Loading
Note: Beware of a website proclaiming to be New Tribal Ventures/An Ishmael Community! Do not reply to any request for information. Our legitimate pages are available on our site here & on the navigation to the left.
HOME

FIND OUT ABOUT
What's new
Daniel Quinn
Daniel Quinn's books
Schools & courses
This website
New Tribal Ventures
Ishmael's Annex
Events

THINGS TO DO
Register
Visit Guestbook
Find others
Help us
Contact us
Order books

THINGS TO READ
Essays
Speeches
Dialogues
Parables
Answers to questions
DQ's suggested reading

FOR TEACHERS
The Ishmael Companion
Beyond Civilization
 Study Guide


DQ on Facebook!
 


BC Home

*BC Audio
&
Text Excerpts
*

BC Resources

ishmael.org

New Tribal
Ventures.com

UNIT 31 Tribes and Other Communities

Another tribal example · Scuffling in the usual way · But can't an X be a tribe? · Communities and tribes: origins · Communities and tribes: membership


Compare and contrast the operation of the Neo-Futurists with that of the East Mountain News.
From what you can gather here, write a paper matching the New-Futurists with the "ingredients" Quinn gives for a tribal business.
Anthropologist Sharon Bohn Gmelch lists some reasons why groups like the Gypsies survive. Write a paper comparing her list to Quinn's "ingredients" for a tribal business.

Do you know anyone who scuffles for a living? Can you think of anyone in books or movies who scuffles for a living?

What does a scuffler give up and gain by making a living this way?

Suppose you're working at some job, and the owner of the business decides to make it a tribal business. You're invited to join the business as a tribal member. What factors would you consider in making your decision?
Do an online search on "intentional communities." Download and distribute information on two or three different communities and have students evaluate how they size up as tribes in Quinn's terms.

Quinn says that "to the extent allowed by law and custom, ordinary communities make it their policy to exclude certain kinds of people and include all the rest." During the 1950s and 1960s many laws were passed limiting the extent to which communities could exclude "certain kinds of people." Give some examples of the "kinds of people" communities wanted to exclude. Certain means of exclusion are now prohibited by law. Have people given up trying to exclude "certain kinds" of people?

Back to UNIT 30 Tribal Goals
Up to Table of Contents
Ahead to UNIT 32 Tribes and Communes



BC Home || BC Excerpts || BC Resources || Ishmael || New Tribal Ventures

Site design and content, ©1999, ©2000 Daniel Quinn, Alan D. Thornhill, and DataDrive
Problems with the website? webmaster@datadrive.com

Site design and content, © 2012, Daniel Quinn