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         Cameroon Culture:     more books (42)
  1. The Impacts of Tourism in the SouthWest Province of Cameroon by Raymond Musoro, 2009-11-12
  2. Africa in Paris: on expressive cultures from the early twentieth century to the present.(Josephine Baker in Art and Life: The Icon and the Image)(Black ... review): An article from: African Arts by Victoria L. Rovine, 2009-06-22
  3. Scribbles from the Den. Essays on Politics and Collective Memory in Cameroon by Dibussi Tande, 2009-05-01
  4. Culture Camerounaise: Culture Du Cameroun, Mythe de La Tortue Chez Les Bafia, Cameroon Radio Television, Ngondo, Assiko, Kongossa (French Edition)
  5. Final report, Zaire fish culture by Beth Burnett, 1983
  6. Excursions into our culture: (a radio series) by S. N Ejedepang-Koge, 1988
  7. The design of micro-projects and macro-policies: Examples from three of ATI's projects in Africa by Eric Hyman, 1988
  8. Education through literature: A paper by Bernard Nsokika Fonlon, 1977
  9. Tribesmen a/Patriots CB by Kofele-Kale, 1980-12-01
  10. Mango Elephants in the Sun by Susana Herrera, 1999-05-11
  11. Fulfulde tales of North Cameroon (African languages and ethnography) by Paul Kazuhisa Eguchi, 1978
  12. President Paul Biyas interview on Cameroon television, February 19, 1987 by Paul Biya, 1987
  13. Houlof I: Archeologie des societes protohistoriques du Nord-Cameroun (Cambridge Monographs in African Archaeology) (French Edition) (Pt.32) by Augustin Holl, 1988-12-31

41. Anthropology UCL - Prof. Rowlands' Further Publications
Akademisk Forlag, Copenhagen; 1989; 87500-2783-2. ROWLANDS,M. Sorcery and Lawin Modern cameroon. culture and History, 1989; issue 6, 63-84. 0902-7521.
http://www.ucl.ac.uk/Anthropology/material_culture/further_pubs/tmp_rowlan02.htm
MATERIAL CULTURE
Michael ROWLANDS Further Publications
ROWLANDS,M. Consumption and Identity in the European Bronze Age. In Ethnicity and Archaeology. Bietti-Sestieri,E., Editor. Oxford, 1998; 1-10. ROWLANDS,M. and NYMANJOH,F. Elite Associations and the Politics of Belonging in Cameroon. Africa, 1998; vol. 68, issue 3, 320-338. #953666. ROWLANDS,M., MILLER,D., JACKSON,P. and THRIFT,M.N. Shopping, Space and Identity. 1998; Routledge, #0-415-15460. ROWLANDS,M. and KRISTIANSEN,K. Social Transformations in Archaeology. 1998; Routledge, London; #0415-06789-8. ROWLANDS,M. Memory, sacrifice and war memorials. New Formations, 1997; issue 30, 8-17. #0950-2378. ROWLANDS,M. Ideals and lifecycles in Cameroon. In African Material Culture. Arnoldi,M.-J., Editor. Smithsonian, Washington; 1996; #0-253-21037-2. ROWLANDS,M. Looking at financial landscapes. In Money go rounds. Ardener,S. and Burman,S., Editors. Berghahan, Oxford; 1996; #0-85496-832-6. ROWLANDS,M. Temporal Inconsistencies in a Nation Space.

