HyperGeertz 1949-1959
This file is part of HyperGeertz©WorldCatalogue(HTM)*
and contains all publications (= directly or indirectly noted public
contributions)
by Prof. Clifford James Geertz, PhD (1926-2006), made public between 1949 & 1959.
* HyperGeertz is a protected Hypertext-Trademark (HTM) by Austrian law (UrhRG 1936 idgF 2006, Par. 21 & 24 iVm 40a).
ATTENTION ! An erroneous, outdated, illegal and pirate copy of HyperGeertz(HTM) in three parts is circulating in the web, distributed by http://www.visualanthropology.com.cn; this illegal pirate copy contains no correct and necessary reference to HyperGeertz(HTM), and lacks the essential and characteristic direct cross-references, updates and additional informations. See the following file(s):
the
1949-1959
file has been
copied illegally into: http://www.visualanthropology.com.cn/Article/ShowArticle.asp?ArticleID=302
(named there "Clifford Geertz I (1950-1980)"; and copied
here as proof (data status 05/2006, download 28/03/08).
Interviews, Oral & Audiovisual presentations
Discussion on values: objective or relative?, at: Antioch College, class of 1949 (spring 1949), informal "Veteran generation discussions", as noted by David Ernest Apter (in: On Clifford Geertz, in: Daedalus (American Academy of Arts and Sciences/ MIT Press), vol. 136, no. 3 (summer 2007), pp. 111–113).
"Values are affirmed [or dismissed, I.M.] only in terms of other values. [They are inevitably relative, I.M.]" (Geertz 1949).
See
the following text passage(s) by David E. Apter:
"My association with Cliff goes back
to when we were both students at Antioch College [1947-1950, I.M.].
He was a fidgety, scratchy, given-to-mumbling sort of guy, in no way
prepossessing although I knew on first exchange that he was no ordinary
student. Not that he was given over much to casual conversation, even in
that high academic moment[s] known as the "Veteran Generation" [=
students attending with WW2-experience, I.M.], when student discussions
(or better, arguments), usually about politics, were pretty much the order
of the day. Cliff tended not to get involved, but if drawn in he invariably
delivered some uncommon insight, often in the form of a quick retort
followed by silence - a silence that some of us took as a reproach or
embarrassment, as if our commentary fell short in some way.
I remember in particular one heated and very undergraduate discussion over
whether "values were objective or relative". Cliff put an end to
the conversation by saying that the only way to affirm a value is in terms
of another value. It was the kind of oracular pronouncement that could put
some people off (italics by I.M.)."
See the complete text of the article by David Ernest Apter on Clifford Geertz in the Daedalus edition summer 2007.
I.M. stands for "Ingo Moerth" as representative of "HyperGeertz(HTM)".
Articles & Book chapters
50Aeng1
(with Storey-Geertz, Hildred))
Editorial, in: IDIOM (Student magazine at Antioch College, Yellow-Springs/Oh./USA), vol.1 no. 1 (Winter 1950), p. 1 (held (only) by the Antiochiana Archive at the Antioch College/Yellow-Springs/Oh./USA ).
also as HyperGeertz-Text.
full text version also: http://www.visualanthropology.com.cn/wenxian/ShowArticle.asp?ArticleID=326
(illegal copy: without quoting HyperGeertz(HTM)
and IDIOM as directly
used online sources).
Additional Infos on the Clifford & Hildred Geertz issue: Clifford Geertz had married Hildred Storey already during his and her undergraduate studies at Antioch in 1948. They collaborated also later at Harvard and the following field studies in Indonesia (1952-1954), and in Morocco (1965, 1969-1970). The results of these collaborations were published in many subsequent joint publications. This series of joint publications ended 1981, when they finally were divorced.
Working papers
51Weng1
Drought, death and alcohol in five Southwestern cultures.
