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Talk:Bradford Keeney

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Upload a picture

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Thanks - I am trying to figure out how to upload a picture of Brad that is copyright free. Wmorris33 (talk) 01:02, 20 October 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Keeney mentioned in My Heart Stands in the Hill

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Deacon, Janette; Foster, Craig (2005). My heart stands in the hill. Cape Town: Struik Publishers. p. 115. ISBN 1770071253. The key researchers who identified the activities that were recorded in rock paintings in the Drakensberg in the 1970s were Patricia Vinnicombe and David Lewis-Williams. Working independently, they made the connections between remarks made by the /Xam and recorded in the Bleek and Lloyd notebooks and trance rituals still practised in the Kalahari. They drew on the experience of anthropologists Megan Biesele, Elizabeth Marshall Thomas, Lorna Marshall, Mathias Guenther, Richard Lee and Bradford Keeney and others who have documented the Kalahari practices in some detail.

-- Tertiaryresources (talk) 15:49, 14 February 2014 (UTC)[reply]

Unsourced paragraph

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I've removed this paragraph of unsourced content after searching for acceptable sources that back up these claims, including Uniting faith, medicine and healthcare : a sixty-year history of the institute for spirituality and health at the texas medical center, and The Rock Art Institute website, The Kalahari Peoples' Fund website, none of which mentions Dr. Keeney:

Dr. Keeney serves as project director for the Kalahari Bushman (San) N/om-Kxaosi Ethnographic Project. This project was originally a collaboration between the Institute of Religion and Health at the Texas Medical Center, Houston, Texas, the Kalahari People’s Fund, and the Rock Art Research Institute of the University of Witwatersrand in Johannesburg, South Africa. Since roughly 1995, data has been collected in Botswana and Namibia, focusing on the religion and healing practices of the Ju/’hoan Bushmen. Dr. Keeney has collaborated with Megan Biesele, Ph.D., an original member of the Harvard Kalahari Research Project and the Director of the Kalahari Peoples Fund to both document the healing traditions of the Kalahari Bushmen or San people and apply what is learned to Western psychotherapeutic interactions.

I'm happy to return the paragraph to the article if someone can point me to useful citations that back up the claims from the paragraph. -- Phoenixred (talk) 13:39, 8 April 2016 (UTC)[reply]