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Native American Oral Traditions Collaboration And Interpretation Evers Larry

  • SKU: BELL-6520712
Native American Oral Traditions Collaboration And Interpretation Evers Larry
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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Native American Oral Traditions Collaboration And Interpretation Evers Larry instant download after payment.

Publisher: Utah State University Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 2.85 MB
Pages: 242
Author: Evers Larry, Toelken Barre
ISBN: 9780874214161, 9780874214154, 0874214165, 0874214157
Language: English
Year: 2001

Product desciption

Native American Oral Traditions Collaboration And Interpretation Evers Larry by Evers Larry, Toelken Barre 9780874214161, 9780874214154, 0874214165, 0874214157 instant download after payment.

Utah State University Press, 2001. — 256 p.This collection provides a benchmark that helps secure the position of collaboration between Native American and non-Native American scholars in the forefront of study of Native oral traditions. Seven sets of intercultural authors present Native American oral texts with commentary, exploring dimensions of perspective, discovery, and meaning that emerge through collaborative translation and interpretation. The texts studied all come from the American West but include a rich variety of material, since their tribal sources range from the Yupik in the Arctic to the Yaqui in the Sonoran Desert.
This presentation of jointly authored work is timely: it addresses increasing interest in, calls for, and movement toward reflexivity in the relationships between scholars and the Native communities they study, and it responds to the renewed commitment in those communities to asserting more control over representations of their traditions. Although Native and academic communities have long tried to work together in the study of culture and literature, the relationship has been awkward and imbalanced toward the academics. In many cases, the contributions of Native assistants, informants, translators, and field workers to the work of professional ethnographers has been inadequately credited, ignored, or only recently uncovered. Native Americans usually have not participated in planning and writing such projects. Native American Oral Traditions provides models for overcoming such obstacles to interpreting and understanding Native oral literature in relation to the communities and cultures from which it comes.

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