fbpx
Wikipedia

Maria Czaplicka

Maria Antonina Czaplicka (25 October 1884 – 27 May 1921), also referred to as Marya Antonina Czaplicka and Marie Antoinette Czaplicka, was a Polish cultural anthropologist who is best known for her ethnography of Siberian shamanism. Czaplicka's research survives in three major works: her studies in Aboriginal Siberia (1914); a travelogue published as My Siberian Year (1916); and a set of lectures published as The Turks of Central Asia (1918). Curzon Press republished all three volumes, plus a fourth volume of articles and letters, in 1999.

Maria Antonina Czaplicka
Czaplicka in 1916
Born(1884-10-25)25 October 1884
Died27 May 1921(1921-05-27) (aged 36)
Bristol, England, United Kingdom[1]
OccupationAnthropologist

Early life and studies edit

Czaplicka was born in the Stara Praga district of Warsaw on the 25th of October 1884[2] to Feliks Czaplicki and Zofia Zawisza. Her father Feliks Czaplicki came from impoverished Polish nobility and worked as a railway clerk and station master.[3] She was the third oldest of her parents' five children, Jadwiga Markowska (née Czaplicka), Stanisław Czaplicki, Gabriela Szaniawska (née Czaplicka), and Marian Czaplicki.[4] Feliks Czaplicki found employment in what is now Latvia, where the family lived from 1904 to 1906 before returning to Warsaw. It was here that Maria Czaplicka was able to take the exam that would allow her to attend university later in life.[5]

She began her studies at the Anna Jasieńska Girls' School and attended the school until 1902.[6] She began her studies in higher-education with the so-called Flying University (later Wyższe Kursy Naukowe), an underground institution of higher education in Russian-held Poland.[7] She supported herself with a number of poorly paid jobs, as a teacher at Łabusiewiczówna Girls' School,[6] a secretary, and lady's companion.[8] She was also known for her lectures at the University for Everyone (1905–1908), and the Society of Polish Culture.[6] She also wrote poetry, eventually being published in Warsaw's Odrodzenie magazine.[6] While battling an illness, she spent time in Zakopane where she went on to do work for the Pedological Society while writing Olek Niedziela, a novel for children centered around education.[6] In 1910 she became the first woman to receive a Mianowski Scholarship, and was therefore able to continue her studies in the United Kingdom.[9]

She left Poland in 1910.[1] Taken ill with appendicitis in late March 1911, she was admitted to St Batholomew's Hospital in London and operated on by Dr. Józef Handelsman.[10] She continued her studies at the Faculty of Anthropology of the London School of Economics under Charles G. Seligman,[1] and at Somerville College, Oxford under R.R. Marett.,[11] graduating from the School of Anthropology in 1912.[6] Marett encouraged her to use her Russian language skills in a review of literature on native tribes in Siberia, which became her book Aboriginal Siberia, published in 1914.[12] In 1914, she became a member of the Royal Anthropological Society,[6] and was also involved with the British Association for the Advancement of Science, presenting research centered around the connection between religion and the environment in Siberia.[6] At this stage she had never visited Siberia,[12] but the quality of her writing led to Aboriginal Siberia becoming the major reference work in its field.[12]

Yenisei Expedition edit

 
Czaplicka, 1919

Marett had intended the work reported in Czaplicka's Aboriginal Siberia to be the basis for fieldwork in Siberia.[11] In May 1914, she began such fieldwork, partly funded by the Mary Ewart Travelling Scholarship granted by Somerville College,[13] leading a joint expedition of Oxford University and University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology staff.[11] Together with English ornithologist Maud Doria Haviland, English painter Dora Curtis, and Henry Usher Hall of the Museum, she arrived in Russia shortly before World War I broke out. After the war started Czaplicka and Hall decided to continue their expedition while the others decided to go back to the United Kingdom. Czaplicka and Hall (accompanied by Michikha, a Tungus woman) spent the entire winter traveling along the shores of the Yenisei River via the Oryol:[14] more than 3,000 kilometres (1,900 mi) altogether.[15]

