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  • Human Relations Area Files, Inc  (13)
  • Gifford, Edward Winslow  (9)
Material
Language
Subjects(RVK)
  • 1
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Yokuts Indians ; Yokuts ; Yokuts
    Abstract: The Native American Yokuts of the San Joaquin Valley and the adjacent foothills of the Sierra Nevada in south-central California, traditionally included some forty to fifty subtribes grouped into three divisions; the Northern Valley Yokuts, the Southern Valley Yokuts, and the Foothills Yokuts. This file consists of 23 documents that discuss the Yokuts in the San Joaquin Valley and Sierra foothills of central California, in the United States. Some of these documents include a small section on the archaeology of the area, however most of the documents focus on the time period from Spanish contact to the 1970s (1770s A.D. to 1970s A.D.). Cultural summaries can be found in Latta, Kroeber, Wallace, and Spier. Brief glimpses of Yokuts culture can be found in Gayton who presents a portion of a Spanish Lieutenant's diary from 1819 and Powers who wrote about the Yokuts of the early 1870s. Other topics found include language; shamans, ceremonies, and other aspects of religion; environment; trade; names and naming; ceramics; population estimates; and music and song
    Note: Culture summary: Yokuts - By Gerald F. Reid and Sarah Berry (file evaluation and indexing notes) - 2002 -- - Yokuts and western Mono ethnography: vol. 1, Tulare Lake, Southern Valley, and Central Foothill Yokuts - By A. H. Gayton - 1948 -- - The Yokuts - A. L. Kroeber - 1953 -- - Handbook of Yokuts Indians - by F. F. Latta - 1949 -- - Culture-environment integration - A. H. Gayton - 1946 -- - The Yokuts language of south central California: part III - By A. L. Kroeber - 1907 -- - A Lacustrine economy in California - Ralph L. Beals and Joseph A. Hester, Jr. - 1958 -- - Estudillo among the Yokuts: 1819 - by A. H. Gayton - 1936 -- - The aboriginal population of the San Joaquin Valley, California - by S. F. Cook - 1955 -- - Notes on Yokuts weather shamanism and the rattlesnake ceremony - By Francis A. Riddell - 1955 -- - Tachi Yokuts music - James Hatch - 1958 -- , - Yokuts names - A. L. Kroeber - 1906 -- - Yokuts and Western Mono myths: part 1. general considerations - A. H. Gayton and Stanley S. Newman - 1940 -- - Yokuts trade networks and native culture change in central and eastern California - Brooke S. Arkush - 1993 -- - Yokuts: introduction - Michael Silverstein - 1978 -- - The Yokuts: people of the land - William L. Preston - 1981 -- - Culture-environment integration: external references in Yokuts life - by Anna H. Gayton - 1976 -- - Bibliography - 1978 -- - Southern Valley Yokuts - William J. Wallace - 1978 -- - Northern Valley Yokuts - William J. Wallace - 1978 -- - Foothill Yokuts - Robert F. G. Spier - 1978
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  • 2
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Yuki Indians ; Yuki ; Yuki
    Abstract: The Yuki lived in northern Mendocino County, California and spoke a language, Yukian, that has no known relationship to other languages. The Yuki include the Coast Yuki, Yuki, and Huchnom. In the 1990s there were about 100 Yukis around Round Valley, California. The Yuki used to practice hunting, gathering, and fishing and the Round Valley supported a relatively dense population on the rich wild resources. However, the Round Valley land was much desired by European-American settlers and the Yuki were displaced and killed to free up the land. There are eighteen documents in this collection. A general introduction to the three main Yuki groups can be found in Kroeber's articles from the Handbook of Californian Indians