A report of the values study (by)
Cliff (sic!) Geertz, Jr., Cambridge/Ma./USA 1951: Harvard University,
Graduate School: Social Relations Department (119 leaves, typoscript; caption
title (in
the text declared as) "Research report"; held (only) by the Tozzer
Library, Harvard University: Cambridge/Ma./USA; note = part of the "Five
cultures project" (= "Ramah/Rimrock" & "Harvard
Value Study" project), see
also Geertz
95Beng1,
footnote).
directly cited in: Powers, Willow Roberts: The Harvard study of values: Mirror for postwar anthropology, in: Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences (Hoboken/N.J./USA: John Wiley & Sons, Inc.), vol. 36 no. 1, pp. 15-29 (here: pp. 27, 28).
The
Harvard Graduate School Department of Social Relations (1946-1972)
was one of the leading social research institutions of the USA in the '50s and '60s of
the last century.
One of the major research projects at that institution was the "Five Cultures Project",
studying behaviour and values, which examined five very different
communities living in the same region of Texas (= the "Ramah" and
"Rimrock" counties: (1) Zuni (Indian), (2) Navajo
(Indian), (3)
Mormon (LDS), (4) Spanish-American (Mexican Immigrants), and
(5) (white & traditional) "Texas Homesteaders").
Geertz participated as graduate student at Harvard in this research and
was responsible especially for the aspects of alcoholism and
suicide in these "Five cultures".
Although this a.m. report by Clifford Geertz was not directly included (as seperate contribution) in the later official publications on this project (f.e. Vogt, Evon Zartman/ Ethel M. Albert Vogt (eds.) 1966: People of Rimrock; a study of values in five cultures, Cambridge/ MA/ USA 1968: Harvard University Press), his results were included in the later reports and contributions, and there also several times referred to.
see also the Worldcat-entry (& further entry).
Collaboration
Culture: A Critical Review of Concepts and Definitions, by Kluckhohn, Clyde Kay M.; Kroeber, Alfred Louis (eds.), with the assistance of Wayne [W.] Untereiner, and appendices by Alfred G. Meyer): Cambridge/Ma./USA 1952: Peabody Museum (435 p.; several quoted definitions and comments stem from research, quotations and formulations by Clifford Geertz).
Quote from the "acknowledgements" by Clyde K. M. Kluckhohn & Alfred G. Meyer: "Wayne Untereiner, Richard Hobson, Clifford Geertz, Jr., Charles Griffith, and Ralph Patrick (all graduate students in anthropology at Harvard University) have not only done unusually competent work as research assistants; each has made significant criticisms of content and style. We have placed [only] the name of Mr. Untereiner on the title-page because he [alone] made [also] major contributions to our theoretical formulations." (op. cit., p. V.). But Clifford Geertz obviously contributed several citations and most probably also drafts of several of the published comments (all this online via Questia.com).
this
book was reprinted unaltered as 63Weng3:
New York/ NY/ USA 1963: Alfred A. Knopf & Random House
("Vintage Books" series).
Interviews, Oral & Audiovisual presentations
54Ieng1
Discussion with Stocking, George William Jr. - on Kluckhohn, Clyde Kay
M. ,
Harvard University, spring 1954, private recollection by George W. Stocking,
made - indirectly - public in:
Stocking, George W. (1996): Schneider on Kluckhohn, 1964:
Myth and Memory, the Oral and the Written, Fact and Fabrication, Historical Retrospect and Self-Representation in the Historiography of Modern American and British Anthropology [HAN XXIII:1996 #2],
online only:
http://anthropology.uchicago.edu/about/han/han232.htm:
see
the full text quotation from the full text mentioned above:
"Finally,
of course, one should not neglect the fact that in the Department of Social
Relations there was an unequal distribution of charisma. At times some
people suspect[ed] that Clyde’s [Kluckhohn's] dissent was in fact aimed at precisely that
problem. I know that I had a very long and very intense, slightly
bitter [,]
argument with Cliff Geertz in the middle of Harvard Square one day in 1953
or 1954 over this very problem. I think that I was able to convince him at
that time[,] that this did not explain anywhere near all of Clyde’s
ambivalence with Sociology. And I would insiste that it only accounts for,
in fact, a small portion of it."
