This book is tremendously valuable as a tool for understanding not only linguistic research but for understanding the life and culture of an Ojibwe woman. Angeline Williams, Biidaasigekwe or Sunlight Woman, came to Virginia in 1941 from Sugar Island on the St. Mary\u27s River to teach the Ojibwe language to Leonard Bloomfield. Bloomfield\u27s subsequent translations and understanding of the Algonquian language family led to significant advances and changes in the study of linguistics. This series of Ojibwe stories and their up-todate translations to English illustrate the thoroughness of Bloomfield\u27s linguistic research
This volume is a critical historiography of the nature and meaning of the Midewiwin as it was, and s...
Employing a broad multi-disciplinary approach which includes history, anthropology, economics, demog...
Review of: Peoples of the Inland Sea: Native Americans and Newcomers in the Great Lakes Region, 1600...
This book is tremendously valuable as a tool for understanding not only linguistic research but for ...
Linguists and students of reservation-period Indian lore should welcome this finely crafted book. Th...
The late Sarah Whitecalf was born on the Moosomin Reserve in Western Saskatchewan in 1919 and grew u...
Let’s Speak Chickasaw: Chikashshanompa’ Kilanompoli’ is a landmark achievement in Chickasaw language...
Utilizing Oral Traditions: Some Concerns Raised by Recent Ojibwe Studies; a Review Essay Rebecca Kug...
It was family pride that initially caused Arlene Jauken of southeast Nebraska to begin to research t...
The author, Nancy Oestreich Lurie, is a native of Wisconsin born in Milwaukee, where she is now the ...
This innovative work is an ethno-historical study of the Ojibwa migration from the Great Lakes regio...
In this work Meyer draws primarily upon the substantial resources available from the colonial U.S. b...
Conventional wisdom among scholars of Indian history holds that the boarding school experience for m...
Louise Erdrich is an award-winning Anishinaabe-American author, whose works of fiction have attracte...
This volume on Inuit speech follows the evolution of a native language of the North American Arctic,...
This volume is a critical historiography of the nature and meaning of the Midewiwin as it was, and s...
Employing a broad multi-disciplinary approach which includes history, anthropology, economics, demog...
Review of: Peoples of the Inland Sea: Native Americans and Newcomers in the Great Lakes Region, 1600...
This book is tremendously valuable as a tool for understanding not only linguistic research but for ...
Linguists and students of reservation-period Indian lore should welcome this finely crafted book. Th...
The late Sarah Whitecalf was born on the Moosomin Reserve in Western Saskatchewan in 1919 and grew u...
Let’s Speak Chickasaw: Chikashshanompa’ Kilanompoli’ is a landmark achievement in Chickasaw language...
Utilizing Oral Traditions: Some Concerns Raised by Recent Ojibwe Studies; a Review Essay Rebecca Kug...
It was family pride that initially caused Arlene Jauken of southeast Nebraska to begin to research t...
The author, Nancy Oestreich Lurie, is a native of Wisconsin born in Milwaukee, where she is now the ...
This innovative work is an ethno-historical study of the Ojibwa migration from the Great Lakes regio...
In this work Meyer draws primarily upon the substantial resources available from the colonial U.S. b...
Conventional wisdom among scholars of Indian history holds that the boarding school experience for m...
Louise Erdrich is an award-winning Anishinaabe-American author, whose works of fiction have attracte...
This volume on Inuit speech follows the evolution of a native language of the North American Arctic,...
This volume is a critical historiography of the nature and meaning of the Midewiwin as it was, and s...
Employing a broad multi-disciplinary approach which includes history, anthropology, economics, demog...
Review of: Peoples of the Inland Sea: Native Americans and Newcomers in the Great Lakes Region, 1600...