Czaplicka prepared several hundreds of photographs of people of Siberia, as well as countless notes on anthropometry and their customs. Czaplicka also received funds from the Committee for Anthropology of the Pitt Rivers Museum in Oxford to collect specimens from Siberia;[16] 193 objects were donated by Czaplicka to the museum's Asian collection.[17] In addition, she collected botanical specimens for the Fielding-Druce Herbarium.[18] It is speculated that recordings of the many languages that they encountered during their expedition were produced on wax cylinders, but this has not been proven and the recordings are not well-known and likely never made it through academic processing if they were brought back to the university.[19] The overall results of the expedition were modest, something that historians have credited to the nature of the study and the many financial and political struggles faced by the team during the journey.[20]

She was also well known for her criticisms of the term "Arctic Hysteria" to refer to the Western perspective of the presentation of nervous diseases. She encourages cultural relativism, meaning that aspects of one culture should not be viewed and judged through the lens of a different culture when it comes to this situation. She describes that what Western academics called hysteria was viewed through a much different lens in Siberian cultures. This was all a part of her works studying Shamanism in Siberia.[6]

Return to England and death edit

Czaplicka returned to England in 1915. She wrote a diary of her travel entitled My Siberian Year, which was published in 1916 by Mills & Boon (in their non-fiction "My Year" series); the book became very popular. In 1916, she also became the first female lecturer in anthropology at Oxford University,[1][21] supported by the Mary Ewart Trust.[9] She gave lectures on the nations of Central and Eastern Europe as well as on the habits of the Siberian tribes. She also spoke on Polish issues, including Danzig's post-war disposition.[9]

In 1920, her work was honoured with a Murchison Grant from the Royal Geographical Society,[22] "for her ethnographical and geographical work in Northern Siberia." In spite of this triumph, her financial future was still insecure. Her three-year fellowship at Oxford having expired in 1919, she obtained a temporary teaching position in anthropology in the Department of Anatomy at the University of Bristol.[9]

In 1921, she failed to obtain the Albert Kahn Travelling Fellowship which she had hoped for, and in May of that year she poisoned herself.[1] The University of Bristol Senate expressed its regret and "appreciation of the loss to the University of so distinguished a member of its staff".[23] Czaplicka is buried in the Wolvercote Cemetery in Oxford.[21]

Legacy edit

In a will written months before she died, Czaplicka left her notes and reports to her colleague Henry Usher Hall. Although she never married, questions have been raised about the relationship between Hall and Czaplicka. Hall married the artist Frances Devereux Jones about a month after Czaplicka's death.[24]

After Hall died in 1944, some of Czaplicka's early papers were donated to the University of Pennsylvania Museum, but at least one report and a partial manuscript may be lost.[25] Her primary papers are archived at Somerville College, Oxford.[26] Polish museums hold a few private letters of Czaplicka to Bronisław Malinowski and Władysław Orkan, one of the most prominent Polish poets of the time.

Upon her death in 1971, Barbara Aitkin (née Barbara Freire-Marreco), a student of Marett and friend of Czaplicka's, memorialised Czaplicka with a fund at Somerville College.[25] In 2015, the Pitt Rivers Museum in Oxford held a small exhibition entitled "My Siberian Year, 1914–1915" to commemorate the 100th anniversary of Czaplicka's expedition to Siberia.[27]

Selected works edit

  • Aboriginal Siberia: A Study in Social Anthropology. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1914.
  • Shamanism in Siberia. Oxford at the Clarendon Press, 1914.
  • The Influence of Environment upon the Religious Ideas and Practices of the Aborigines of Northern Asia. Folklore. 25. pp. 34–54. 1914.
  • "The Life and Work of N.N. Miklubo-Macklay". Man. 14. pp. 198–203, 1914.
  • My Siberian Year. London, Mills and Boon, 1916.
  • "Tribes of the Yenisei. The Oxford Expedition". Times Russian Supplement. 13. p. 6. 18 September 1915.
  • Siberia and some Siberians Journal of the Manchester Geographical Soc. 32. pp. 27–42. 1916.
  • The Siberian Colonist or Sibiriak In W. Stephens ed. The Soul of Russia. London: Macmillan. 1916
  • On the track of the Tungus. Scottish Geographical Magazine. 33. pp. 289–303. 1917.
  • "Ostyaks". Encyclopædia of Religion and Ethics. volume 9. pp. 289–303. 1917
  • "The Evolution of the Cossack Communities". Journal of the Central Asian Society. 5. pp. 42–58. 1918.
  • "A plea for Siberia". New European. 6. pp. 339–344. 1918.
  • The Turks of Central Asia in History and at the Present Day, An Ethnological Inquiry into the Pan-Turanian Problem, and Bibliographical Material Relating to the Early Turks and the Present Turks of Central Asia. Oxford: Clarendon Press. 1918.
  • "Poland". The Geographical Journal. 53:36. 1919.
  • "Samoyed". Encyclopædia of Religion and Ethics. volume 11. pp. 172–177. 1920
  • "Siberia, Siberiaks, Siberians". Encyclopædia of Religion and Ethics. volume 11. pp. 488–496. 1920
  • The Ethnic versus the Economic Frontiers of Poland. Scottish Geographical Magazine. 36. pp. 10–16. 1920.
  • "History and Ethnology in Central Asia". Man. 21. pp. 19–24. 1921.
  • "Tungus". Encyclopædia of Religion and Ethics. volume 12. pp. 473–476. 1921
  • "Turks". Encyclopædia of Religion and Ethics. volume 12. pp. 476–483. 1921