Articles & Book chapters
Book review, in: Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies (Cambridge/Ma./USA: Harvard-Yenching Institute), vol. 18 (1955), pp. 462-465 (on: DeYoung, John Edward: "Village Life in Modern Thailand" (Berkeley/Ca./USA 1955: Univ. of California Press).
full text online available via JSTOR (subscription needed, see the list of participating JSTOR-Libraries & Institutions);
now also available as JSTOR-freeware (pdf-image only).
also as HyperGeertz-Text.
full
text version also: http://www.visualanthropology.com.cn/wenxian/ShowArticle.asp?ArticleID=327
(illegal copies: without quoting HyperGeertz(HTM)
and jstor
as direct online sources).
Working papers etc.
55Weng1
Religious belief and economic behavior in a central Javanese
town: some preliminary remarks. s.l. (sine loco), s.n. (sine
nomine), s.a. (sine anno) [1955]; (33 leaves, typoscript, caption title (dated
in the text and there declared as "Working draft"; held f.e. by
the Syracuse University Library: Syracuse/N.Y./USA; note: original town
name "Pare" (instead of the later pseudonym "Modjokuto") used).
draft version, published somewhat revised (f.e. using "Modjokuto" (pseudonym) instead of "Pare" (original name of the town)) as 56Aeng1.
this revised version also as HyperGeertz-Text.
this full text online available via JSTOR.org (subscription needed, see the list of participating JSTOR-Libraries & Institutions);
full
text version also: http://www.visualanthropology.com.cn/wenxian/ShowArticle.asp?ArticleID=328
(illegal: without quoting HyperGeertz(HTM)
and JSTOR as direct online sources).
Articles & Book chapters
56Aeng1
Religious belief and economic behavior in a central Javanese
town: some preliminary considerations, in: Economic Development and
Cultural Change (Chicago/Ill./USA: University of Chicago Press), vol.
4 no. 2 (1956), pp. 134-158.
see the preliminary version: 55Weng1.
full
text online available via JSTOR.org
(subscription needed, see the list of participating JSTOR-Libraries
& Institutions);
but NOT available as JSTOR-freeware (see some previous and some below
entries).
also as HyperGeertz-Text.
full
text version also: http://www.visualanthropology.com.cn/wenxian/ShowArticle.asp?ArticleID=328.
(illegal copy: without quoting HyperGeertz(HTM)
and jstor
as direct online sources).
see also the corresponding WorldCat-entry.
reprint: 68Reng10.
56Aeng2
Capital intensive agriculture in a peasant society: a case study,
in: Social Research: an international quarterly of political and social
science (New-York/N.Y./USA: New School for Social
Research), vol. 23
no. 4 (1956), pp. 433-449
= revised version of 56Weng3.
also as HyperGeertz-Text (via SocialResearch: http://www.socres.org/vol51/issue512.htm);
full
text versions also: http://www.visualanthropology.com.cn/wenxian/ShowArticle.asp?ArticleID=382
(329).
(illegal copies: without quoting HyperGeertz(HTM)
and SocialResearch as direct online sources).
(offprint) see also as Worldcat-entry.
reprint: 84Reng3.
also as HyperGeertz-Abstract.
Working papers etc.
56Weng1
The development of the Javanese economy: a socio-cultural approach.
Cambridge/Ma./USA: Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Center for International
Studies (130 leaves; caption title; on front page "Economic development program Nr.
C/56-1" (dated in the text and there declared as "Working
draft"); held f.e. by the University of Chicago Library: Chicago/Il./USA).
This edition was offered recently via amazon.com as "Books: The development of the Javanese economy: a socio-cultural approach".
see also the respective WorldCat-entry.
