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Archaeology and Anthropology in East Malaysia and Brunei

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 April 2011

Extract

Dirges mark endings. And though it may seem strange to begin a report on archaeology and anthropology in East Malaysia and Brunei with a “dirge”, it is precisely the ritual form suited to set the tone for this review.

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Articles
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Copyright © The National University of Singapore 1987

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References

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96 Clayton Chu's unpublished collection of interview notes on the Shaman will provide a rich supplement to published reports. See also David Miller, A Checklist of the Works of Tom Harrisson (1911–1976); Clifford A. Sather, “Benedict Sandin, 1918–1982: A Biographical Memoir”, to be published in the Sarawak Museum Journal. For a summary of other studies of religion in East Malaysia, see G. N. Appell, “The Status of Social Science”.

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127 BRB 15, 1:46–48; Kenneth D. Smith, “The Languages of Sabah: A Tentative Lexicostatistical Classification” (unpublished manuscript).

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