Oratory in Native North America

From: Western Folklore | Date: October 1, 2003| Author: Allred, David A | Copyright information

Oratory in Native North America. By William M. Clements. (Tucson: University of Arizona Press, 2002. Pp. xvii + 187, preface, acknowledgments, appendix, notes, bibliography, index. $40.00 cloth)

In Oratory in Native North America, William M. Clements begins the daunting task of reconstructing the performance dynamics of pretwentieth-ccntury Native American oratory. Given that the available sources are textual rather than visual or aural and are often superficial, ethnocentric, or hosti...

Related newspaper, magazine, and journal articles from HighBeam Research

A Native American Theology. (Shorter Notices).(Brief Article)
Theological Studies ; A NATIVE AMERICAN THEOLOGY. By Clara Sue Kidwell, Homer Noley, and George E. Tinker. Maryknoll, N.Y.: Orbis, 2001. Pp. xii + 204. $21. The three authors of this comprehensive and provocative work, each a Native American scholar engaged in fields ranging from anthropology to theology, present what
Native American Verbal Art: Texts and Contexts.(Review)
Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute ; CLEMENTS, WILLIAM M. x, 252 pp., bibliogr. Tucson: Univ. of Arizona Press, 1996. $45.00 (cloth), $19.95 (paper) In the United States, the discipline of folklore has grown out of a confluence of literary and anthropological interests. While the field is under attack in the cost-cutting American
Bishops Release Report on Native American Catholics
U.S. Newswire ; WASHINGTON, June 19 /U.S. Newswire/ -- Nearly half-a-million Native Americans are Catholic, according to a report released today, Native American Catholics at the Millennium, by the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops' (USCCB) Ad Hoc Committee on Native American Catholics. "This report is
Contemplating Native American Art.
Art Business News ; In spite of stringent legal considerations, Native American art remains a top seller Last June, after toiling for 40 years as an advertising executive, Joe Zeller retired. Five months later, he opened River Trading Post in East Dundee, Ill., sparked by his intense appreciation of Native American
"Native American DNA Tests": What are the Risks to Tribes? Study cites further undermining of tribal sovereignty
The Native Voice ; Does DNA make an Indian? In Red Earth, White Lies (Scribner, 1995), Vine Deloria Jr. muses about the dramatic rise in people self-identifying as Native American since the political upheavals of the 1960s. Deloria asks: "Can whites really become Indians? A good many people seriously want to know."
The Native American identity phenomenon.(women inmates who identify selves as Native American)(Statistical Data Included)
Corrections Compendium ; The past decade has seen a rise in the number of inmates requesting accommodations for Native American religious services (Fordham, 1993; Grobsmith, 1994, 1996; Holscher, 1992; Ross, 1998). This may suggest that-there has been an increase in the number of Native Americans, Alaskan Natives and
NATIVE AMERICAN SHOPS GROWING
The Record (Bergen County, NJ) ; ... GROWING -- CUSTOM-MADE `I MAKE AN EFFORT TO EDUCATE PEOPLE' By JOHN A. GAVIN, Staff Writer Date: 02-23-1995, Thursday Section: NEWS Edition: All Bergen Editions -- 3 Star, 2 Star B, 1 Star Late, 1 Star Early At first glance, Sunrise Creations in Westwood looks ...
Re-creating Native American literary history: the past looks towards the future.
College Literature ; Native American Studies has yet to receive the attention or undergo the controversy that other minority literatures receive. Eva Kornfield highlights this lack of attention particularly from scholars working in poststructuralist and postcolonialist methods which she argues focus predominantly on
The Native American niche: Specialized banks address housing, infrastructure needs
Bank News ; Many of the raw numbers surrounding the Native American population which consists of around 4.2 million people and 562 tribes - are disheartening. As much as half the population is unemployed and a full one-third lives below the poverty line. A shortage of 220,000 housing units exists and only
Native American studies at COD continue to grow.(Neighbor)
Daily Herald (Arlington Heights, IL) ; Byline: Elisabeth Mistretta Daily Herald Staff Writer Jim Frank always has been fascinated with Native American culture, but the College of DuPage professor never thought his passion would be contagious. After Frank invited a Native American guest speaker to COD in 1991, students at the Glen Ellyn