The Way of a Peyote Roadman is a work which is certain to stir controversy in a number of academic circles. Silvester J. Brito holds a Ph.D. in folklore and anthropology from Indiana University. The book begins with a personal affirmation of the author\u27s belief in the power of sorcery, based on his personal experiences culminating in a peyote ritual curing ceremony
This text addresses the complex challenge of comprehending religious otherness. Brown and Brightman ...
In the introduction to Native Americans of the Pacific Coast, Vinson Brown presents many admirable a...
Bernd Peyer has collected a number of documents which, although available elsewhere, are not easily ...
The Underdogs (Los De Abajo) is a classic novel of the Mexican Revolution. The foreword briefly cove...
The editor indicated in his foreword that he had several purposes for collecting and assembling the ...
The importance of documenting “oral histories” in print has to be emphasized among all Pacific Asian...
Poised at the gateway to the Great Plains, Pecos Pueblo-the people and the place-figured prominently...
The explanation of peyote, the hallucinogenic cactus central to several American Indian ceremonies, ...
In the last few years the New Mexican Chicano narrative has taken a significant place within Chicano...
The major weakness of this text is that it is a reprint of a 1979 special edition of Revista Chicano...
Twenty two poems shimmer with irridescence [iridescence] in Looking Through a Squared Off Circle. Th...
American Indian Autobiography provides significant insight into the nature and production of Indian ...
As one drives through the state of California, the legacy of Indian, Spanish, and Mexican cultures i...
The forced removal of thousands of Indians from eastern Kansas between 1854 and 1871 adversely affec...
In this volume, Peter Whiteley, an anthropologist, probes into the reasons for the split in Oraibi, ...
This text addresses the complex challenge of comprehending religious otherness. Brown and Brightman ...
In the introduction to Native Americans of the Pacific Coast, Vinson Brown presents many admirable a...
Bernd Peyer has collected a number of documents which, although available elsewhere, are not easily ...
The Underdogs (Los De Abajo) is a classic novel of the Mexican Revolution. The foreword briefly cove...
The editor indicated in his foreword that he had several purposes for collecting and assembling the ...
The importance of documenting “oral histories” in print has to be emphasized among all Pacific Asian...
Poised at the gateway to the Great Plains, Pecos Pueblo-the people and the place-figured prominently...
The explanation of peyote, the hallucinogenic cactus central to several American Indian ceremonies, ...
In the last few years the New Mexican Chicano narrative has taken a significant place within Chicano...
The major weakness of this text is that it is a reprint of a 1979 special edition of Revista Chicano...
Twenty two poems shimmer with irridescence [iridescence] in Looking Through a Squared Off Circle. Th...
American Indian Autobiography provides significant insight into the nature and production of Indian ...
As one drives through the state of California, the legacy of Indian, Spanish, and Mexican cultures i...
The forced removal of thousands of Indians from eastern Kansas between 1854 and 1871 adversely affec...
In this volume, Peter Whiteley, an anthropologist, probes into the reasons for the split in Oraibi, ...
This text addresses the complex challenge of comprehending religious otherness. Brown and Brightman ...
In the introduction to Native Americans of the Pacific Coast, Vinson Brown presents many admirable a...
Bernd Peyer has collected a number of documents which, although available elsewhere, are not easily ...