42. Books: Africa: Central: Art, Culture, Music & Religion; History, Economics, Deve
ART, culture RELIGION. Neba, Aaron. S., Modern Geography of cameroon. NebaPubl., 1987. Click here for more information on Geography of cameroon.
http://www.ibike.org/bibliography/africa/africa-central.htm
International Bicycle Fund
Bibliography: Africa: Central
Introduction
History and Economics
Modern Literature
Neba, Aaron. S., Modern Geography of Cameroon . Neba Publ., 1987. Click here for more information on Geography of Cameroon Ngwa, J.A., A New Geography of Cameroon . Longman, 1987.
HISTORY AND ECONOMICS
Chiabi, Emmanuel, Making of Modern Cameroon: A History of Substate Nationalism and Disparate Union, 1914-1961 . University Press of America, 1997. Click here for more information on Modern Cameroon Delancy, Mark W., and Mbella, Mokeba H., Historical Dictionary of the Republic of Cameroon . Scarecrow Press, 1990. Click here for more information on books by Mark Delancy Egerton, F.C., African Majesty: A Record of Refuge at the Court of the King of Bangangte in French Cameroon A History of the Cameroon . Longman, 1987. Click here for more information on History of the Cameroon Johnson, Willard R., The Cameroon Federation: Political Integration in a Fragmentary Society . Princeton, 1970. Click here for more information on Cameroon Federation Joseph, R.A.

43. Bits Of Culture - Cameroon
Language Map. Bits of culture. PointTo-Talk Booklets. Additional Resources.BITS OF culture - cameroon. Languages. Geography. Cultural Values.
http://www.mgh.harvard.edu/interpreters/b_camr.asp
BITS OF CULTURE - Cameroon Languages Geography Cultural Values Health Care Values ... Interesting Facts Languages English,
French,
Fang,
Bulu,
Fulani,
Duala,
and Mbum (English Creole on the coast)
Geography
Cultural Values
Health Care Values
Diet Interesting Facts

44. Cameroon-Info.Net :: View Forum - Culture
Translate this page Jump to Select a forum.
http://www.cameroon-info.net/cmForumNG/viewforum.php?forum=8&655

45. Teaching Jobs
GEN / Web Directory / Africa / cameroon / Society and culture (16).Sub Mama for Story Papers on cameroon society and culture. Mambila
http://dirs.globalesl.net/cat/82698/
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You must have both JavaScript and Cookies enabled in order to use
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46. The Place Of The Elephant In Culture And Oral Tradition
On the elephant's important and mythical position in the culture and oral traditions among the local Category Arts Literature Myths and Folktales Myths African......The Place of the Elephant in the culture and Oral Tradition in Northern cameroon(Part I) Natasha Zwall Martin Tchamba Due to the interaction of elephant
http://www.nczooeletrack.org/elephants/inculture1.html
The Place of the Elephant in the Culture and Oral Tradition in Northern Cameroon (Part I)
Due to the interaction of elephant with human beings, the elephant occupies an important and mythical position in the culture and oral traditions among the local population. Many tales are told with the intention to justify the behaviour of elephants in a given region. The most interesting and fascinating of these tales are those that attempt to give explanation to the origin of these elephants, their related human aspect as well as their relations with other animals.
The belief that marauder elephants migrated from Chad is generally agreed upon in this region. Far behind, before the elephants were signaled in this region, travelers from Chad were said to have told mythical stories about some gigantic animals; "even the most colossal of all the villagers was unable the reach or touch the back of this enormous creature with the hand".
The story of the arrival of the first elephants in the villages is also told with mythical vehemence. "The first elephant to arrive, got there in the night. Without the slightest noise nor did it destroy any farm. Just its footprints were conspicuously marked out on the ground. At dawn, these footprints, as large and wide as the human feet put together, were discovered by the villagers. These villagers thought that someone must have done it as a work of art. Speculations were made to this unraveled phenomenon. Finally, after a few days, the villagers saw the animal. It was a miracle".

47. AdmiNet - Cameroon
organisations Cities Towns Agriculture Law Art, culture Health Environment UniversitiesPress, Entertainment Defence WWW resources about cameroon Thanks.
http://www.adminet.com/world/cm/
spreads information all over the Net Search throughout the whole AdmiNet site :
options
AdmiNet World Africa Cameroon Government
Links with other countries