    Note: Culture summary: Yuki - Ian Skoggard - 2003 -- - Some plants used by the Yuki Indians of Round Valley, northern California - by L.S.M. Curtin ; historical review and photos by Margaret C. Irwin - 1957 -- - A summary of Yuki culture - by George M. Foster - 1944 -- - The Coast Yuki - by E. W. Gifford - 1965 -- - Coast Yuki myths - By E. W. Gifford - 1937 -- - War stories from two enemy tribes - By Walter Goldschmidt, George Foster, and Frank Essene - 1939 -- - The Yuki: ethnic geography - By A. L. Kroeber - 1972 -- - The Yuki: culture - By A. L. Kroeber - 1972 -- - The Yuki: religion - By A. L. Kroeber - 1972 -- - The Huchnom and Coast Yuki - By A. L. Kroeber - 1972 -- - Yuki myths - by A. L. Kroeber - 1932 -- - The changing role of the chief on a California Indian Reservation - Virginia P. Miller - 1989 -- - Ukomno'm: the Yuki Indians of northern California - by Virginia P. Miller - 1979 -- , - Whatever happened to the Yuki? - Virginia P. Miller - 1975 -- - Yuki, Huchnom, and Coast Yuki - Virginia P. Miller - 1978 -- - The Yú-ki - Stephen Powers - 1976 -- - An archaeological survey of the Yuki area - by A. E. Treganza, C. E. Smith and W. D. Weymouth - 1950 -- - Tá-tu - Stephen Powers - 1976 -- - Bibliography - 1978
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  • 3
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Pomo Indians ; Pomo ; Pomo
    Abstract: Pomo and Pomoan refer to a family of seven California Indian languages and to their speakers, often differentiated by Southwestern Pomo (Kashaya), Southern Pomo, Central Pomo, Northern Pomo, Northeastern Pomo (Salt Pomo), Eastern Pomo, and Southeastern Pomo. This file of 30 documents covers the late nineteenth century to approximately 1976
    Note: Culture summary: Pomo - Robert L. Oswalt and John Beierle (file evaluation and indexing notes) - 2001 -- - Pomo Indians - A. L. Kroeber - 1953 -- - Notes on Pomo ethnogeography - Omer C. Stewart - 1943 -- - Pomo folkways - by Edwin M. Loeb ... - 1926 -- - Ceremonies of the Pomo Indians - S. A. Barrett - 1917 -- - Pomo bear doctors - by S. A. Barrett - 1917 -- - Pomo Indian basketry - by S. A. Barrett - 1908 -- - Clear Lake Pomo society - by Edward Winslow Gifford ... - 1926 -- - The ethno-geography of the Pomo and neighboring Indians - S. A. Barrett - 1908 -- - The mechanics of kinship - B. W. Aginsky - 1935 -- - Population control in the Shanel (Pomo) Tribe - Burt W. Aginsky - 1939 -- - Psychopathic trends in culture - Burt W. Aginsky - 1939 -- - The socio-psychological significance of death among the Pomo Indians - B. W. Aginsky - 1940 -- - The Pomo - Stephen Powers - 1877 -- - Pomo buildings - S. A. Barrett - 1916 -- , - Pomo doctors and poisoners - L. S. Freedland - 1923 -- - Pomo lands on Clear Lake - Edward W. Gifford - 1923 -- - Pomo - by A. L. Kroeber - 1911 -- - The army worm: a food of the Pomo Indians - Samuel A. Barrett - 1936 -- - Pomo - Alfred L. Kroeber - 1917 -- - Pomo - by Edward Winslow Gifford - 1922 -- - Material aspects of Pomo culture - S.A. Barrett - 1952 -- - Culture contact and acculturation of the southwestern Pomo - by Mary Jean Kennedy - 1955 -- - Pomo geography - by Fred B. Kniffen - 1939 -- - The Pomo kin group and the political unit in aboriginal California - P. H. Kunkel - 1974 -- - Ethnographic and historical sketch of the Eastern Pomo and their neighbors, the Southeastern Pomo - Sally McLendon - 1977 -- - Identity crises: changes in lifestyle of the Manchester Band of the Pomo Indians - by Dorothea J. Theodoratus - 1971 -- - Pomo: introduction - Sally McLendon and Robert L. Oswalt - 1978 -- - Western Pomo and Northeastern Pomo - Lowell John Bean and Dorothea Theodoratus - 1978 -- , - Eastern Pomo and Southeastern Pomo - Sally McLendon and Michael J. Lowy - 1978 -- - Bibliography - 1978
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  • 4
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Yuki Indians
    Abstract: ^^ - Whatever happened to the Yuki? - Virginia P. Miller - 1975 -- - Yuki, Huchnom, and Coast Yuki - Virginia P. Miller - 1978 -- - The Yú-ki - Stephen Powers - 1976 -- - An archaeological survey of the Yuki area - by A. E. Treganza, C. E. Smith and W. D. Weymouth - 1950 -- - Tá-tu - Stephen Powers - 1976 -- - Bibliography - 1978
