This is a beautiful coffee-table book. One wonders why a university press chose to publish it. Though the illustrations to the book are lovely and in the spirit of Black Elk\u27s account of the major ceremonies of the Lakota people, they do not add to our scholarly understanding of those rituals. Furthermore, in editing Joseph Epes Brown\u27s original text, Drysdale removed all footnotes and much of the technical detail concerning Lakota iconology that was included by Brown and Black Elk in the original Sacred Pipe (1953). As a consequence, this account of the ceremonies is readable but lacks the density, the explanatory power, and the profundity of the earlier version. What scholars need now is not more work popularizing the beauty of prec...
Regrettably, Holler\u27s own most original theoretical constructions suffer from what seems, anyway,...
Pipe, Bible, and Peyote among the Oglala Sioux is a republication of a 1980 manuscript published in ...
Greengrass Pipe Dancers is an account of Little Eagle\u27s trips in 1988 and 1990 to Lakota communit...
This is a beautiful coffee-table book. One wonders why a university press chose to publish it. Thoug...
This book supports the basic presupposition that Native American religion has always been the expres...
Father Steinmetz spent twenty years as a priest among the Oglala Lakota on the Pine Ridge Reservatio...
When John Neihardt finished Black Elk Speaks, he put on deposit in the University of Missouri librar...
This volume provides an introduction to contemporary Lakota religious life among the Oglalas of Pine...
The classic accounts of the Oglala holy man, Nicholas Black Elk, are three: Black Elk Speaks (1932) ...
As a Lakota person, it seems more pertinent to me that those publications that deal with specific gr...
This volume passes on to readers some of the teachings of the late scholar and educator Joseph Epes ...
This rich and complex book reminds me of Sir James G. Frazer\u27s The Golden Bough, with one big dif...
This well-researched book presents an excellent anthropological discussion of the ritual aspects o...
At the beginning of the nineteenth century, Omahas occupied a strategic position on the Missouri Riv...
Native Americans, including the Lakota of the Great Plains, are mistrustful of anthropologists. For ...
Regrettably, Holler\u27s own most original theoretical constructions suffer from what seems, anyway,...
Pipe, Bible, and Peyote among the Oglala Sioux is a republication of a 1980 manuscript published in ...
Greengrass Pipe Dancers is an account of Little Eagle\u27s trips in 1988 and 1990 to Lakota communit...
This is a beautiful coffee-table book. One wonders why a university press chose to publish it. Thoug...
This book supports the basic presupposition that Native American religion has always been the expres...
Father Steinmetz spent twenty years as a priest among the Oglala Lakota on the Pine Ridge Reservatio...
When John Neihardt finished Black Elk Speaks, he put on deposit in the University of Missouri librar...
This volume provides an introduction to contemporary Lakota religious life among the Oglalas of Pine...
The classic accounts of the Oglala holy man, Nicholas Black Elk, are three: Black Elk Speaks (1932) ...
As a Lakota person, it seems more pertinent to me that those publications that deal with specific gr...
This volume passes on to readers some of the teachings of the late scholar and educator Joseph Epes ...
This rich and complex book reminds me of Sir James G. Frazer\u27s The Golden Bough, with one big dif...
This well-researched book presents an excellent anthropological discussion of the ritual aspects o...
At the beginning of the nineteenth century, Omahas occupied a strategic position on the Missouri Riv...
Native Americans, including the Lakota of the Great Plains, are mistrustful of anthropologists. For ...
Regrettably, Holler\u27s own most original theoretical constructions suffer from what seems, anyway,...
Pipe, Bible, and Peyote among the Oglala Sioux is a republication of a 1980 manuscript published in ...
Greengrass Pipe Dancers is an account of Little Eagle\u27s trips in 1988 and 1990 to Lakota communit...