A Serbian VillageColumbia University Press, 1958 - 325 pages A condensed version of the author's doctoral dissertation published in 1956 under title: Social and cultural change in a Serbian village. |
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Page 140
... children by each . The second gives a comparison of number of births according to which child borne , e.g. , first , second , third , by all mothers giving birth in 1881 and in 1951. Both tables show the same pattern of a marked ...
... children by each . The second gives a comparison of number of births according to which child borne , e.g. , first , second , third , by all mothers giving birth in 1881 and in 1951. Both tables show the same pattern of a marked ...
Page 174
... child . He is permitted to crawl around on the dirt floor , and in many households he spends considerable time in ... child grows up in an emotionally warm atmosphere and learns to freely expect and return love . There is always some ...
... child . He is permitted to crawl around on the dirt floor , and in many households he spends considerable time in ... child grows up in an emotionally warm atmosphere and learns to freely expect and return love . There is always some ...
Page 221
... children : eight boys and two girls . She died when she gave birth to her tenth child . So my grandfather married Jelena , a widow from Bukovik . They had two more sons and two more daughters so that the total number of his children was ...
... children : eight boys and two girls . She died when she gave birth to her tenth child . So my grandfather married Jelena , a widow from Bukovik . They had two more sons and two more daughters so that the total number of his children was ...
Contents
The Setting | 1 |
Serbia and Orašac in the Nineteenth Century | 21 |
Orašac Village Today | 37 |
Copyright | |
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agricultural Arandjelovac attitude Autobiography basic Belgrade boys brandy bread bride Bukovik ceremony cheese church clan clothing common considered Cooperative Home corn culture dance dinars Dodola economic farm father feast Figure gazda girls grade guests gusle Gypsies head hectares holiday homestead household important income increasing Jarmenovci Jasenica kafana kajmak Karadjordje kilos Kopljare Kosmaj Kragujevac labor land livestock living marriage married Miloš Misača mixed agriculturalists Mladenovac mother neighbors officials older Orašac peasant Orašac population Orašac village Orašani parents Partisans Party Pashaluk of Belgrade pattern peasants percent period Petrović pigs plow plum policies priest Prilike pure agriculturalists rakija region relatives Revolt Serbia Serbs sheep significant slava social Srbije starešina Stojnik Šumadija taxes teachers town traditional Turkish Turks urban usually Venčac Village Council Vojvodina wedding wheat wife wine women wooden workers Yugoslav Yugoslavia zadruga