"In the aforementioned book, Geertz traces the historical and economic development of Java by providing in-depth information about wars, rulers, trade, discovery, etc. Also in 1956 Geertz wrote The Social Context of Economic Change: An Indonesian Case Study, in which he traces both the urban and rural developments of an Indonesian town-village." (http://hyper.vcsun.org/HyperNews/battias/get/cs600/bio/6.html?nogifs).
56Weng2
The social context of economic change: an Indonesian case study.
Cambridge/Ma./USA: Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT); Center for International
Studies (CIS) (179 leaves; caption title; on front page "Economic development program Nr.
C/56-18" (dated in the text and there declared as "Preliminary
working paper"); held f.e. by the Cleveland State University Library,
Cleveland/Oh./USA.
reissued unchanged as working paper in print (Cambridge/Ma./USA 1964: MIT: CIS);
= reprinted as microfiche/ microfilm edition: Ann Arbor/Mi./USA 1972: UMI = University Microfilms (now: UMI Books on Demand (http://www.il.proquest.com/umi/bod), BOD Order Number: WB1-OP36407-001.
revised and published later also as 65Beng1.
direct & unchanged reissue (1978) of the mircrofilm edition mentioned above (1972): 78Reng2.
56Weng3
The impact of capital-intensive agriculture on peasant social
structure: a case study. Cambridge/Ma./USA: Massachusetts Institute
of Technology, Center for International Studies (20 leaves; caption title; on front page
"Economic Development Program Nr. C/56-17"; on leaf 2: "Paper,
delivered at the annual meeting of the Society for Applied Anthropology/
summary of a larger CENIS study by Dr. Geertz: the social context
of economic change; an Indonesian case study: C/56-18"); held f.e by
the Vanderbilt University Library: Nashville/Tn./USA;
= summary of 56Weng2.
reprint: 61Reng1.
published revised as 56Aeng2.
this version also as HyperGeertz-Text (via SocialResearch: http://www.socres.org/vol51/issue512.htm);
full
text versions also: http://www.visualanthropology.com.cn/wenxian/ShowArticle.asp?ArticleID=382
(329).
(illegal copy: without quoting HyperGeertz(HTM)
and SocialResearch as direct online sources).
see the corresponding WorldCat-entry.
56Weng4
The rotating credit association: an instrument for development.
Cambridge/Ma./USA: Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Center for
International Studies ( 51 leaves; caption title; on front page "Economic Development Program Nr.
C/56-30" (dated in the text and there declared as "Research report");
held f.e. by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Library,
Cambridge/Ma./USA, or the Trondheim Universitetsbiblioteket, Trondheim/NOR: see
the Norwegian Bibsys record no. 990305139).
see the corresponding WorldCat-entry.
published revised as 62Aeng3.
this version (1962) also as HyperGeertz-Abstract & HyperGeertz-Text.
this full text (1962) online available via JSTOR (subscription needed, see the list of participating JSTOR-Libraries & Institutions);
full
text version 1962 also: http://www.visualanthropology.com.cn/wenxian/ShowArticle.asp?ArticleID=330
(illegal copy: without quoting HyperGeertz(HTM)
and JSTOR as direct online source).
56Weng5
Religion in Modjokuto: a study of ritual and belief in a complex
society, by Clifford James Geertz, Jr.; Cambridge/Ma./USA: Harvard
University (4, IV, 574 leaves; = Ph.D. Thesis (director: Prof. Cora DuBois);
held (only) by the Harvard University, Tozzer Library: Boston/Ma./USA; see also
the other (partly revised) versions: 57Weng1, 58Weng1,
60Beng1).
a photocopy of this original version of the Ph.D.-thesis by Clifford James Geertz, Jr., is available on demand by the Harvard University Archives, Cambridge/Ma./USA 1991: Harvard University.
see the corresponding WorldCat-entry.
the text was developed and discussed within the context of the so called "Modjokuto studies" (1955 onwards), later distributed also in parts 1957 & 1958 (57Weng1, 58Weng1); the 1956 thesis version therefore is only a preliminary convolution of a text in progress, finally published as 60Beng1).