    Abstract: The Yuki lived in northern Mendocino County, California and spoke a language, Yukian, that has no known relationship to other languages. The Yuki include the Coast Yuki, Yuki, and Huchnom. In the 1990s there were about 100 Yukis around Round Valley, California. The Yuki used to practice hunting, gathering, and fishing and the Round Valley supported a relatively dense population on the rich wild resources. However, the Round Valley land was much desired by European-American settlers and the Yuki were displaced and killed to free up the land. There are eighteen documents in this collection. A general introduction to the three main Yuki groups can be found in Kroeber's articles from the Handbook of Californian Indians
    Description / Table of Contents: Yuki - Ian Skoggard - 2003 -- - Some plants used by the Yuki Indians of Round Valley, northern California - by L.S.M. Curtin ; historical review and photos by Margaret C. Irwin - 1957 -- - A summary of Yuki culture - by George M. Foster - 1944 -- - The Coast Yuki - by E. W. Gifford - 1965 -- - Coast Yuki myths - By E. W. Gifford - 1937 -- - War stories from two enemy tribes - By Walter Goldschmidt, George Foster, and Frank Essene - 1939 -- - The Yuki: ethnic geography - By A. L. Kroeber - 1972 -- - The Yuki: culture - By A. L. Kroeber - 1972 -- - The Yuki: religion - By A. L. Kroeber - 1972 -- - The Huchnom and Coast Yuki - By A. L. Kroeber - 1972 -- - Yuki myths - by A. L. Kroeber - 1932 -- - The changing role of the chief on a California Indian Reservation - Virginia P. Miller - 1989 -- - Ukomno'm: the Yuki Indians of northern California - by Virginia P. Miller - 1979 --^
    URL: Volltext  (Deutschlandweit zugänglich)
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  • 5
    Language: English
    Pages: VI, 210 S. , Ill., graph. Darst., Kt. , 28 cm
    Series Statement: Anthropological records 21,1
    DDC: 970.66392
    Keywords: Kalifornien Nordwest ; Indianer ; Fischfang
    Note: Literaturverz. S. 135 - 141
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  • 6
    Language: English
    Pages: IV, 155 S. , Ill., graph. Darst., Notenbeisp. , 28 cm
    Series Statement: Anthropological records 13,1
    Keywords: Kalifornien Nordwest ; Kult ; Welt
    Note: Literaturverz. S. 140
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  • 7
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Yuki Indians
    Abstract: ^^ - Whatever happened to the Yuki? - Virginia P. Miller - 1975 -- - Yuki, Huchnom, and Coast Yuki - Virginia P. Miller - 1978 -- - The Yú-ki - Stephen Powers - 1976 -- - An archaeological survey of the Yuki area - by A. E. Treganza, C. E. Smith and W. D. Weymouth - 1950 -- - Tá-tu - Stephen Powers - 1976 -- - Bibliography - 1978
    Abstract: The Yuki lived in northern Mendocino County, California and spoke a language, Yukian, that has no known relationship to other languages. The Yuki include the Coast Yuki, Yuki, and Huchnom. In the 1990s there were about 100 Yukis around Round Valley, California. The Yuki used to practice hunting, gathering, and fishing and the Round Valley supported a relatively dense population on the rich wild resources. However, the Round Valley land was much desired by European-American settlers and the Yuki were displaced and killed to free up the land. There are eighteen documents in this collection. A general introduction to the three main Yuki groups can be found in Kroeber's articles from the Handbook of Californian Indians
    Description / Table of Contents: Yuki - Ian Skoggard - 2003 -- - Some plants used by the Yuki Indians of Round Valley, northern California - by L.S.M. Curtin ; historical review and photos by Margaret C. Irwin - 1957 -- - A summary of Yuki culture - by George M. Foster - 1944 -- - The Coast Yuki - by E. W. Gifford - 1965 -- - Coast Yuki myths - By E. W. Gifford - 1937 -- - War stories from two enemy tribes - By Walter Goldschmidt, George Foster, and Frank Essene - 1939 -- - The Yuki: ethnic geography - By A. L. Kroeber - 1972 -- - The Yuki: culture - By A. L. Kroeber - 1972 -- - The Yuki: religion - By A. L. Kroeber - 1972 -- - The Huchnom and Coast Yuki - By A. L. Kroeber - 1972 -- - Yuki myths - by A. L. Kroeber - 1932 -- - The changing role of the chief on a California Indian Reservation - Virginia P. Miller - 1989 -- - Ukomno'm: the Yuki Indians of northern California - by Virginia P. Miller - 1979 --^
    URL: Volltext  (Deutschlandweit zugänglich)
