This paper addresses the history and development of Episcopalianism in the Nets'aii Gwich'in community of Arctic Village, Alaska. It is argued that Christianity in the village well represents communal resistance to colonial domination, as well as the ability to blend past and present traditions. This development is due largely to the role played by the Gwich'in Reverend Albert E. Tritt, whose efforts, including his building of the community's first church, were central to the community's embracing of Christianity. The paper concludes with a discussion of Gwich'in Episcopalianism in the twenty-first century, and its role in the battle against oil drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge
This dissertation analyzes the Indigenous policies of the Anglican, Presbyterian, and United Churche...
The Nisga’a of British Columbia’s rugged Pacific Coast have long forged their spirituality from both...
Christianity is heavily influenced by those who practice it, often with political and social mores h...
This paper addresses the history and development of Episcopalianism in the Nets'aii Gwich'in communi...
For the indigenous peoples of Alaska, there is an ever-present tension between maintaining cultural ...
This paper applies letters, journals, history interviews, government-company contracts, internationa...
The arrival in Native Alaskan communities of Russians in the mid-18th century and Americans in the m...
The Indian Shaker Church is an indigenous spiritual tradition that incorporates Christian-in-origin ...
The goal of this research thesis is to explore the activities of the Protestant and Russian Orthodox...
The Unangan have lived on the island of Unalaska, Alaska for thousands of years, yet little is known...
Christianity is an aspect of Native history, not simply an external force acting upon it. This diss...
The purpose of this article is to point out that the Indian prophetic movements enabled the American...
Christianity is an integral aspect of Native history, not simply an external force acting upon it. N...
Armand Tagoona (1926–1991) was born in Naujaat (Repulse Bay, Northwest Territories) in 1926, from an...
By the mid-nineteenth century, Christianity had spread rapidly in Yorùbáland. In Yorùbáland, nay Òkè...
This dissertation analyzes the Indigenous policies of the Anglican, Presbyterian, and United Churche...
The Nisga’a of British Columbia’s rugged Pacific Coast have long forged their spirituality from both...
Christianity is heavily influenced by those who practice it, often with political and social mores h...
This paper addresses the history and development of Episcopalianism in the Nets'aii Gwich'in communi...
For the indigenous peoples of Alaska, there is an ever-present tension between maintaining cultural ...
This paper applies letters, journals, history interviews, government-company contracts, internationa...
The arrival in Native Alaskan communities of Russians in the mid-18th century and Americans in the m...
The Indian Shaker Church is an indigenous spiritual tradition that incorporates Christian-in-origin ...
The goal of this research thesis is to explore the activities of the Protestant and Russian Orthodox...
The Unangan have lived on the island of Unalaska, Alaska for thousands of years, yet little is known...
Christianity is an aspect of Native history, not simply an external force acting upon it. This diss...
The purpose of this article is to point out that the Indian prophetic movements enabled the American...
Christianity is an integral aspect of Native history, not simply an external force acting upon it. N...
Armand Tagoona (1926–1991) was born in Naujaat (Repulse Bay, Northwest Territories) in 1926, from an...
By the mid-nineteenth century, Christianity had spread rapidly in Yorùbáland. In Yorùbáland, nay Òkè...
This dissertation analyzes the Indigenous policies of the Anglican, Presbyterian, and United Churche...
The Nisga’a of British Columbia’s rugged Pacific Coast have long forged their spirituality from both...
Christianity is heavily influenced by those who practice it, often with political and social mores h...