Parliament

Political organisations
...
Thanks

Welcome to Cameroon : An Informal Introduction to the Country and its People
The government of Cameroon
Links with other countries
  • Embassies and Consulates of Cameroon to other countries :
    France
  • Embassies and Consulates of other countries in Cameroon:
    France
  • Foreign Chambers of Commerce and Industry :
Parliament
  • Political organisations
    Cities and Towns
    Agriculture
    Finance
    Law
    Art, Culture
    Health
    Environment
    Sports
    Jobs
    Companies
  • 48. African Studies Centre - Culture, Politics And Inequality
    Output book, book chapters, articles. Title Political change and regionalismin cameroon. Theme group culture, Politics and Inequality.
    http://asc.leidenuniv.nl/research/themegroup-cpi.htm
    Culture, Politics and Inequality Head: Prof. Dr G.J. Abbink Theme:
    Clickez ici pour le texte français
    Building closed Monday 28 April at 16:00
    OnMonday afternoon, 28 April, the ASC secretariat and Library will be closed at 16.00 due to general maintenance to our electricity grid.
    Projects
    Title: Borders of Africa: The dynamics of political loyalty and local identity Theme group: Culture, Politics and Inequality Researcher(s): G.J. Abbink and R.A. van Dijk Funding: DGIS, Netherlands Ministry of Foreign Affairs (publication support) Period: Keywords: borders, mobility, identity Output: edited book Title: History, memory and identity: Wolayta, Ethiopia, 1893-2000 Theme group: Culture, Politics and Inequality Researcher(s): G.J. Abbink Cooperation: Data De'a (University of Bergen, Norway)
    Ministry of Culture, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
    Frobenius Institute, Frankfurt-am-Main, Germany Funding: ASC Location: Ethiopia Period: Keywords: Ethiopia, politics of memory, revolt and resistance, ethnicity and politics, ethno-history, regional identity Output: article, monograph

    49. ASC Research Projects In And Specialization On Cameroon
    Title 'Ask and you shall be given' Pentecostalism and the economiccrisis in cameroon. Theme group culture, Politics and Inequality.
    http://asc.leidenuniv.nl/research/l7.htm
    Research projects in Cameroon
    Title: 'Ask and you shall be given': Pentecostalism and the economic crisis in Cameroon Theme group: Culture, Politics and Inequality Researcher(s): Robert Mbe Akoko Cooperation: Piet Konings (ASC)
    Prof. Pieter Geschiere (Leiden University)
    Prof. Francis Nyamnjoh (University of Botswana)
    Dr B. Meyer (University of Amsterdam)
    University of Buea Funding: WOTRO Location: Cameroon Period: Keywords: Pentecostalism, established churches, economic crisis, capital accumulation, regionalism Output: PhD thesis, book chapters, articles Title: How Africa works: Occupational change, identity and morality Theme group: Economy, Ecology and Exclusion Researcher(s): D.F. Bryceson Cooperation: Institute of Social and Economic Research, Rhodes University, South Africa
    Centre for Research and Development, Kano, Nigeria Funding: DGIS, Netherlands Ministry of Foreign Affairs Location: Cameroon Kenya Mali Nigeria ... Tanzania Period: Keywords: occupational change, income diversification, employment, identity, public morality Output: edited collection Title: The role of civil society during economic and political liberalization in Africa Theme group: Culture, Politics and Inequality

    50. Germany Info: Culture & Life
    World Cup Germany Beats cameroon to Advance, dpa photo. Germany beatcameroon 20 on June 11 to advance to the World Cup round of 16.
    http://www.germany-info.org/relaunch/culture/new/cul_wcup2002a.html
    Germany Info Home: World Cup: Germany Beats Cameroon to Advance
    Match : Carsten Jancker goes up against midfielder Marc-Vivien Foe. dpa photo Germany beat Cameroon 2-0 on June 11 to advance to the World Cup round of 16. The game between the two leaders in Group E saw the continued rise to Cup stardom for Miroslav Klose, who scored his fifth goal of the tournament, another header, to seal the victory for Germany in the 79th minute. Klose was also key in the first goal in the 50th minute when he beat Cameroon defenders and found substitute Marco Bode who shot it past goalee Boukar Alioum. The game was perhaps most notable for its officiating, with the Spanish referee throwing a total of 16 yellow cards and ousting Germany's Carsten Ramelow in the 40th minute and Cameroon's Patrick Suffo in the 77th.
    Foul : Referee Antonio Nieto Lopez red-cards Carsten Ramelow as teammate Michael Ballack looks on. dpa photo A tie was all Germany needed to secure the step into the round of 16. Both Cameroon and Germany led Group E with four points going into the game, but Germany had the goal-differential advantage. Cameroon tied against Ireland and beat Saudi Arabia 1-0. Germany also tied against Ireland, but beat Saudi Arabia 8-0. The game in Shizuoka, Japan, pitted coach Rudi Völler against his countryman Winfried "the Tiger" Schaefer who led Cameroon to become African Cup of Nations champions in 2000. But their loss against Germany means Cameroon exits the tournament. Ireland will advance after beating Saudi Arabia 3-0.

