Bride service and Colletotrichum musae: Difference between pages

(Difference between pages)
Content deleted Content added
Zoe (talk | contribs)
{{unsourced}}
 
Created page with '{{Taxobox | color = lightblue | name = ''Colletotrichum musae'' | regnum = Fungi | phylum = Ascomycota | classis = Sordariomycetes | subclassis = [[Ince...'
 
Line 1:
{{Taxobox
{{unsourced}}
| color = lightblue
| name = ''Colletotrichum musae''
| regnum = [[Fungi]]
| phylum = [[Ascomycota]]
| classis = [[Sordariomycetes]]
| subclassis = [[Incertae sedis]]
| ordo = [[Phyllachorales]]
| familia = [[Phyllachoraceae]]
| genus = ''[[Colletotrichum]]''
| species = '''''C. musae'''''
| binomial = ''Colletotrichum musae''
| binomial_authority = (Berk. & M.A. Curtis) Arx, (1957)
}}
 
'''Colletotrichum musae''' is a plant pathogen.
{{cleanup-date|October 2006}}
'''Brideservice''' has traditionally been portrayed in the [[anthropological]] literature as the service rendered to the bride’s family by the [[bridegroom]] as a [[brideprice]] or part of one (see [[dowry]]).
 
== External links ==
Brideservice and [[bridewealth]] models frame anthropological discussions of [[kinship]] in many regions of the world, see for instance: Langenbahn 1989; Fricke, Thornton and Dahal 1998; Hagen 1999; Gose 2000; Helliwell 2000; and Jamieson 2003.
 
[http://www.speciesfungorum.org/Names/Names.asp Index Fungorum]<br>
Patterns of [[uxorilocal]] post-marital residence, as well as the practice of temporary or prolonged brideservice, have been widely reported for [[Native]] [[Amazonia]] (among others, see [[Arvelo-Jiménez]] 1971:104; [[Dumont]] 1978:75; Harner 1973:79-80; Hill & Moran 1983:124-25; Holmberg 1969:217; Kracke 1976; [[Maybury-Lewis]] 1971:384; 1967:97f; 1979:9; Murphy 1956; Rivière 1984:40f; Renshaw 2002:186ff; Siskind 1977:79-81; Turner 1979:159-60; Whitten & Whitten 1984:209).
[http://nt.ars-grin.gov/fungaldatabases USDA ARS Fungal Database]<br>
 
[[Category:Plant pathogens and diseases]]
Rather than seeing [[affinity]] in terms of a "compensation" model whereby [[individuals]] are exchanged as [[objects]], Dean’s (1995) research on [[Amazonian]] brideservice among the [[Urarina]] demonstrates how differentially situated [[subjects]] negotiate the politics of [[marriage]]. (See Bartholomew Dean "Forbidden fruit: [[infidelity]], affinity and brideservice among the [[Urarina]] of [[Peruvian]] [[Amazonia]]." ''Journal of the [[Royal Anthropological Institute]]'', 1995 (1)
 
A famous example of brideservice occurs in the Book of [[Genesis]], when [[Jacob]] labors for [[Laban (Bible)|Laban]] for fourteen years to win [[Rachel]] and [[Leah]].
 
[[Category:Anthropology]]
[[Category:Ethnology]]
[[Category:Marriage]]