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Winnebago/Ho-Chunk NP12

Katalog der UB Augsburg (1/1)

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Winnebago/Ho-Chunk

NP12

Autor/Mitarbeiter: Lurie, Nancy Oestreich   , Radin, Paul   , Hill, Thomas W.   , Richards, Patricia B.  
Verlagsort, Verlag, Jahr: New Haven, Conn, Human Relations Area Files, Inc, 2010
Umfang: 1 Online-Ressource
Schlagwörter: Winnebago
 
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Autor/Mitarbeiter: Lurie, Nancy Oestreich
Autor/Mitarbeiter: Radin, Paul
Autor/Mitarbeiter: Hill, Thomas W.
Autor/Mitarbeiter: Richards, Patricia B.
Titel: Winnebago/Ho-Chunk
Titelzusatz: NP12
Erläuterung: Verlag
Verlagsort: New Haven, Conn
Verlag: Human Relations Area Files, Inc
Jahr: 2010
Umfang: 1 Online-Ressource
Reihe: eHRAF World Cultures
Information: Culture Summary: Winnebago/Ho-Chunk - Nancy Oestreich Lurie - 2010 -- - The Winnebago tribe - Paul Radin - 1923 -- - Cultural change among the Wisconsin Winnegabo - Nancy Oestreich - 1944 -- - Winebago berdache - Nancy Oestreich Lurie - 1953 -- - The road of life and death: a ritual drama of the American Indian - Paul Radin ; with a foreword by Mark Van Doren ... - 1945 -- - Winnebago - Nancy Oestreich Lurie - 1978 -- - Peyotism and the control of heavy drinking: the Nebraska Winnebago in the early 1900s - Thomas W. Hill - 1990 -- - Winnebago subsistence - change and continuity - Patricia B. Richards - 1993
Abstract: The Winnebago/Ho-Chunk collection covers a time span from approximately 1620 to the late twentieth century. The primary work in this collection is Radin, which provides a detailed ethnography of the Winnebago/Ho-Chunk from the early seventeenth century to 1913. This material is supplemented by the summary of Winnebago/Ho-Chunk culture history by Lurie, which covers the early period described by Radin, and expands coverage up to 1978. This document discusses the fur trade period, treaties and land cessions between the U. S. government and the Nebraska and Wisconsin branches as two separate entities of the tribe, and post-World War II economic conditions. Other major topics include culture change and cultural stability among the Wisconsin Winnebago/Ho-Chunk in 1944 and the status of the berdache in Winnebago/Ho-Chunk society. In addition Radin attempts to show how three marked characteristics of Winnebago/Ho-Chunk civilization – the conservation of old cultural elements, the receptivity to new ideas, and the capacity for making new integrations – interact with one another to create new culture patterns in the Winnebago/Ho-Chunk milieu. Hill, based on ethno-historical research, is a study of the drinking practices of the Winnebago/Ho-Chunk from the early 1860s to the early 1920s, relating these practices to the changing socio-cultural environment. The major focus in this work is on the manner in which the Peyote religion helped control excessive drinking. Richards' paper in this collection focuses on the Winnebago/Ho-Chunk during the late prehistoric/early historic period, with particular emphasis on subsistence. The Astor site in Green Bay, Wisconsin is suggested as a potential link between the prehistoric/historic Winnebago/Ho-Chunk and limited subsistence information from the site is examined in that light
Schlagwörter Winnebago   Fragezeichen
Subject: Ho Chunk Indians
RVK-Notation:
Hauptsprache: Englisch
Land: |||||| |o||||||||
Volltext : http://ehrafWorldCultures.yale.edu/collection?owc=NP12
B3Kat-ID: BV039982947