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c d e Kubica 2007, p. 146.
  2. ^ Kubica 2007, p. 147.
  3. ^ Grazyna Kubica (November 2020). Maria Czaplicka: Gender, Shamanism, Race. U of Nebraska Press. p. 62. ISBN 978-1-4962-2261-9.
  4. ^ Grazyna Kubica (November 2020). Maria Czaplicka: Gender, Shamanism, Race. U of Nebraska Press. p. 64. ISBN 978-1-4962-2261-9.
  5. ^ Grazyna Kubica (November 2020). Maria Czaplicka: Gender, Shamanism, Race. U of Nebraska Press. p. 67. ISBN 978-1-4962-2261-9.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i Kubica, Grażyna Kubica (2015). "Maria Czaplicka and Her Siberian Expedition, 1914–1915: A Centenary Tribute". Arctic Anthropology. 52 (1): 325. doi:10.3368/aa.52.1.1. S2CID 161918555.
  7. ^ Kubica 2007, p. 148.
  8. ^ Kubica 2007, p. 149.
  9. ^ a b c d Collins 1999, Introduction.
  10. ^ Kubica, Grażyna (2020). Maria Czaplicka Gender, Shamanism, Race. Koschalka, Ben. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press. ISBN 978-1-4962-2319-7. OCLC 1195470535.
  11. ^ a b c Collins & Urry 1997, p. 18.
  12. ^ a b c Znamenski 2007, p. 67.
  13. ^ Vider, Jaanika. "Series 1: Maria Czaplicka (1884–1921)". Women in Oxford's History Podcast. Women in Oxford's History. Retrieved 20 November 2020.
  14. ^ Grazyna Kubica (November 2020). Maria Czaplicka: Gender, Shamanism, Race. U of Nebraska Press. p. 270. ISBN 978-1-4962-2261-9.
  15. ^ Nuttall 2005, p. 459.
  16. ^ Twenty-seventh Annual Report of the Delegates of the University Museum (1914). University of Oxford Gazette. XLV.
  17. ^ Pitt Rivers Museum. (2006). Geographical Statistics PRM Asia collections statistics summary Asian countries and colonies. University of Oxford. See for example: Quiver and arrows 10 January 2010 at the Wayback Machine
  18. ^ Fielding-Druce Herbarium collectors list.
  19. ^ Grażyna Kubica (November 2020). Maria Czaplicka: Gender, Shamanism, Race. U of Nebraska Press. p. 292. ISBN 978-1-4962-2261-9.
  20. ^ Grażyna Kubica (November 2020). Maria Czaplicka: Gender, Shamanism, Race. U of Nebraska Press. p. 293. ISBN 978-1-4962-2261-9.
  21. ^ a b Riviere 2009, p. 172.
  22. ^ The Geographical Journal, Vol. 55, No. 5 (May, 1920), p. 400.
  23. ^ Minutes of the University's Senate 1920–21, p. 287.
  24. ^ Kubica, Grażyna (2020). Maria Czaplicka: Gender, Shamanism, Race. Translated by Ben Koschalka. Lincoln, Nebraska: University of Nebraska Press. p. 445.
  25. ^ a b Collins & Urry 1997, p. 20.
  26. ^ CP-SCO Czaplicka Papers, Somerville College, Oxford.
  27. ^ Exhibitions and Case Displays 18 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine at Pitt Rivers Museum (accessed 8 May 2015)