    51. Index On Africa
    Links Section. You are here Home Countries cameroon culture. culture.Afromix Music Guide A listing of cameroonian music and artists.
    http://www.afrika.no/links/Countries/Cameroon/Culture/
    Home Links Opinion About ... Made by the Norwegian Council for Africa AFRICA NEWS UPDATE
    Join our free newslist, Africa News Update, and keep yourself updated on what's happening on the continent! Enter your email address:
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    COUNTRY SHORTCUTS
    Pick a country Algeria Angola Benin Botswana Burkina Faso Burundi Cameroon Cape Verde CAR Chad Comoros Congo-Brazzaville Congo-Zaire Côte d'Ivoire Djibouti Egypt Equatorial Guinea Eritrea Ethiopia Gabon Gambia Ghana Guinea Guinea-Bissau Kenya Lesotho Liberia Libya Madagascar Malawi Mali Mauritania Mauritius Morocco Mozambique Namibia Niger Nigeria Rwanda Sao Tome-Principe Senegal Seychelles Sierra Leone Somalia South Africa Sudan Swaziland Tanzania Togo Tunisia Uganda Western Sahara Zambia Zimbabwe Links Section You are here: Home Countries Cameroon : Culture Culture
    Afromix Music Guide

    A listing of Cameroonian music and artists. Review It Bambou art gallery and commerce centre Bambou est un site camerounais marchand et exposant des objets d'art d'afrique et du cameroun. Hébergé par wagne. Review It Ethnologue Database A catalogue of more than 6,700 languages spoken in 228 countries. The Ethnologue Name Index lists over 39,000 language names, dialect names, and alternate names. The Ethnologue Language Family Index organizes languages according to language families.

    52. IWon - Travel Guide - History & Culture
    iWon Travel. 5 iWon 6 Travel 3 Africa 3 cameroon History culture, Powered by. HISTORY and culture History culture. History.
    http://www.iwon.com/travel/travelguide/history/0,20310,Africa-365,00.html
    iWon Travel Africa Cameroon Powered by HISTORY and CULTURE
    History
    Culture
    History
    Despite an invitation from a Douala chief to set up a protectorate over the area in the 1850s, Great Britain dallied for decades and finally lost to the Germans in 1884, who beat them to an agreement by five days. The Germans were active colonisers, building schools, railways and plantations. But German rule was harsh: at one plantation a fifth of the labourers died in a single year from overwork. After WWI Cameroon received new overlords courtesy of the League of Nations, which gave the French a mandate over 80% of the territory, and the British control of two separate areas, one in the south-western highlands (Southern Cameroons) and the other in the north (Northern Cameroons, now part of Nigeria). As a result, a single nation was divided into three parts governed by two colonial powers - hardly a situation conducive to later unification. What was worse, the British neglected their territories and instead lavished attention on their administrative capital in Nigeria. Within a few years the Brits sold their Cameroons holdings back to the Germans, who didn't last much longer - the outbreak of WWII saw them repatriated and stripped of their land by the Allies. By contrast, the French improved the railway (with forced labour, forbidden by their mandate), developed cocoa and palm-oil plantations and exported timber, increasing the value of trade fivefold in its portion of the country between the world wars. After WWII, new political parties formed in French Cameroon, pressing for independence. A northern-based party, the Union Camerounaise, gained control of the national assembly, aggravating the resentment of southerners. Following independence in 1960, that ill will blossomed into a full-scale rebellion that took five battalions of French troops and a squadron of fighter planes eight months to put down. Thousands were ruthlessly killed and a state of emergency was declared that lasted two decades. The Union Camerounaise held onto power and its leader, Ahmadou Ahidjo, a northerner and ardent Muslim, became president.