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  • 8
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Pomo Indians ; Pomo Indians ; Pomo
    Abstract: Pomo and Pomoan refer to a family of seven California Indian languages and to their speakers, often differentiated by Southwestern Pomo (Kashaya), Southern Pomo, Central Pomo, Northern Pomo, Northeastern Pomo (Salt Pomo), Eastern Pomo, and Southeastern Pomo. This file of 30 documents covers the late nineteenth century to approximately 1976
    Abstract: ^^ - Eastern Pomo and Southeastern Pomo - Sally McLendon and Michael J. Lowy - 1978 -- - Bibliography - 1978
    Description / Table of Contents: Pomo - Robert L. Oswalt and John Beierle (file evaluation and indexing notes) - 2001 -- - Pomo Indians - A. L. Kroeber - 1953 -- - Notes on Pomo ethnogeography - Omer C. Stewart - 1943 -- - Pomo folkways - by Edwin M. Loeb ... - 1926 -- - Ceremonies of the Pomo Indians - S. A. Barrett - 1917 -- - Pomo bear doctors - by S. A. Barrett - 1917 -- - Pomo Indian basketry - by S. A. Barrett - 1908 -- - Clear Lake Pomo society - by Edward Winslow Gifford ... - 1926 -- - The ethno-geography of the Pomo and neighboring Indians - S. A. Barrett - 1908 -- - The mechanics of kinship - B. W. Aginsky - 1935 -- - Population control in the Shanel (Pomo) Tribe - Burt W. Aginsky - 1939 -- - Psychopathic trends in culture - Burt W. Aginsky - 1939 -- - The socio-psychological significance of death among the Pomo Indians - B. W. Aginsky - 1940 -- - The Pomo - Stephen Powers - 1877 -- - Pomo buildings - S. A. Barrett - 1916 --^
    Description / Table of Contents: a food of the Pomo Indians - Samuel A. Barrett - 1936 -- - Pomo - Alfred L. Kroeber - 1917 -- - Pomo - by Edward Winslow Gifford - 1922 -- - Material aspects of Pomo culture - S.A. Barrett - 1952 -- - Culture contact and acculturation of the southwestern Pomo - by Mary Jean Kennedy - 1955 -- - Pomo geography - by Fred B. Kniffen - 1939 -- - The Pomo kin group and the political unit in aboriginal California - P. H. Kunkel - 1974 -- - Ethnographic and historical sketch of the Eastern Pomo and their neighbors, the Southeastern Pomo - Sally McLendon - 1977 -- - Identity crises: changes in lifestyle of the Manchester Band of the Pomo Indians - by Dorothea J. Theodoratus - 1971 -- - Pomo: introduction - Sally McLendon and Robert L. Oswalt - 1978 -- - Western Pomo and Northeastern Pomo - Lowell John Bean and Dorothea Theodoratus - 1978 --^
    URL: Volltext  (Deutschlandweit zugänglich)
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  • 9
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Yokuts Indians
    Abstract: The Native American Yokuts of the San Joaquin Valley and the adjacent foothills of the Sierra Nevada in south-central California, traditionally included some forty to fifty subtribes grouped into three divisions; the Northern Valley Yokuts, the Southern Valley Yokuts, and the Foothills Yokuts. This file consists of 23 documents that discuss the Yokuts in the San Joaquin Valley and Sierra foothills of central California, in the United States. Some of these documents include a small section on the archaeology of the area, however most of the documents focus on the time period from Spanish contact to the 1970s (1770s A.D. to 1970s A.D.). Cultural summaries can be found in Latta, Kroeber, Wallace, and Spier. Brief glimpses of Yokuts culture can be found in Gayton who presents a portion of a Spanish Lieutenant's diary from 1819 and Powers who wrote about the Yokuts of the early 1870s. Other topics found include language; shamans, ceremonies, and other aspects of religion; environment; trade; names and naming; ceramics; population estimates; and music and song
