Raven appears as an important character in many Alaskan Athabascan myths. He is depicted as a powerful shaman who transforms the world through magic. In this paper, I analyze an often-neglected motif of Alaskan Athabascan Raven stories: Raven as Dog-eaters. I use mythological texts and ethnographic data collected in prior studies and from my fieldwork in the community of Nikolai, Alaska. In some Alaskan Athabascan myths, Raven has a strong appetite for dog meat and assists his neighbors who slaughter their dogs for him. This motif seems to describe a sacrificial practice whereby Raven, as a transformer, receives gifts of food in exchange for providing spiritual services and protection. However, in real life, Northern Athabascans do not prac...
ABSTRACT. A collection of dog bones recovered from a Thule culture site at Porden Point, Devon Isla...
... domestic dogs played a significant role in the adaptive strategies of most historic Inuit and th...
This collection maps out the current state of the field of literary and cultural animal studies in N...
This study is about the Haida raven. It is both a zoological and symbolic study: of the raven bird (...
Dogs in the North offers an interdisciplinary in-depth consideration of the multiple roles that dogs...
Whether religion and ritual are elements of past cultures that can be studied effectively by archaeo...
In Alaska, Raven is paradoxically both a lazy scavenger, relying on others to hunt for it and not ad...
The Mi’kmaq are the First Nation people that traditionally inhabited the eastern coast of North Amer...
Some 1500 years ago, on a gravel spit extending into the Chukchi Sea, people living at the site of I...
A comparative study was conducted of several variants of the Raven cycle of myths as manifested amon...
Traces of Slavic pagan cosmology are preserved to a great extent in folklore. The pagan philosophy r...
Until the mid-nineteenth century, First Nations peoples in British Columbia valued dogs as hunting a...
On the Stone Age rock carving panels at Jiepmaluokta, Alta, Norway, more than one third of all the k...
The precontact lifeways of Yup’ik people in Southwest Alaska were poorly known until the 2009–2018 e...
It is believed that pagan cosmology once ran strong through the Slavic countries and traces are visi...
ABSTRACT. A collection of dog bones recovered from a Thule culture site at Porden Point, Devon Isla...
... domestic dogs played a significant role in the adaptive strategies of most historic Inuit and th...
This collection maps out the current state of the field of literary and cultural animal studies in N...
This study is about the Haida raven. It is both a zoological and symbolic study: of the raven bird (...
Dogs in the North offers an interdisciplinary in-depth consideration of the multiple roles that dogs...
Whether religion and ritual are elements of past cultures that can be studied effectively by archaeo...
In Alaska, Raven is paradoxically both a lazy scavenger, relying on others to hunt for it and not ad...
The Mi’kmaq are the First Nation people that traditionally inhabited the eastern coast of North Amer...
Some 1500 years ago, on a gravel spit extending into the Chukchi Sea, people living at the site of I...
A comparative study was conducted of several variants of the Raven cycle of myths as manifested amon...
Traces of Slavic pagan cosmology are preserved to a great extent in folklore. The pagan philosophy r...
Until the mid-nineteenth century, First Nations peoples in British Columbia valued dogs as hunting a...
On the Stone Age rock carving panels at Jiepmaluokta, Alta, Norway, more than one third of all the k...
The precontact lifeways of Yup’ik people in Southwest Alaska were poorly known until the 2009–2018 e...
It is believed that pagan cosmology once ran strong through the Slavic countries and traces are visi...
ABSTRACT. A collection of dog bones recovered from a Thule culture site at Porden Point, Devon Isla...
... domestic dogs played a significant role in the adaptive strategies of most historic Inuit and th...
This collection maps out the current state of the field of literary and cultural animal studies in N...