References edit

  • Anderson, David G. (October 2005). "Review". The Slavonic and East European Review. 83 (4). University College London, School of Slavonic and East European Studies: 766–767. ISSN 0037-6795.
  • Collins, David Norman; James Urry (December 1997). "A Flame Too Intense for Mortal Body to Support". Anthropology Today. 13 (6). Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland: 18–20. [1]
  • Collins, David Norman, ed. (1999). The Collected Works of M. A. Czaplicka. Vol. 1: Collected Articles and Letters; Vol. 2: Aboriginal Siberia; Vol. 3: My Siberian Year; Vol. 4: The Turks of Central Asia. Richmond: Curzon Press. ISBN 978-0-7007-1001-0.
  • Hultkrantz, Åke (2005) [1987]. "Arctic Religions: History of Study". In Jones, Lindsay (ed.). Encyclopedia of Religion. Vol. 1 (2 ed.). Detroit: Macmillan Reference USA. pp. 473–476. ISBN 0-02-865733-0.
  • Kubica, Grazyna (2007). "A Good Lady, Androgynous Angel, and Intrepid Woman: Maria Czaplicka in Feminist Profile". In Bryceson, Deborah Fahy; Judith Okely; Jonathan Webber (eds.). Identity and Networks: Fashioning Gender and Ethnicity Across Cultures. Berghahn Books. pp. 146–163. ISBN 978-1-84545-162-2. [2]
  • de la Rue, Hélène (1996). "Maria Antonina Czaplicka". In V. Amid (ed.). Collectors: Collecting for the Pitt Rivers Museum. Oxford: Pitt Rivers Museum.
  • Marett, R. R. (July 1921). "Obituary: Marie A. de Czaplicka: Died May 27th, 1921". Man. 21 (60). Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland: 105–106. ISSN 0025-1496.
  • Nuttall, Mark (2005). "Czaplicka, Marie Antoinette". Encyclopedia of the Arctic. Vol. 1. Routledge. pp. 458–459. ISBN 1-57958-437-3.
  • Riviere, Peter (2009). A History of Oxford Anthropology. Berghahn Books. ISBN 978-1-84545-699-3. [3]
  • Urry, James; David N. Collins: Maria Antonina Czaplicka. Życie i praca w Wielkiej Brytanii i na Syberii; Warsaw, 1998.
  • Znamenski, Andrei A. (2007). "From Siberia to North America". The Beauty of the Primitive: Shamanism and Western Imagination. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-517231-7. [4]

External links edit

  • Aboriginal Siberia - Excerpts from the Sacred Texts archive
  • – Photo Album of Maria Czaplicka
  • Oxford Dictionary of National Biography David N. Collins, 'Czaplicka, Marya Antonina (1884–1921)', first published Sept 2004, 960 words, with portrait illustration

