The Lakota (Sioux) sacred clowns (heyoka) of traditional religious practice offer a glimpse of the clown phenomenon found in many of the world\u27s indigenous traditions. By illustrating the unified Lakota and Western conceptions of humor, the logic of how particular entities of the natural environment are understood as relatives according to Lakota thought is brought to light in hopes of introducing the idea that such insights were not only statements or observations about the external, physical world, but also about the internal or mental world
Pilgrimage in Practice: Narration, Reclamation and Healing provides an interdisciplinary approach to...
Native Americans, including the Lakota of the Great Plains, are mistrustful of anthropologists. For ...
The reciting of oral traditions, or storytelling, is the oldest form of human literary achievement. ...
The Lakota (Sioux) sacred clowns (heyoka) of traditional religious practice offer a glimpse of the c...
Non-Indians have long considered Indian people to possess little or no sense of humor because they t...
This paper analyzes the Lakota as a people, and one of their most prominent chiefs, Sitting Bull. Ba...
The Concept of Duality in Culture and Myths of Lakota Indians The purpose of the dissertation is to ...
Plains Indian theology centers on the concept of the Great Mystery (Wakan Tanka, in the Lakota tongu...
AN ABSTRACT OF THE DISSERTATION OF Gabor Hardy, for the Doctor of Philosophy degree in Speech Commun...
After Chief Sitting Bull returned to the U.S. in 1881 from Canada, about 250 Lakota people remained ...
Oglala Lakota ethos manifests a pre-Socratic/Heideggerian variant of ethos: ethos as “haunt...
The article deals with selected issues which - as we perceive it - can provide an insight into what ...
This thesis focuses primarily on Lakota concerns about the appropriation of their spirituality. The...
Includes bibliographical references.The focus of this work is to record and clarify the traditional ...
Thesis (Ph.D.) - Indiana University, Anthropology, 2015The Lakotas are well known historically for t...
Pilgrimage in Practice: Narration, Reclamation and Healing provides an interdisciplinary approach to...
Native Americans, including the Lakota of the Great Plains, are mistrustful of anthropologists. For ...
The reciting of oral traditions, or storytelling, is the oldest form of human literary achievement. ...
The Lakota (Sioux) sacred clowns (heyoka) of traditional religious practice offer a glimpse of the c...
Non-Indians have long considered Indian people to possess little or no sense of humor because they t...
This paper analyzes the Lakota as a people, and one of their most prominent chiefs, Sitting Bull. Ba...
The Concept of Duality in Culture and Myths of Lakota Indians The purpose of the dissertation is to ...
Plains Indian theology centers on the concept of the Great Mystery (Wakan Tanka, in the Lakota tongu...
AN ABSTRACT OF THE DISSERTATION OF Gabor Hardy, for the Doctor of Philosophy degree in Speech Commun...
After Chief Sitting Bull returned to the U.S. in 1881 from Canada, about 250 Lakota people remained ...
Oglala Lakota ethos manifests a pre-Socratic/Heideggerian variant of ethos: ethos as “haunt...
The article deals with selected issues which - as we perceive it - can provide an insight into what ...
This thesis focuses primarily on Lakota concerns about the appropriation of their spirituality. The...
Includes bibliographical references.The focus of this work is to record and clarify the traditional ...
Thesis (Ph.D.) - Indiana University, Anthropology, 2015The Lakotas are well known historically for t...
Pilgrimage in Practice: Narration, Reclamation and Healing provides an interdisciplinary approach to...
Native Americans, including the Lakota of the Great Plains, are mistrustful of anthropologists. For ...
The reciting of oral traditions, or storytelling, is the oldest form of human literary achievement. ...