This article considers Tsimshian feasting activities from the 1860s to the turn of the century. It is informed by the remarkable diary of a Tsimshian, Arthur Wellington Clah. It takes up the analysis where Robert Grumet left it in his article in Ethnohistory in 1975. Clah\u27s day- by- day account shows how support for feasting and the chiefly system it reinforced waxed and waned over forty years. For a time after a permanent missionary came to their village of Fort Simpson, Tsimshian feasts became Christian festivals as the community dispensed with chiefs and the transmission of chiefly names before reverting to chiefdoms when the need for strong leadership was recognized to deal with land alienation and other threats to community cohesion...
When white explorers encountered them in their Wisconsin homeland, the Kickapoo Indians lived in sep...
The Nisga’a of British Columbia’s rugged Pacific Coast have long forged their spirituality from both...
Paper submitted for History 302 Honors, Spring 2010. The papers from this class are collected in th...
Most of our knowledge of missions and missionary interactions with the indigenous peoples they evang...
grantor: University of TorontoThis dissertation examines the archaeological data for the t...
In January of 1987 we sat around the table of George Byron Nelson, Sr., a 69-year-old Hupa forester,...
85 pages. A thesis presented to the Department of Anthropology and the Clark Honors College of the U...
Based largely on the diaries of an Anglican missionary and the recorded memories of a Coast Salish e...
Anthropological inquiries into the human condition have long been tempered with a concern for the di...
The text that follows is a narrative of reminiscences in the Shoshone language by Josephine Thorpe. ...
Between 1838 and 1848, two New England families interacted and lived among a small band of Spokan In...
The Mandan and Hidatsa tribes located in modern day North Dakota have a rich history characterized b...
The Charles H. Stephens Collection, housed at the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology a...
In developed countries,many traditional festivals have degenerated and been set in danger of extinct...
In 1959, a serialised, illustrated encyclopaedia, The Book of Knowledge, published a photograph capt...
When white explorers encountered them in their Wisconsin homeland, the Kickapoo Indians lived in sep...
The Nisga’a of British Columbia’s rugged Pacific Coast have long forged their spirituality from both...
Paper submitted for History 302 Honors, Spring 2010. The papers from this class are collected in th...
Most of our knowledge of missions and missionary interactions with the indigenous peoples they evang...
grantor: University of TorontoThis dissertation examines the archaeological data for the t...
In January of 1987 we sat around the table of George Byron Nelson, Sr., a 69-year-old Hupa forester,...
85 pages. A thesis presented to the Department of Anthropology and the Clark Honors College of the U...
Based largely on the diaries of an Anglican missionary and the recorded memories of a Coast Salish e...
Anthropological inquiries into the human condition have long been tempered with a concern for the di...
The text that follows is a narrative of reminiscences in the Shoshone language by Josephine Thorpe. ...
Between 1838 and 1848, two New England families interacted and lived among a small band of Spokan In...
The Mandan and Hidatsa tribes located in modern day North Dakota have a rich history characterized b...
The Charles H. Stephens Collection, housed at the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology a...
In developed countries,many traditional festivals have degenerated and been set in danger of extinct...
In 1959, a serialised, illustrated encyclopaedia, The Book of Knowledge, published a photograph capt...
When white explorers encountered them in their Wisconsin homeland, the Kickapoo Indians lived in sep...
The Nisga’a of British Columbia’s rugged Pacific Coast have long forged their spirituality from both...
Paper submitted for History 302 Honors, Spring 2010. The papers from this class are collected in th...