maria, czaplicka, maria, antonina, czaplicka, october, 1884, 1921, also, referred, marya, antonina, czaplicka, marie, antoinette, czaplicka, polish, cultural, anthropologist, best, known, ethnography, siberian, shamanism, czaplicka, research, survives, three, . Maria Antonina Czaplicka 25 October 1884 27 May 1921 also referred to as Marya Antonina Czaplicka and Marie Antoinette Czaplicka was a Polish cultural anthropologist who is best known for her ethnography of Siberian shamanism Czaplicka s research survives in three major works her studies in Aboriginal Siberia 1914 a travelogue published as My Siberian Year 1916 and a set of lectures published as The Turks of Central Asia 1918 Curzon Press republished all three volumes plus a fourth volume of articles and letters in 1999 Maria Antonina CzaplickaCzaplicka in 1916Born 1884 10 25 25 October 1884Warsaw Congress Poland Russian EmpireDied27 May 1921 1921 05 27 aged 36 Bristol England United Kingdom 1 OccupationAnthropologist Contents 1 Early life and studies 2 Yenisei Expedition 3 Return to England and death 4 Legacy 5 Selected works 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 External linksEarly life and studies editCzaplicka was born in the Stara Praga district of Warsaw on the 25th of October 1884 2 to Feliks Czaplicki and Zofia Zawisza Her father Feliks Czaplicki came from impoverished Polish nobility and worked as a railway clerk and station master 3 She was the third oldest of her parents five children Jadwiga Markowska nee Czaplicka Stanislaw Czaplicki Gabriela Szaniawska nee Czaplicka and Marian Czaplicki 4 Feliks Czaplicki found employment in what is now Latvia where the family lived from 1904 to 1906 before returning to Warsaw It was here that Maria Czaplicka was able to take the exam that would allow her to attend university later in life 5 She began her studies at the Anna Jasienska Girls School and attended the school until 1902 6 She began her studies in higher education with the so called Flying University later Wyzsze Kursy Naukowe an underground institution of higher education in Russian held Poland 7 She supported herself with a number of poorly paid jobs as a teacher at Labusiewiczowna Girls School 6 a secretary and lady s companion 8 She was also known for her lectures at the University for Everyone 1905 1908 and the Society of Polish Culture 6 She also wrote poetry eventually being published in Warsaw s Odrodzenie magazine 6 While battling an illness she spent time in Zakopane where she went on to do work for the Pedological Society while writing Olek Niedziela a novel for children centered around education 6 In 1910 she became the first woman to receive a Mianowski Scholarship and was therefore able to continue her studies in the United Kingdom 9 She left Poland in 1910 1 Taken ill with appendicitis in late March 1911 she was admitted to St Batholomew s Hospital in London and operated on by Dr Jozef Handelsman 10 She continued her studies at the Faculty of Anthropology of the London School of Economics under Charles G Seligman 1 and at Somerville College Oxford under R R Marett 11 graduating from the School of Anthropology in 1912 6 Marett encouraged her to use her Russian language skills in a review of literature on native tribes in Siberia which became her book Aboriginal Siberia published in 1914 12 In 1914 she became a member of the Royal Anthropological Society 6 and was also involved with the British Association for the Advancement of Science presenting research centered around the connection between religion and the environment in Siberia 6 At this stage she had never visited Siberia 12 but the quality of her writing led to Aboriginal Siberia becoming the major reference work in its field 12 Yenisei Expedition edit nbsp Czaplicka 1919 Marett had intended the work reported in Czaplicka s Aboriginal Siberia to be the basis for fieldwork in Siberia 11 In May 1914 she began such fieldwork partly funded by the Mary Ewart Travelling Scholarship granted by Somerville College 13 leading a joint expedition of Oxford University and University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology staff 11 Together with English ornithologist Maud Doria Haviland English painter Dora Curtis and Henry Usher Hall of the Museum she arrived in Russia shortly before World War I broke out After the war started Czaplicka and Hall decided to continue their expedition while the others decided to go back to the United Kingdom Czaplicka and Hall accompanied by Michikha a Tungus woman spent the entire winter traveling along the shores of the Yenisei River via the Oryol 14 more than 3 000 kilometres 1 900 mi altogether 15 Czaplicka prepared several hundreds of photographs of people of Siberia as well as countless notes on anthropometry and their customs Czaplicka also received funds from the Committee for Anthropology of the Pitt Rivers Museum