The pertaining "Modjokuto studies" ("Modjokuto" = a pseudonym for "Pare", Java) contain 2 vols: vol.1: Modjokuto study: Abangan religion, Santri religion (381 leaves); vol. 2: Modjokuto study: Prijaji religion (244 leaves). Cambridge/Ma./USA 1957: Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Center for International Studies (both dated in the text and there declared as "Working drafts"; (see 57Weng1);
Articles & Book chapters
57Aeng1
Ethos, world-view and the analysis of sacred symbols, in: The Antioch Review
(Yellow-Springs/Oh./USA: Antioch Review Inc.), vol. 17 no. 4 (1957), pp.
421-437.
reprinted as chapt. 5 in 73Beng1, pp. 126-141 (for the numerous translations as part of this book see there).
translation into Spanish: 73Tspa1.
translation into Hungarian in 94Bhun1, pp. 218-268.
translation into Lithuanian in 05Blit1.
full text: http://dizzy.library.arizona.edu/users/jneill/geertz.htm.
also as HyperGeertz-Text.
full
text versions also: http://www.visualanthropology.com.cn/wenxian/ShowArticle.asp?ArticleID=396
(331).
(illegal copy: without quoting HyperGeertz(HTM)
& "http://dizzy.library.arizona.edu"
as direct online sources).
57Aeng2
Ritual and social change: a Javanese example, in: American
Anthropologist (Washington/D.C./USA etc.: American Anthropological
Association), vol. 59 no.1 (1957), pp. 32-53.
full text online available via JSTOR (subscription needed, see the list of participating JSTOR-Libraries & Institutions);
now also available as JSTOR-freeware (pdf-image only).
direct reprints: 67Reng1, 68Reng2, 72Reng4, 76Reng4, 03Reng2.
reprint s.a. (= sine anno): Bobbs-Merrill reprint series in the social sciences, no. A-78, Indianapolis/ In./USA: Bobbs-Merrill Inc. (offered recently - after the closure of Bobbs-Merrill - also via amazon.com).
this reprint see also as WorldCat-entry.
reprinted as chapt. 6 in 73Beng1, pp. 142-169 (for the numerous translations as part of this book see there).
this reprint (via Questia.com) also as HyperGeertz-Text.
full
text versions also: http://www.visualanthropology.com.cn/wenxian/ShowArticle.asp?ArticleID=387
(371)
(332)
(illegal copy: without quoting HyperGeertz(HTM),
JSTOR or Questia as direct online sources).
translation into German in 83Bger1.
Working papers etc.
57Weng1
Modjokuto studies. 2 vols: vol.1: Modjokuto study:
Abangan religion, Santri religion (381 leaves); vol. 2: Modjokuto
study: Prijaji religion (244 leaves). Cambridge/Ma./USA 1957:
Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Center for International Studies (both
dated in the text and there declared as "Working drafts"; =
enlarged version of 56Weng5; held f.e. by the Alden
Library, Southeast Asia Collection: Ohio University, Athens/Oh./USA).
revised versions as 58Weng1.
final published version: 60Beng1.
see also the WorldCat-entry.
Collaboration
57Weng1
Indonesia's Economic Stabilization and
Development, by Higgins, Benjamin Howard: New-York/N.Y./USA 1957: Institute of
Pacific Relations.
Quote
from the author's preface:
"The study may thus be regarded also as an
interim report of the M.I.T. Indonesia Project, which is part of the
Economic and Political Development Program of the M.I.T. Center for
International Studies, launched in July 1955 with financing for five years
from the Ford Foundation. Until recently the Project has concentrated mainly
on the study of central government policy in relation to economic
development, including financial and stabilization measures and the
political background as they relate to economic development. At the same
time, the Indonesia Field Team of the Center has conducted a series of
studies of anthropological, sociological, and cultural aspects of Central
Javanese society.The present study presents in summary fashion some major
findings of the Project with regard to central government policy between the
transfer of sovereignty at the end of 1949 and the opening of the first
elected parliament in May of 1956. ... This book is in large measure a team
product. Liberal use has been made of Dr. Douglas Paauw's work on finance,
Dr. Guy Pauker's studies of politics, and Mr. John Rodrigues' and Dr.