    Description / Table of Contents: Yokuts - By Gerald F. Reid and Sarah Berry (file evaluation and indexing notes) - 2002 -- - Yokuts and western Mono ethnography: vol. 1, Tulare Lake, Southern Valley, and Central Foothill Yokuts - By A. H. Gayton - 1948 -- - The Yokuts - A. L. Kroeber - 1953 -- - Handbook of Yokuts Indians - by F. F. Latta - 1949 -- - Culture-environment integration - A. H. Gayton - 1946 -- - The Yokuts language of south central California: part III - By A. L. Kroeber - 1907 -- - A Lacustrine economy in California - Ralph L. Beals and Joseph A. Hester, Jr. - 1958 -- - Estudillo among the Yokuts: 1819 - by A. H. Gayton - 1936 -- - The aboriginal population of the San Joaquin Valley, California - by S. F. Cook - 1955 -- - Notes on Yokuts weather shamanism and the rattlesnake ceremony - By Francis A. Riddell - 1955 -- - Tachi Yokuts music - James Hatch - 1958 --^
    Description / Table of Contents: part 1. general considerations - A. H. Gayton and Stanley S. Newman - 1940 -- - Yokuts trade networks and native culture change in central and eastern California - Brooke S. Arkush - 1993 -- - Yokuts: introduction - Michael Silverstein - 1978 -- - The Yokuts: people of the land - William L. Preston - 1981 -- - Culture-environment integration: external references in Yokuts life - by Anna H. Gayton - 1976 -- - Bibliography - 1978 -- - Southern Valley Yokuts - William J. Wallace - 1978 -- - Northern Valley Yokuts - William J. Wallace - 1978 -- - Foothill Yokuts - Robert F. G. Spier - 1978
    URL: Volltext  (Deutschlandweit zugänglich)
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  • 10
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Clans ; Creation--Mythology ; Indians of North America--Social life and customs ; Wyaco, Virgil, 1926- ; Zuni Indians ; Zuni Indians--Biography ; Zuni Indians--Legal status, laws, etc ; Zuni Indians--Politics and government ; Zuni mythology
    Abstract: This collection about the Zuni, a pueblo Indian group located in the southwestern United States, consists of 33 documents. The collection is oriented toward traditional Zuni ethnography represented by the classic works of Stevenson, Cushing, Kroeber, Parsons, Bunzel, and Woodbury. The social and political organization of the Zuni are covered in Ladd, Eggan, Eggan and Pandey, and Pandey. Kinship is discussed in Kroeber, Schneider, and Ladd; and agriculture is covered by Cushing, Bohrer, and Damp. Acculturation and culture change are topics of focus in McFeat, Leighton, Mills, and Eggan and Pandey. Other ethnographic subjects covered in this collection are kachinas, family and household, and ceramics. Wyaco wrote an autobiographical account of growing up in the Zuni society, and Pandey critiques various anthropologists' work with the Zuni over the years. The Zuni, who call themselves "A shiwi," are primarily concentrated in the single village or pueblo of Zuni situated on a reservation in west-central New Mexico
    Description / Table of Contents: their mythology, esoteric fraternities, and ceremonies - by Matilda Coxe Stevenson - 1904 -- - A Zuni life: a Pueblo Indian in two worlds - Virgil Wyaco ; transcribed and edited by J.A. Jones ; historical sketch by Carroll L. Riley - 1998 -- - Bibliography - Alfonso Ortiz, volume editor - 1979 -- - Outlines of Zuñi creation myths - By Frank Hamilton Cushing - 1896 -- - Zuni agriculture - By Vorsila L. Bohrer, With sections by Lawrence Kaplan and Thomas W. Whitaker - 1960 -- - People of the middle place: a study of the Zuni Indians - by Dorothea C. Leighton and John Adair - [1963] -- - Zuni law: a field of values - by Watson Smith and John M. Roberts. With an appendix by Stanley Newman - 1954 --^
    Description / Table of Contents: lessons for repatriation from Zuni Pueblo and the Smithsonian Institution - by William L. Merrill, Edmund J. Ladd, and T. J. Ferguson - 1993 -- - Acts of resistance: Zuni ceramics, social identity, and the Pueblo Revolt - Barbara J. Mills - 2002 -- - Anthropologists at Zuni - Triloki Nath Pandey - 1972 -- - Images of power in a Southwestern pueblo - Triloki Nath Pandey - 1977 -- - Zuni history, 1850-1970 - Fred Eggan and T. N. Pandey - 1979 -- - Zuni sacred theater - by Barbara Tedlock - 1983 -- - The witches were saved: a Zuni origin story - Dennis Tedlock - 1988 --^
    Description / Table of Contents: a revisionist cultural model of Zuni social organization - Linda K. Watts - 1997 -- - Zuni prehistory and history to 1850 - Richard B. Woodbury - 1979
    URL: Volltext  (Deutschlandweit zugänglich)
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