Ethnographic studies have long been plagued by questions of credibility. Can the ethnographer believe his or her sources? And, in turn, can readers believe the ethnographer? Ronald Frey knows full well that such issues of believability plague anyone attempting to understand a culture\u27s otherness from the outside. He is determined to explain general historical, religious, and cultural aspects of the world of the Crow Indians from as close to the inside as he possibly can tell them
This is a book for a wider audience than folklorists or anthropologists, though both will find subst...
Through the lens of historical interpretation, Robert Dale Parker presents a controversial, deconstr...
Frank Rzeczkowski’s book Uniting the Tribes brings a refreshing perspective to the much studied earl...
In this relatively short book, Frey seeks to describe the world view of the Crow (Apsaalooke) Indian...
With a thorough grasp of the historical record of the Crow people of Montana, Frank Rzeczkowski pres...
Although at midcentury the distinguished anthropologist A. Irving Hallowell suggested a new field, ...
The red and black Chumash pictograph reproduced on the cover of Smoothing the Ground shows an alert ...
The University of Oklahoma Press has long led the way in publications about the American West, and m...
In Joan Mark\u27s introduction to the Bison edition of this classic work, she offers a good analysis...
Review of: Children of the Raven: The Seven Indian Nations of the Northwest Coast. Hays, H. R
Powers\u27 collection of seven essays (mostly about Lakota culture) is of great value to students of...
Lee Irwin, whose earlier writing has focused on Plains Indian visionary traditions, has gathered fou...
Review of: Wild West Shows and the Images of American Indians, 1883-1933. Moses, L. G
Until very recently, Indian history existed in the doldrums of guilt and ethnocentric misunderstandi...
Hollywood inherited conflicting myths of Native Americans: barbaric savages or Noble Savage. Influ...
This is a book for a wider audience than folklorists or anthropologists, though both will find subst...
Through the lens of historical interpretation, Robert Dale Parker presents a controversial, deconstr...
Frank Rzeczkowski’s book Uniting the Tribes brings a refreshing perspective to the much studied earl...
In this relatively short book, Frey seeks to describe the world view of the Crow (Apsaalooke) Indian...
With a thorough grasp of the historical record of the Crow people of Montana, Frank Rzeczkowski pres...
Although at midcentury the distinguished anthropologist A. Irving Hallowell suggested a new field, ...
The red and black Chumash pictograph reproduced on the cover of Smoothing the Ground shows an alert ...
The University of Oklahoma Press has long led the way in publications about the American West, and m...
In Joan Mark\u27s introduction to the Bison edition of this classic work, she offers a good analysis...
Review of: Children of the Raven: The Seven Indian Nations of the Northwest Coast. Hays, H. R
Powers\u27 collection of seven essays (mostly about Lakota culture) is of great value to students of...
Lee Irwin, whose earlier writing has focused on Plains Indian visionary traditions, has gathered fou...
Review of: Wild West Shows and the Images of American Indians, 1883-1933. Moses, L. G
Until very recently, Indian history existed in the doldrums of guilt and ethnocentric misunderstandi...
Hollywood inherited conflicting myths of Native Americans: barbaric savages or Noble Savage. Influ...
This is a book for a wider audience than folklorists or anthropologists, though both will find subst...
Through the lens of historical interpretation, Robert Dale Parker presents a controversial, deconstr...
Frank Rzeczkowski’s book Uniting the Tribes brings a refreshing perspective to the much studied earl...