Most of the papers included in this anthology were presented in Bismarck in 1982 at a conference entitled American Indian Religion in the Dakotas: Historical and Contemporary Perspectives. The conference was funded by the North Dakota Humanities Council and brought together a wide array of academicians and lay people representing different and sometimes conflicting experiential and philosophical points of view
The reciting of oral traditions, or storytelling, is the oldest form of human literary achievement. ...
Colonialism becomes the lens through which Jeffrey Ostler both analyzes and interprets the history o...
The literature on Native American dispossession grows with every year, and there are times when the ...
This book supports the basic presupposition that Native American religion has always been the expres...
St. Clair Drake, the recently deceased anthropologist, has written an elaborate summary essay on t...
Although Black Elk Speaks was first published in 1932, it was not until the 1960s that the book gain...
Review of: Lakota America: A New History of Indigenous Power, by Pekka Hämäläinen
INDIANS AND ANTHROPOLOGISTS To say that the Plains volume of the Smithsonian Institution\u27s Handbo...
The presentation of symposia papers in book form poses several editorial problems, the chief of whic...
This brief narrative was written by DeWitt Clinton Poole, Indian agent at the Whetstone Agency in Da...
This well-researched book presents an excellent anthropological discussion of the ritual aspects o...
This slim volume is essentially a caricature of an older genre of anthropological books about Indian...
This collection of essays acknowledges and celebrates Aboriginal oral traditions in contemporary Abo...
From 1869 to 1870 many Oglala and Brule Sioux lived together on their first reservation, the Whetsto...
This text addresses the complex challenge of comprehending religious otherness. Brown and Brightman ...
The reciting of oral traditions, or storytelling, is the oldest form of human literary achievement. ...
Colonialism becomes the lens through which Jeffrey Ostler both analyzes and interprets the history o...
The literature on Native American dispossession grows with every year, and there are times when the ...
This book supports the basic presupposition that Native American religion has always been the expres...
St. Clair Drake, the recently deceased anthropologist, has written an elaborate summary essay on t...
Although Black Elk Speaks was first published in 1932, it was not until the 1960s that the book gain...
Review of: Lakota America: A New History of Indigenous Power, by Pekka Hämäläinen
INDIANS AND ANTHROPOLOGISTS To say that the Plains volume of the Smithsonian Institution\u27s Handbo...
The presentation of symposia papers in book form poses several editorial problems, the chief of whic...
This brief narrative was written by DeWitt Clinton Poole, Indian agent at the Whetstone Agency in Da...
This well-researched book presents an excellent anthropological discussion of the ritual aspects o...
This slim volume is essentially a caricature of an older genre of anthropological books about Indian...
This collection of essays acknowledges and celebrates Aboriginal oral traditions in contemporary Abo...
From 1869 to 1870 many Oglala and Brule Sioux lived together on their first reservation, the Whetsto...
This text addresses the complex challenge of comprehending religious otherness. Brown and Brightman ...
The reciting of oral traditions, or storytelling, is the oldest form of human literary achievement. ...
Colonialism becomes the lens through which Jeffrey Ostler both analyzes and interprets the history o...
The literature on Native American dispossession grows with every year, and there are times when the ...