The reciting of oral traditions, or storytelling, is the oldest form of human literary achievement. But because time changes everything, including oral traditions, human societies finally are forced to put their stories into written form to preserve them for posterity
Modern Siouan storytellers make a distinction in speaking of the difference between bedtime and sacr...
Most of the papers included in this anthology were presented in Bismarck in 1982 at a conference ent...
Although numerous nonfiction works about American Indians fill juvenile sections of public libraries...
The reciting of oral traditions, or storytelling, is the oldest form of human literary achievement. ...
Julian Rice presents Ella Deloria\u27s work as part of the landscape of American literature without ...
This book supports the basic presupposition that Native American religion has always been the expres...
In the latter half of the nineteenth century a deadly clash of cultures swept across the Great Plain...
Although Black Elk Speaks was first published in 1932, it was not until the 1960s that the book gain...
Review of: Lakota America: A New History of Indigenous Power, by Pekka Hämäläinen
Dance, song, and spiritual renewal are at the heart of traditional Lakota life in contemporary Ameri...
Julian Rice organizes, critiques, and analyzes one of Ella Cara Deloria\u27s lifetime achievements, ...
Identity everywhere is complicated, but, in my experience, nowhere as complicated as on the contempo...
Review of: Honor the Grandmothers: Dakota and Lakota Women Tell Their Stories. Penman, Sarah, ed
When John Neihardt finished Black Elk Speaks, he put on deposit in the University of Missouri librar...
In Carolyn Reyer\u27s book, Cante ohitika Win (Brave-hearted Women), the words of Debra Lynn White P...
Modern Siouan storytellers make a distinction in speaking of the difference between bedtime and sacr...
Most of the papers included in this anthology were presented in Bismarck in 1982 at a conference ent...
Although numerous nonfiction works about American Indians fill juvenile sections of public libraries...
The reciting of oral traditions, or storytelling, is the oldest form of human literary achievement. ...
Julian Rice presents Ella Deloria\u27s work as part of the landscape of American literature without ...
This book supports the basic presupposition that Native American religion has always been the expres...
In the latter half of the nineteenth century a deadly clash of cultures swept across the Great Plain...
Although Black Elk Speaks was first published in 1932, it was not until the 1960s that the book gain...
Review of: Lakota America: A New History of Indigenous Power, by Pekka Hämäläinen
Dance, song, and spiritual renewal are at the heart of traditional Lakota life in contemporary Ameri...
Julian Rice organizes, critiques, and analyzes one of Ella Cara Deloria\u27s lifetime achievements, ...
Identity everywhere is complicated, but, in my experience, nowhere as complicated as on the contempo...
Review of: Honor the Grandmothers: Dakota and Lakota Women Tell Their Stories. Penman, Sarah, ed
When John Neihardt finished Black Elk Speaks, he put on deposit in the University of Missouri librar...
In Carolyn Reyer\u27s book, Cante ohitika Win (Brave-hearted Women), the words of Debra Lynn White P...
Modern Siouan storytellers make a distinction in speaking of the difference between bedtime and sacr...
Most of the papers included in this anthology were presented in Bismarck in 1982 at a conference ent...
Although numerous nonfiction works about American Indians fill juvenile sections of public libraries...