About This Book
A collection of Arikara myths and oral narratives gathers creation accounts, emergence variants, and a long series of transformer legends that explain origins of people, animals, dances, and sacred objects. Stories recount land brought into being by animal and culture figures, people fashioned by spiders, visits of a corn spirit, escapes from buffalo, marriages between humans and celestial or animal beings, and the deeds of trickster figures alongside a recurrent culture-hero poor boy. Many tales also serve as etiologies for ceremonies, dances, medicine societies, and ritual powers, often linking human life with animal and cosmic forces.
About the Author
You May Also Like
6 picks
Angola and the River Congo, vol. 2
by Joachim John Monteiro
Homeri Carmina et Cycli Epici Reliquiæ. Pars Tertia: Hymni
by Homer
Village Life in China: A Study in Sociology
by Arthur H. Smith
An Historical Relation of the Island Ceylon in the East Indies / Together with an Account of the Detaining in Captivity the Author and Divers other Englishmen Now Living There, and of the Author's Miraculous Escape
by Robert Knox
Primitive Athens as described by Thucydides
by Jane Ellen Harrison
Kantele Taikka Suomen Kansan sekä Wanhoja että Nykyisempiä Runoja ja Lauluja, II
by Elias Lönnrot