in Oxford to collect specimens from Siberia 16 193 objects were donated by Czaplicka to the museum s Asian collection 17 In addition she collected botanical specimens for the Fielding Druce Herbarium 18 It is speculated that recordings of the many languages that they encountered during their expedition were produced on wax cylinders but this has not been proven and the recordings are not well known and likely never made it through academic processing if they were brought back to the university 19 The overall results of the expedition were modest something that historians have credited to the nature of the study and the many financial and political struggles faced by the team during the journey 20 She was also well known for her criticisms of the term Arctic Hysteria to refer to the Western perspective of the presentation of nervous diseases She encourages cultural relativism meaning that aspects of one culture should not be viewed and judged through the lens of a different culture when it comes to this situation She describes that what Western academics called hysteria was viewed through a much different lens in Siberian cultures This was all a part of her works studying Shamanism in Siberia 6 Return to England and death editCzaplicka returned to England in 1915 She wrote a diary of her travel entitled My Siberian Year which was published in 1916 by Mills amp Boon in their non fiction My Year series the book became very popular In 1916 she also became the first female lecturer in anthropology at Oxford University 1 21 supported by the Mary Ewart Trust 9 She gave lectures on the nations of Central and Eastern Europe as well as on the habits of the Siberian tribes She also spoke on Polish issues including Danzig s post war disposition 9 In 1920 her work was honoured with a Murchison Grant from the Royal Geographical Society 22 for her ethnographical and geographical work in Northern Siberia In spite of this triumph her financial future was still insecure Her three year fellowship at Oxford having expired in 1919 she obtained a temporary teaching position in anthropology in the Department of Anatomy at the University of Bristol 9 In 1921 she failed to obtain the Albert Kahn Travelling Fellowship which she had hoped for and in May of that year she poisoned herself 1 The University of Bristol Senate expressed its regret and appreciation of the loss to the University of so distinguished a member of its staff 23 Czaplicka is buried in the Wolvercote Cemetery in Oxford 21 Legacy editIn a will written months before she died Czaplicka left her notes and reports to her colleague Henry Usher Hall Although she never married questions have been raised about the relationship between Hall and Czaplicka Hall married the artist Frances Devereux Jones about a month after Czaplicka s death 24 After Hall died in 1944 some of Czaplicka s early papers were donated to the University of Pennsylvania Museum but at least one report and a partial manuscript may be lost 25 Her primary papers are archived at Somerville College Oxford 26 Polish museums hold a few private letters of Czaplicka to Bronislaw Malinowski and Wladyslaw Orkan one of the most prominent Polish poets of the time Upon her death in 1971 Barbara Aitkin nee Barbara Freire Marreco a student of Marett and friend of Czaplicka s memorialised Czaplicka with a fund at Somerville College 25 In 2015 the Pitt Rivers Museum in Oxford held a small exhibition entitled My Siberian Year 1914 1915 to commemorate the 100th anniversary of Czaplicka s expedition to Siberia 27 Selected works editAboriginal Siberia A Study in Social Anthropology Oxford Clarendon Press 1914 Shamanism in Siberia Oxford at the Clarendon Press 1914 The Influence of Environment upon the Religious Ideas and Practices of the Aborigines of Northern Asia Folklore 25 pp 34 54 1914 The Life and Work of N N Miklubo Macklay Man 14 pp 198 203 1914 My Siberian Year London Mills and Boon 1916 Tribes of the Yenisei The Oxford Expedition Times Russian Supplement 13 p 6 18 September 1915 Siberia and some Siberians Journal of the Manchester Geographical Soc 32 pp 27 42 1916 The Siberian Colonist or Sibiriak In W Stephens ed The Soul of Russia London Macmillan 1916 On the track of the Tungus Scottish Geographical Magazine 33 pp 289 303 1917 Ostyaks Encyclopaedia of Religion and Ethics volume 9 pp 289 303 1917 The Evolution of the Cossack Communities Journal of the Central Asian Society 5 pp 42 58 1918 A plea for Siberia New European 6 pp 339 344 1918 The Turks of Central Asia in History and at the Present Day An Ethnological Inquiry into the Pan Turanian Problem and Bibliographical Material Relating to the Early Turks and the Present Turks of Central Asia Oxford Clarendon Press 1918 Poland The Geographical Journal 53 36 1919 Samoyed Encyclopaedia of Religion and Ethics volume 11 pp 172 177 1920 Siberia Siberiaks Siberians