Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q456933> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 81 of
81
with 100 triples per page.
- Q456933 subject Q6553799.
- Q456933 subject Q6562702.
- Q456933 subject Q7020874.
- Q456933 subject Q7028495.
- Q456933 subject Q7107720.
- Q456933 subject Q7478265.
- Q456933 subject Q7842310.
- Q456933 subject Q9578600.
- Q456933 abstract "Lydia Cabrera (May 20, 1899 in Havana, Cuba – September 19, 1991 in Miami, Florida) was a Cuban anthropologist and poet.Cabrera was a Cuban writer and literary activist. She was an authority on Santería and other Afro-Cuban religions. During her lifetime she published over one hundred books; little if any of her work is available in English. Her most important book is El Monte (Spanish: "The Wilderness"), which was the first major anthropological study of Afro-Cuban traditions. Published in 1954, the book became a "bible" for Santeros who practice Santeria, a blend of Catholic teachings and native African religions that evolved among former African slaves in the Caribbean. She donated her research collection to the library of the University of Miami. A section in Guillermo Cabrera Infante's book Tres Tigres Tristes is written under Lydia Cabrera's name, in a comical rendition of her literary voice. She was one of the first writers to recognize and make public the richness of Afro-Cuban culture. She made valuable contributions in the areas of literature, anthropology, and ethnology. In El Monte, Cabrera fully described the major Afro-Cuban religions: the Regla de Ocha (commonly known as Santeria) and the Ifa’ cult, which are both derived from traditional Yoruba religion; and Palo Monte, which originated in Central Africa.Both the literary and anthropological perspectives on Cabrera’s work assume that she wrote about mainly oral, practical religions with only an “embryonic” written tradition. She is credited by literary critics for having transformed Afro-Cuban oral narratives into literature, which is, written works of art, while anthropologists rely on her accounts of oral information collected during interviews with santeros, babalaos, or paleros, and on her descriptions of religious ceremonies.There is a dialectical relationship between Afro-Cuban religious writing and Cabrera’s work; she used a religious writing tradition that has now internalized her own ethnography.".
- Q456933 birthDate "1899-05-20".
- Q456933 birthPlace Q1563.
- Q456933 deathDate "1991-09-19".
- Q456933 deathPlace Q8652.
- Q456933 field Q23404.
- Q456933 influencedBy Q46.
- Q456933 knownFor Q388467.
- Q456933 nationality Q241.
- Q456933 wikiPageExternalLink chc0339.
- Q456933 wikiPageExternalLink findingaid&id=48.
- Q456933 wikiPageExternalLink Bustos.htm.
- Q456933 wikiPageWikiLink Q10931.
- Q456933 wikiPageWikiLink Q1321.
- Q456933 wikiPageWikiLink Q149416.
- Q456933 wikiPageWikiLink Q1563.
- Q456933 wikiPageWikiLink Q1761572.
- Q456933 wikiPageWikiLink Q1860.
- Q456933 wikiPageWikiLink Q1875977.
- Q456933 wikiPageWikiLink Q188863.
- Q456933 wikiPageWikiLink Q189819.
- Q456933 wikiPageWikiLink Q217577.
- Q456933 wikiPageWikiLink Q23404.
- Q456933 wikiPageWikiLink Q241.
- Q456933 wikiPageWikiLink Q276548.
- Q456933 wikiPageWikiLink Q305164.
- Q456933 wikiPageWikiLink Q36192.
- Q456933 wikiPageWikiLink Q388467.
- Q456933 wikiPageWikiLink Q46.
- Q456933 wikiPageWikiLink Q482.
- Q456933 wikiPageWikiLink Q5192057.
- Q456933 wikiPageWikiLink Q6553799.
- Q456933 wikiPageWikiLink Q6562702.
- Q456933 wikiPageWikiLink Q7020874.
- Q456933 wikiPageWikiLink Q7028495.
- Q456933 wikiPageWikiLink Q7075.
- Q456933 wikiPageWikiLink Q7107720.
- Q456933 wikiPageWikiLink Q7264.
- Q456933 wikiPageWikiLink Q7272.
- Q456933 wikiPageWikiLink Q738258.
- Q456933 wikiPageWikiLink Q7478265.
- Q456933 wikiPageWikiLink Q7842310.
- Q456933 wikiPageWikiLink Q82821.
- Q456933 wikiPageWikiLink Q8652.
- Q456933 wikiPageWikiLink Q90.
- Q456933 wikiPageWikiLink Q901222.
- Q456933 wikiPageWikiLink Q9174.
- Q456933 wikiPageWikiLink Q927277.
- Q456933 wikiPageWikiLink Q9578600.
- Q456933 birthDate "1899-05-20".
- Q456933 birthPlace Q1563.
- Q456933 deathDate "1991-09-19".
- Q456933 deathPlace Q8652.
- Q456933 field Q23404.
- Q456933 influences "European Vanguard".
- Q456933 knownFor Q388467.
- Q456933 knownFor Q482.
- Q456933 name "Lydia Cabrera".
- Q456933 nationality Q241.
- Q456933 type Person.
- Q456933 type Agent.
- Q456933 type Person.
- Q456933 type Scientist.
- Q456933 type Agent.
- Q456933 type NaturalPerson.
- Q456933 type Thing.
- Q456933 type Q215627.
- Q456933 type Q5.
- Q456933 type Q901.
- Q456933 type Person.
- Q456933 comment "Lydia Cabrera (May 20, 1899 in Havana, Cuba – September 19, 1991 in Miami, Florida) was a Cuban anthropologist and poet.Cabrera was a Cuban writer and literary activist. She was an authority on Santería and other Afro-Cuban religions. During her lifetime she published over one hundred books; little if any of her work is available in English. Her most important book is El Monte (Spanish: "The Wilderness"), which was the first major anthropological study of Afro-Cuban traditions.".
- Q456933 label "Lydia Cabrera".
- Q456933 name "Lydia Cabrera".