by David Maybury-Lewis. Pp. 16-45. Cambridge and London: Harvard University Press. [Especially pp. 21-24: “Naming Relationship System.”] Lave, Jean C. HAVE 1973. A Comment on a “Study of Structural Semantics: The Siriono Kinship System.” American Anthropologist 75 (1): 314-317. [Krikati naming with regard to Scheffler’s and Lounsbury’s “parallel transmission rule.” Critique. Cross-listed in REVIEWS.] PARÁ-GAVIÃO Arnaud, Expedito, Roberto Cortez, and Anna Rita Alves. 1976. A Terminologia de Parentesco dos Indios Gaviões de Oeste (Parkateyê) – Tocantins, Pará. Boletim do Museu Paraense Emilio Goeldi 63: 1-15. HAVE GUATO Métraux, Alfred. 1942. The Native Tribes of Eastern Bolivia and Western Mato Grosso. Bureau of American Ethnology Bulletin 134. Washington: Government Printing Office. [P. 141: brief description of Guató kin terminology.] HAVE MAXAKALI Popovich, Frances B. 1980. The Social Organization of the Maxakalí. M.A. thesis. University of Texas at Arlington. 95 P. RIKBAKTSA Hahn, Robert A. 1976. Rikbakca Categories of Social Relations: An Epistemological Analysis. Ph.D. dissertation. Harvard University. [Pp. IV-1-IV-5: kin terminology.] HAVE Hahn, Robert A. 1978. Negotiated Kinship among the Rikbakca. In Social Correlates of Kin Terminology, edited by Kenneth M. Kensinger and David J. Thomas. Pp. 37-53. Working Papers on South American Indians 1. Bennington, VT: Bennington College.