    53. Browsing Regional Africa Cameroon Society And Culture Category
    Browse Regional Africa cameroon Society and culture Mama for Story Papers on cameroonsociety and culture. http//lucy.ukc.ac.uk/Chilver/ Preview This Site.
    http://www.uksprite.com/search/search/Regional/Africa/Cameroon/Society_and_Cultu

    54. Culture Shop Arts, Crafts & Culture Of Thailand
    cameroon Mali. Crafts. Collections. culture. Masks details Tikar HarvestMask $125. For more Masks from cameroon. The Elephants of cameroon
    http://www.wotac.com/mall/cameroon.htm
    Culture Shop Original Art Handicrafts Collections Culture
    Home
    Search Index by Country Index by Craft about Us Email ... Wholesale Cameroon
    Mali Crafts Collections Culture Masks
    details
    Tikar Harvest Mask
    For more Masks from Cameroon The Elephants of Cameroon
    North Carolina Zoo (USA) elephant conservation project. Dja Faunal Reserve Paintings-Original
    details
    Village Scene
    Statues
    details Bamileke Statue - female For more Statues from Cameroon Cameroon Education Corporation Mali Literature Contemporary Malian Art Mali - Dogon granary door details Masks and statues Dogon Information on the Dogons houses of Mali Mali Ebony carvings details WWF-Cameroon Programme World Wildlife Fund field project Wind Chimes details Bamboo-Hand Painted

    55. Society And Culture @ Worldagogo.com - Local Links And Information, Society And
    FOREVER. Home Africa cameroon Society and culture, Bid for positionMama for Story Papers on cameroon society and culture. Bid
    http://www.worldagogo.com/global/Africa/Cameroon/Society_and_Culture/

    Home
    Africa Cameroon : Society and Culture
    Cameroon Learning Maps News Weather
    Cameroon World Web
    Categories:

    Politics

    Sites: • Find products related to Society and Culture @ Amazon.com

    56. Lonely Planet's Guide To Cameroon
    Order Now. cameroon. culture. cameroon's split AngloFrench personality is furthercomplicated by its bewildering array of African ethnic groups and languages.
    http://cssvc.travel.compuserve.com/travel/lonely_planet/africa/cameroon/culture.
    From
    Lonely Planet Lonely Planet guide to Cameroon and the world Order Now
    Cameroon Culture chefferies (chiefs). Within each unit there are numerous secret societies responsible for the preservation of rituals. By contrast, the Bamoun are governed by a single leader called the sultan Whereas the south has been in contact with Europe for over 500 years, until the 20th century the north was part of quasi-feudal Muslim Fulani kingdoms centered in Nigeria, and tradition and resistance to outside influence remain strong. This isolation has kept Western-style development to a minimum. Most northerners, however, are neither Fulani nor Muslim but Kirdi, the Fulani word for pagan. The Kirdi are comprised of tribes driven by the Fulani into the inhospitable and isolated rocky areas near the Nigerian border. The music of Cameroon is among the most popular in Africa, especially makossa , a popular dance rhythm you'll hear blaring out of clubs and discos. Makossa is adaptable to a wide variety of instrumentation, from traditional thumb pianos to guitars and synthesizers. Manu Dibango brought the style to international prominence in the early 1970s; now Sam Fan Thomas is the king of makossa. Another popular dance music is bikutsi , typically sung in Ewonde.