Encyclopaedia of Religion and Ethics volume 11 pp 488 496 1920 The Ethnic versus the Economic Frontiers of Poland Scottish Geographical Magazine 36 pp 10 16 1920 History and Ethnology in Central Asia Man 21 pp 19 24 1921 Tungus Encyclopaedia of Religion and Ethics volume 12 pp 473 476 1921 Turks Encyclopaedia of Religion and Ethics volume 12 pp 476 483 1921See also editList of PolesNotes edit a b c d e Kubica 2007 p 146 Kubica 2007 p 147 Grazyna Kubica November 2020 Maria Czaplicka Gender Shamanism Race U of Nebraska Press p 62 ISBN 978 1 4962 2261 9 Grazyna Kubica November 2020 Maria Czaplicka Gender Shamanism Race U of Nebraska Press p 64 ISBN 978 1 4962 2261 9 Grazyna Kubica November 2020 Maria Czaplicka Gender Shamanism Race U of Nebraska Press p 67 ISBN 978 1 4962 2261 9 a b c d e f g h i Kubica Grazyna Kubica 2015 Maria Czaplicka and Her Siberian Expedition 1914 1915 A Centenary Tribute Arctic Anthropology 52 1 325 doi 10 3368 aa 52 1 1 S2CID 161918555 Kubica 2007 p 148 Kubica 2007 p 149 a b c d Collins 1999 Introduction Kubica Grazyna 2020 Maria Czaplicka Gender Shamanism Race Koschalka Ben Lincoln University of Nebraska Press ISBN 978 1 4962 2319 7 OCLC 1195470535 a b c Collins amp Urry 1997 p 18 a b c Znamenski 2007 p 67 Vider Jaanika Series 1 Maria Czaplicka 1884 1921 Women in Oxford s History Podcast Women in Oxford s History Retrieved 20 November 2020 Grazyna Kubica November 2020 Maria Czaplicka Gender Shamanism Race U of Nebraska Press p 270 ISBN 978 1 4962 2261 9 Nuttall 2005 p 459 Twenty seventh Annual Report of the Delegates of the University Museum 1914 University of Oxford Gazette XLV Pitt Rivers Museum 2006 Geographical Statistics PRM Asia collections statistics summary Asian countries and colonies University of Oxford See for example Quiver and arrows Archived 10 January 2010 at the Wayback Machine Fielding Druce Herbarium collectors list Grazyna Kubica November 2020 Maria Czaplicka Gender Shamanism Race U of Nebraska Press p 292 ISBN 978 1 4962 2261 9 Grazyna Kubica November 2020 Maria Czaplicka Gender Shamanism Race U of Nebraska Press p 293 ISBN 978 1 4962 2261 9 a b Riviere 2009 p 172 The Geographical Journal Vol 55 No 5 May 1920 p 400 Minutes of the University s Senate 1920 21 p 287 Kubica Grazyna 2020 Maria Czaplicka Gender Shamanism Race Translated by Ben Koschalka Lincoln Nebraska University of Nebraska Press p 445 a b Collins amp Urry 1997 p 20 CP SCO Czaplicka Papers Somerville College Oxford Exhibitions and Case Displays Archived 18 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine at Pitt Rivers Museum accessed 8 May 2015 References editAnderson David G October 2005 Review The Slavonic and East European Review 83 4 University College London School of Slavonic and East European Studies 766 767 ISSN 0037 6795 Collins David Norman James Urry December 1997 A Flame Too Intense for Mortal Body to Support Anthropology Today 13 6 Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland 18 20 1 Collins David Norman ed 1999 The Collected Works of M A Czaplicka Vol 1 Collected Articles and Letters Vol 2 Aboriginal Siberia Vol 3 My Siberian Year Vol 4 The Turks of Central Asia Richmond Curzon Press ISBN 978 0 7007 1001 0 Hultkrantz Ake 2005 1987 Arctic Religions History of Study In Jones Lindsay ed Encyclopedia of Religion Vol 1 2 ed Detroit Macmillan Reference USA pp 473 476 ISBN 0 02 865733 0 Kubica Grazyna 2007 A Good Lady Androgynous Angel and Intrepid Woman Maria Czaplicka in Feminist Profile In Bryceson Deborah Fahy Judith Okely Jonathan Webber eds Identity and Networks Fashioning Gender and Ethnicity Across Cultures Berghahn Books pp 146 163 ISBN 978 1 84545 162 2 2 de la Rue Helene 1996 Maria Antonina Czaplicka In V Amid ed Collectors Collecting for the Pitt Rivers Museum Oxford Pitt Rivers Museum Marett R R July 1921 Obituary Marie A de Czaplicka Died May 27th 1921 Man 21 60 Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland 105 106 ISSN 0025 1496 Nuttall Mark 2005 Czaplicka Marie Antoinette Encyclopedia of the Arctic Vol 1 Routledge pp 458 459 ISBN 1 57958 437 3 Riviere Peter 2009 A History of Oxford Anthropology Berghahn Books ISBN 978 1 84545 699 3 3 Urry James David N Collins Maria Antonina Czaplicka Zycie i praca w Wielkiej Brytanii i na Syberii Warsaw 1998 Znamenski Andrei A 2007 From Siberia to North America The Beauty of the Primitive Shamanism and Western Imagination Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 517231 7 4 External links editAboriginal Siberia Excerpts from the Sacred Texts archive Photo Album of Maria Czaplicka Photo Album of Maria Czaplicka Oxford Dictionary of National Biography David N Collins Czaplicka Marya Antonina 1884 1921 first published Sept 2004 960 words with portrait illustration Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Maria Czaplicka amp oldid 1216597147, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.