Symposium on local diversity in Iroquois culture, edited by William N. Fenton. [Bureau of American Ethnology Bulletin 149.]. [electronic resource]

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Online Access: Online Access
Corporate Authors: United States. Congress. House, Smithsonian Institution. Bureau of American Ethnology
Other Authors: Deardorff, Merle H., Fenton, William N., Kurath, Gertrude Prokosch, Randle, Martha Champion, Snyderman, George S., Wallace, Anthony F.C. (Francis Clarke)
Format: Government Document Electronic eBook
Language:English
Published: Washington, DC, 1951.
Series:United States congressional serial set ; serial set no. 11479.
House document (United States. Congress. House) ; 81st Congress, no. 703.
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Description
Item Description:Table of contents, p. V.
List of illustrations, p. V.
No. 1. Introduction: The concept of locality and the program of Iroquois research, by William N. Fenton, p. 1.
No. 2. Concepts of land ownership among the Iroquois and their neighbors, by George S. Snyderman, p. 13.
No. 3. Locality as a basic factor in the development of Iroquois social structure, by William N. Fenton, p. 35.
No. 4. Some psychological determinants of culture change in an Iroquoian community, by Anthony F.C. Wallace, p. 55.
No. 5. The religion of Handsome Lake: Its origin and development, by Merle H. Deardorff, p. 77.
No. 6. Local diversity in Iroquois music and dance, by Gertrude P. Kurath, p. 109.
No. 7. The feast of the dead, or ghost dance at Six Nations Reserve, Canada, by William N. Fenton and Gertrude P. Kurath, p. 139.
No. 8. Iroquois women, then and now, by Martha Champion Randle, p. 167.
Index, p. 181.
Physical Description:192 p. : illustrations, tables.
Reproduction Note:Electronic reproduction.
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