    57. Cameroon
    report on cameroon published in Forbes Global Magazine, October 1 st, 2001. Developed by Agencia E. culture cameroon BASIC FACTS.
    http://www.winne.com/cameroon/report/culture.htm
    TRADITIONAL LIFESTYLE Cameroon offers a wide diversity of customary traditions, and lifestyles; among those currently used, we could mention the following ones:
    In the Centre, South and West , a cane basket is frequently used by women to carry farm products
    Among Bamilekes, the perforated basket made of bamboo fibres can contain various objects.
    In the North, potters make kitchen utensils from clay
    In the Mandara region, polished calabashes are used as head-dress by young girls.
    In Maroua, women have weaved cotton for centuries with the same ritual gestures.
    In Mayo-ulla, craftsmen embroider with first class fabrics geometrical figures and arabesques.
    OTHER TRADITIONAL ARTS AND OBJETS
    Wood sculpture (Mahogany-tree, Sapelli, Ebony) : panels of all dimensions showing images of everyday life, ornaments, and traditonal doors
    Skin and Bronze :
    Pearl : calabashes, canes, thrown and fetch-rest for kings, statues. Fabrics: embroided tablecloths , doily, tablemats Rattan : basket furniture Clay : piper and figurines PLASTIC ARTS Kenfack Pascal : Painter and woodcarver, he paints on large canvas, and generally carves on a large trunks of tree. In his painting, he uses pale colours whereas in his sculptures , he uses essential, complex and vivid forms. It is in the carving of trunks that he finds his expressive form. Masterpieces of his work include: youths and peace ; the struggle ; master initiation; spirit of twins; column of initiates; masked dance (the drummer) ; divines and bird-eating spider.

    58. Colby African Studies: Cameroon
    I had a wonderful semester in cameroon, and was very impressed with SIT's abilityto The structure of the program had an emphasis on culture and development.
    http://www.colby.edu/afstudies/countries/cameroon/
    Katie Lazdowski ('02) spent the fall of her junior year in Cameroon, located in western Africa. If you are interested in studying in Cameroon, visit SIT's Cameroon site . To learn more about Cameroon, check out the links below.
    A Semester in Cameroon
    I spent the fall semester of my junior year in Cameroon on a program run by the School for International Training (SIT, based in Brattleboro, Vermont). I had a wonderful semester in Cameroon, and was very impressed with SIT's ability to provide a fulfilling experience for the participating individuals. The structure of the program had an emphasis on culture and development. culture, clarifying some of their ideas about the American culture. The people in this village were representative of those we met all over Cameroon- always hospitable and giving of themselves. I chose to study in Cameroon because of the fact that it is a French-speaking country. I came home at the end of my semester with a greater knowledge, not simply of the country, but of the people and their rich culture. Katie Lazdowski
    Class of 2002
    Majors: French Studies, Sociology

    59. Panapress Official Website
    Sabze, a specialist in traditional autopsy in Dschang, a locality on the westernhighlands of cameroon. 12/12/2002 full text ACP culture Festival to be
    http://www.panapress.com/RubIndexlat.asp?code=eng006

    60. Cameroonian Twin Studies!Cameroonian Twin StudiesCameroonian Twin Studies
    Ethnoarchaeological study of the material culture of twins in cameroon and West Africa. TheMaterial culture of Twins in West Africa. See pictures of cameroon.
    http://www.sfu.ca/archaeology/museum/ndi/
    The Material Culture of Twins
    in
    West Africa. See pictures of Cameroon. Many cultures, including our own, celebrate the birth of twins, some view them as something dangerous that must be destroyed but is rare to find a society that is indifferent to this unusual occurrence. The treatment of twins in West Africa is particularly unusual, possibly due to the high twin rate in this area. In the Cameroonian Grassfields twins are generally regarded as gifts from God. They are highly celebrated and respected. My own experience as a 'Manyi' (mother of twins) in Cameroonian culture made me aware of the significance of twins to this society. With this research I hope to enlighten archaeologists working in West Africa. I would like to provide a data base of material culture associated with twins to allow correct interpretation of the archaeological record. This site is designed to teach you about Cameroon and all its rich history. My own work is available for you to read and of course you have to check out the fun stuff! After all, learning should be entertaining!

    Site content the Simon Fraser University and the author,-Rachael Ndi.

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