Clifford Geertz' surveys of sociological and cultural factors."
(pp. v-vi, op. cit.)
all texts of this book also via Questia.com.
Working papers etc.
58Weng1
Modjokuto: religion in Java. Cambridge/Ma./USA 1958:
Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Center for International Studies (2
vols.: XVI, 206+520 leaves; both dated in the text and there declared as "Working drafts";
= enlarged version of 57Weng1); held f.e. by the
Arizona
State University Library: Phoenix/Az./USA; or the Library of Congress,
control no. 7953524 (collated there: 4 vols., XVI + 730 leaves,
subject: Modjokerto).
registered as WorldCat-entry;
final published version: 60Beng1.
58Weng2
Bali/ (by) Clifford Geertz, University of California,
in: The Tarn [Nathaniel F.] Papers, Section IV: Anthropology & General
Scholarship, Burma: U.S. Files (1958 - late 60s); 1 TLS (?), 1 page.
see the
source information at:
http://www-sul.stanford.edu/depts/hasrg/ablit/amerlit/Tarn%20scholarship.html.
Form and Variation in Balinese Village Structure. November 1958, in: The Pauker [Guy Jean] Papers, Hoover Institution Library and Archives, Stanford/Ca./USA, box 14 folder 9 (there: 38 p.; caption title; = typoscript pre-version of 59Aeng1).
see the source information: http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/tf3b69n68z/C01/476947213.
published version 1959 via JSTOR.org also as HyperGeertz-Text.
full
text version 1959 also: http://www.visualanthropology.com.cn/wenxian/ShowArticle.asp?ArticleID=333
(illegal: without quoting HyperGeertz(HTM)
& JSTOR as direct online source).
Articles & Book chapters
59Aeng1
Form and variation in Balinese village structure, in:
American
Anthropologist (Washington/D.C./USA etc: American Anthropological
Association), vol. 61 no. 4 (1959), pp. 991-1012 (printed version of 58Weng3).
full text online available via JSTOR.org (subscription needed, see the list of participating JSTOR-Libraries & Institutions);
now also available as JSTOR-freeware (pdf-image only).
also as HyperGeertz-Text.
full
text version also: http://www.visualanthropology.com.cn/wenxian/ShowArticle.asp?ArticleID=333
(illegal: without quoting HyperGeertz(HTM)
and jstor
as direct online sources).
reprint s.a. (= sine anno): Bobbs-Merrill reprint series in the social sciences, Indianapolis/ In./USA: Bobbs-Merrill Inc. (offered recently - after the closure of Bobbs-Merrill - also via amazon.com)
reprint: 67Reng2.
translation into French in 83Bfre1.
translation into Portuguese: 99Tpor1.
59Aeng2
The Balinese village, in: Skinner, George William (ed.):
Local,
ethnic and national loyalities in village Indonesia: a symposium.
New-Haven/Ct./USA 1959: Yale University (Graduate School: Southeast Asian
Studies; Cultural Report Series no. 8; distributed in cooperation with the
Institute of Pacific Relations, New-York/N.Y./USA), pp. 34-41 (= printed version
of 59Weng3).
Book review, in: Journal of Asian Studies (Ann Arbor/Mi./USA: Association for Asian Studies), vol. 3 (1959), pp. 398-399 (on: van Nieuwenhuijze, Christoffel Anthonie Olivien: "Aspects of Islam in Post-Colonial Indonesia. Five Essays" (Den Haag/NED 1958: W. van Hoeve).
full text online available via JSTOR (subscription needed, see the list of participating JSTOR-Libraries & Institutions);
now also available as JSTOR-freeware (pdf-image only).
also as HyperGeertz-Text.
full
text version also: http://www.visualanthropology.com.cn/wenxian/ShowArticle.asp?ArticleID=334
(illegal: without quoting HyperGeertz(HTM)
and JSTOR as direct online sources).
