This text addresses the complex challenge of comprehending religious otherness. Brown and Brightman present a previously unpublished 1823 letter journal of fur trader George Nelson in which he reflects on his struggle to understand the Cree and Ojibwa people he knew at first hand. While he constantly wondered at the strangeness of Algonquian religion, he also expressed his admiration as frequently. The Cree and the Ojibwa were thoroughly religious and, paradoxical as it seemed to Nelson, he did admit that their religion worked
The University of Oklahoma Press has long led the way in publications about the American West, and m...
In Before the Country, Stephanie McKenzie examines Canadian literature of the 1960s and 1970s to id...
In the introduction to Native Americans of the Pacific Coast, Vinson Brown presents many admirable a...
This text addresses the complex challenge of comprehending religious otherness. Brown and Brightman ...
As Amerindian traditional religions gain legitimacy in the eyes of a world dominated by the big fiv...
John A. Grim utilizes the methodology of the fields of anthropology, mythology, psychology, and soci...
This excellent historical study will make a contribution in various fields: American Indian missions...
Much has been written about the traditional social organization, art, and technology of the Northwes...
This volume passes on to readers some of the teachings of the late scholar and educator Joseph Epes ...
The author, Nancy Oestreich Lurie, is a native of Wisconsin born in Milwaukee, where she is now the ...
Most of the papers included in this anthology were presented in Bismarck in 1982 at a conference ent...
Until very recently, Indian history existed in the doldrums of guilt and ethnocentric misunderstandi...
Review of: A Stranger in Her Native Land: Alice Fletcher and the American Indians. Mark, Joan
Review of: "The Gods of Indian Country: Religion and the Struggle for the American West," by by Jenn...
This new edition of Dancing Gods includes a six page foreword by Tony Hillerman, a fourteen page int...
The University of Oklahoma Press has long led the way in publications about the American West, and m...
In Before the Country, Stephanie McKenzie examines Canadian literature of the 1960s and 1970s to id...
In the introduction to Native Americans of the Pacific Coast, Vinson Brown presents many admirable a...
This text addresses the complex challenge of comprehending religious otherness. Brown and Brightman ...
As Amerindian traditional religions gain legitimacy in the eyes of a world dominated by the big fiv...
John A. Grim utilizes the methodology of the fields of anthropology, mythology, psychology, and soci...
This excellent historical study will make a contribution in various fields: American Indian missions...
Much has been written about the traditional social organization, art, and technology of the Northwes...
This volume passes on to readers some of the teachings of the late scholar and educator Joseph Epes ...
The author, Nancy Oestreich Lurie, is a native of Wisconsin born in Milwaukee, where she is now the ...
Most of the papers included in this anthology were presented in Bismarck in 1982 at a conference ent...
Until very recently, Indian history existed in the doldrums of guilt and ethnocentric misunderstandi...
Review of: A Stranger in Her Native Land: Alice Fletcher and the American Indians. Mark, Joan
Review of: "The Gods of Indian Country: Religion and the Struggle for the American West," by by Jenn...
This new edition of Dancing Gods includes a six page foreword by Tony Hillerman, a fourteen page int...
The University of Oklahoma Press has long led the way in publications about the American West, and m...
In Before the Country, Stephanie McKenzie examines Canadian literature of the 1960s and 1970s to id...
In the introduction to Native Americans of the Pacific Coast, Vinson Brown presents many admirable a...