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Alyssa Fox

discussion of 6 societies - 0 views

http://www.zyama.com/bambara/

started by Alyssa Fox on 06 Dec 11 no follow-up yet
Michelle Rainaldi

Bambara Art - 0 views

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    Interesting information of the art of the Bambara
Michelle Rainaldi

Bambara Info - 0 views

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    This site has a general overview of the Bambara culture
Michelle Rainaldi

Bambara Profile - 0 views

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    Joshua Project overview of Bambara people
Alyssa Fox

http://www.joshuaproject.net/people-profile.php?peo3=10617&rog3=ML - 3 views

also helpful

started by Alyssa Fox on 05 Dec 11 no follow-up yet
Alyssa Fox

http://www.forafricanart.com/Bambara_ep_30-1.html - 1 views

a lot of this is about masks. but it's really useful. the masks seem to be an essential part of their life

started by Alyssa Fox on 04 Dec 11 no follow-up yet
Alyssa Fox

http://www.africaguide.com/culture/tribes/bambara.htm - 1 views

this has a really good section about daily life

started by Alyssa Fox on 04 Dec 11 no follow-up yet
Alyssa Fox

http://www.uiowa.edu/~africart/toc/people/bamana.html - 1 views

more quick facts. they're very clearly organized, too

started by Alyssa Fox on 04 Dec 11 no follow-up yet
Meghan Murnane

A Preliminary Report of Existing Information on the Manding Languages of West Africa - 0 views

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    This will be very useful to whoever is doing language. I emailed Professor Hill to confirm that the Bambara are also known as Bamana, which seems to be correct. I would start by looking at page 12 of this. This is the section of the text Professor Hill sent to me: "Bambara is probably the most widespread, dominant language in West Africa. It is the principal language of Mali and is a second language for many. An estimate of the number of speakers is 1.5 million (Platiel 1978). Those who understand some Bambara are between four and five million. Bambara speakers call themselves banmana, and their language bamanakan. The general region of Bambara (see figure 4.3) is from Djenne, to Segou, to Bamako (the acknowledged center of the language); north to Kaarta region (150 kilometers east of Bafoulabe). There is also a Bambara dialect in eastern Senegal. There is also a "trade" version of Bambara, having a similar role in Mali as Dyula has in Ivory Coast. There is a "standard" version of Bambara, which Radio Mali uses, as well as established primers, orthography, newspapers, adult literacy, lexiques, dictionaries, and many guides for Bambara instruction. There is a Bible (1961), and much technical work has been carried out, notably by Charles Bird and also by Maurice Houis."
Meghan Murnane

Encyclopedia of African religion - 0 views

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    This part of the Encyclopedia talks about the religion, history, social life and rituals of the bambara beginning on page 100
Meghan Murnane

Bamana People - 0 views

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    Gives a brief overview on the economy, religion, history and political systems. Note the bambara are also known as the bamana
Meghan Murnane

Bambara - 0 views

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    Another website that has a lot of general information on all sections of Bambara life/history.
Meghan Murnane

Bambara Religion - 0 views

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    Whoever is doing religion, it might be worthwhile to get a hold of this book
Meghan Murnane

A Case Study of Bambara Children - 0 views

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    I plan on using this case study for my page on family structure
Meghan Murnane

Culture of Mali - history, people, traditions, women, beliefs, food, customs, family, s... - 0 views

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    This gives a general overview of the people in Mali in general, however there are specific details that they give about the Bambara
Alyssa Fox

Bambara on GoWestAfrica.org - 1 views

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    I got a lot of quick facts from this website. It's a good overview
Meghan Murnane

Bambara summary - 0 views

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    This article gives a description of many aspects of bambara culture including demography, history, economy, trade, division of labor etc.
Shanaya Thomas-Williams

The Bamanan - 1 views

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    This is where I got some of my notes on location, language, and population. It is also from the database that we used in class.
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