Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Marcel Griaule (16 May 1898 – 23 February 1956) was a French author and anthropologist known for his studies of the Dogon people of West Africa, and for pioneering ethnographic field studies in France.

  2. Marcel Griaule (1898 – 1956) was a pioneer of French ethnographic research in Africa, an emblematic figure of French ethnography, and a catalyst to the emerging discipline's professionalization. After serving in World War I as an air force pilot, he obtained a degree in living Oriental languages (Amharic and Gueze) before studying with ...

  3. Avec l'avance allemande, le président Azana et sa suite partent pour Montauban où M. Azana meurt quelque temps après. Lors des accords de Munich (1938), Marcel Griaule se met mis à la disposition de la république tchécoslovaque pour la défendre avec d'autres militaires français.

  4. Marcel Griaule, an ethnologist who studied the Dogon from 1933 to 1956 was the first to conduct an in depth study that explores the deep cosmological beliefs of the Dogon.

    • Suzanne Blier
  5. Marcel Griaule's Conversations with Ogotemmeli (and even more Griaule and Dieterlen's Le Renard Pale), Bernard Maupoil's La Geo-mancie de l'ancienne Cote des Esclaves, and Victor Turner's Forest of Symbols. A few more monographs might be added, but not many. Each of these works has the merit of going deeply behind the surface of the

  6. The author compares his own fieldwork among the Dogon of Mali with the classic studies of Marcel Griaule and finds many discrepancies and problems. He argues that Griaule's texts are not recognizable, productive, or reliable sources of Dogon culture and suggests a model of how they were generated.

  7. May 17, 2018 · France, 1920: Marcel Griaule is a young man who is very well-established in his studies, especially in mathematics. He has recently served as a volunteer in the French Air Force and aspires to attend the prestigious Lycée Louis le Grande.