Book review, in: Pacific Historical Review (Berkeley/Ca./USA: Univ. of California Press), vol. 2 (1959), p. 199 (on: Schrieke, Bertram Johannes Otto: "Indonesian Sociological Studies: Selected Writings of B. Schrieke: Part Two: Ruler and Realm in Early Java" (Den Haag/NED 1957: W. van Hoeve).
Working papers etc.
59Weng1
(with Geertz, Hildred)
The Balinese kinship system. s.l. [Cambridge/Ma./USA 1959]:
s.n. [Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Center for International Studies] (115
leaves, typoscript; caption title; dated in the text and there declared as "Working
paper"; included in: The Human Relations Area Files (HRAF; Yale
University, New-Haven/Ct./USA 1959; vol. OF7 no.9 (Bali)); implemented also in
the SCSS (Standard Cross Cultural Sample): no. 84, EA: 152, Ib: 3 (village of
Tinhingan), call no. 0300000.
see http://www.worldcultures.org/~drwhite/worldcul/SCCSbib.pdf (link outdated).
see also the corresponding WorldCat-entry (caption title; remark: "Texte multigraphié recto des pages seul/ copy version, front pages only").
published revised and enlarged later as 75Beng1.
59Weng2
Social change and economic modernization in two Indonesian towns: a
case in point/ by Clifford Geertz. (s.l. = sine loco), (s.n. = sine
nomine). (20 leaves, typoscript; caption title; on front page: "Draft: for private
distribution. Not to be quoted. June 1959"; held f.e. by the University
of Chicago Library, Chicago/Il./USA; or the Amsterdam University Library,
Amsterdam/NED).
see the corresponding WorldCat-entry.
comparing the towns of "Pare (= later pseudonym 'Modjokuto')" and "Tabanan", both in Bali.
published revised later as 62Aeng2;
this version via Questia.com also as HyperGeertz-Text.
full
text versions also: http://www.visualanthropology.com.cn/wenxian/ShowArticle.asp?ArticleID=344
(335)
(illegal: without quoting HyperGeertz(HTM)
and Questia
as direct online sources).
included in 63Beng2.
59Weng3
Balinese religion in transition. (7 leaves, typoscript;
caption title; included in: The Human Relations Area Files (HRAF; Yale University,
New-Haven/Ct./USA 1959): vol. OF7 no.9 (Bali); as such implemented also in the
SCCS (Standard Cross Cultural Sample): no. 84, EA: 152, Ib: 3 (village of
Tinhingan), call. no. 0400000.
see http://www.worldcultures.org/~drwhite/worldcul/SCCSbib.pdf (this link outdated).
59Weng4
Ethnic vs. national loyalties in the Indonesian village: the Javanese
village, February 1959, in: The Pauker
[Guy Jean] Papers, Hoover
Institution Library and Archives, Stanford/Ca./USA, box 41 folder 13 (12 p; =
typoscript pre-version of 59Aeng2; caption title,
"February 1959" and "preliminary version, not for
quotation" noted on the front leaf).
59Weng5
(together with Eggan, Fred Russell; Fallers, Lloyd A. ("Tom");
Firth, Raymond William; Fortes, Meyer; Redfield, Robert; Schneider, David. M.;
Warner, William L.; Washburn, Sherwood L.)
Proposal for an Anglo-American Journal of Social Anthropology,
unpublished paper, Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences,
Stanford University, Stanford/Ca./USA (4 p., typoscript; caption title; to be found in the
Archives of the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences,
Stanford/Ca./USA).
information source: "Anthropology at Chicago" by George William Stocking, Jr.
see: http://anthropology.uchicago.edu/about/cases/paloalto.shtml.