World-Making Stories
Published through the Recovering Languages and Literacies of the Americas initiative, supported by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation World-Making Stories is a collection of Maidu creation stories that will help readers appreciate California’s rich cultural tapestry. At the beginning of the twentieth century, renowned storyteller Hanc’ibyjim (Tom Young) performed Maidu and Atsugewi stories for anthropologist Ronald B. Dixon, who published these stories in 1912. The resulting Maidu Texts presented...
Price-Forecasting Models for SC Health Corp Cl A SCPE Stock
by Ton Viet Ta
Circular of Information Regarding Indian Popular Names (1915)
by Smithsonian Institution Bureau of Americ
In the Current Where Drowning Is Beautiful (Wesleyan Poetry)
by Abigail Chabitnoy
In the Current Where Drowning Is Beautiful is a meditation on water, land, women, and violent environmental changes as they affect both the natural world and human migration. The poet reckons with the unsettling realities that women experience, questioning the cause and effect of events and asking why stories of oppression are so often simply accepted as the only stories. Alutiiq language is used throughout these poems that are in conversation with history, ancestors, and an uncertain future, in...
Charles Alexander Eastman (Sioux: Ohiyesa) was a Native American author, physician and reformer. He was active in politics and helped found the Boy Scouts of America. With illustrations in color by Dan Sayre Groesbeck. CONTENTS: PART I. THE WARRIOR: The Love of Antelope -- The Love of Antelope -- The Madness of Bald Eagle -- The Singing Spirit -- The Famine -- The Chief Soldier -- The White Man's Erreand -- The Grave of the Dog. PART II. THE WOMAN: Winona, The Woman-Child -- Winona, the Child-Wo...
A Study of the Local Literature of the Upper Ohio Valley
by Mary Meek Atkeson
"Two-Spirit people, identified by many different tribally specific names and standings within their communities, have been living, loving, and creating art since time immemorial. It wasn't until the 1970s, however, that contemporary queer Native literature gained any public notice. Even now, only a handful of books address it specifically, most notably the 1988 collection Living the Spirt: A Gay American Indian Anthology. Since that book's publication twenty-three years ago, there has not been a...
I Have Spoken is a collection of American Indian oratory from the 17th to the 20th century, concentrating on speeches focusing around Indian-white relationships, especially treaty-making negotiations. A few letters and other writings are also included. Here, in their own words, is the Indian's story told with integrity, with drama, with caustic wit, with statesmanship, with poetic impact; a story of proffered friendship, of broken promises, of hope, of disillusionment, of pride, of a whole land...
In The American Indian Intellectual Tradition, David Martínez presents thirty-one essays that exemplify Native American intellectual culture across two centuries. The occasion for many of the pieces was the exertion of colonial and then federal power to limit or obliterate the authority and autonomy of American Indians. The writers featured were activists for their home communities and for all indigenous people. Martínez divides his book into three critical epochs of American Indian history wit...
The Last Great Poet Laureate of the Mythical State of Jefferson, USA
by Je Corseau
Mythen Und Legenden Der Bolivianischen Anden (Mythen Und Legenden in Der Bolivianischen Literatur, #1)
by Marcial Villarroel Siles