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Allan Hill and Sara Randall observe that western authors have looked for "romance and mystery, as well as the repository of laudable characteristics believed lost in the West, such as independence, stoicism in the face of physical adversity, and a strong sense of loyalty to family and to tribe" in nomadic pastoralist societies.
The researchers associated with the IISNC studies the present state and problems of nomadism in various regions of the world. The institute organizes international conferences and scientific research expeditions for studies on nomadism. [1]
Randall Langa Peteni (6 December 1915 – 8 September 2000) was a Xhosa South African novelist and academic, and author of the novel Hill of Fools (Aba Kwazidenge), which was adapted for television by the SABC. [1] The novel was Peteni's only novel. [2]
Transhumance in Alpes-de-Haute-Provence, France. Transhumance is a type of pastoralism or nomadism, a seasonal movement of livestock between fixed summer and winter pastures. . In montane regions (vertical transhumance), it implies movement between higher pastures in summer and lower valleys in wint
Impressions of a Nomad (1930) It Is Wonderful (1931) The Laughter of God (1932) The Eyes of the Blind (1932) Behold the Man (1933) Out of the Clouds (1934) A Lamp Unto My Feet (1936) The Temple Not Made With Hands (1936) Thrust In the Sickle (1936) A Light Set Upon a Hill (1938) I Came (1940) That Ye Might Have (1940) Life More Abundant (1940)
Shasu prisoner as depicted in Ramesses III's reliefs at Medinet Habu.. The Shasu (Ancient Egyptian: šꜣsw, possibly pronounced šaswə [1]) were Semitic-speaking pastoral nomads in the Southern Levant from the late Bronze Age to the Early Iron Age or the Third Intermediate Period of Egypt.
The Maler: The Nature-Man-Spirit Complex in a Hill Tribe, 1963; Aspects of Social Anthropology in India (with B. N. Sahay and P. K. Dutta), 1980; Art and Culture of North East India, 1986; The Kharia, then and now: a comparative study of Hill, Dhelki, and Dudh Kharia of the central-eastern region of India, 1980; Leadership in India, 1967
Norman F. Ellison (1893–1976) was an English radio presenter and author who made radio programmes about nature and the countryside for the BBC's Children's Hour, [1] under the pseudonym Nomad the Naturalist, and wrote on the same subjects both as Nomad and in his own name.