University of Manitoba Press, 2011. — 223 p. Life Stages and Native Women explores how life stages and responsibilities of Métis, Cree, and Anishinaabe women were integral to the health and well-being of their communities during the mid- 20th century. The book is rich with oral history conducted with fourteen Algonquian elders from the Canadian prairies and Ontario. These...
University of Manitoba Press, 2011. — 223 p. Life Stages and Native Women explores how life stages and responsibilities of Métis, Cree, and Anishinaabe women were integral to the health and well-being of their communities during the mid- 20th century. The book is rich with oral history conducted with fourteen Algonquian elders from the Canadian prairies and Ontario. These...
University of Manitoba Press, 2002. — 274 p.
The Midewiwin is the traditional religious belief system central to the world view of Ojibwa in Canada and the US. It is a highly complex and rich series of sacred teachings and narratives whose preservation enabled the Ojibwa to withstand severe challenges to their entire social fabric throughout the 19th and 20th centuries. It...
McGill-Queen's University Press, 2021. — 176 p. Members of Eli Baxter's generation are the last of the hunting and gathering societies living on Turtle Island. They are also among the last fluent speakers of the Anishinaabay language known as Anishinaabaymowin. Aki-wayn-zih is a story about the land and its spiritual relationship with the Anishinaabayg, from the beginning of...
McGill-Queen's University Press, 2021. — 176 p. Members of Eli Baxter’s generation are the last of the hunting and gathering societies living on Turtle Island. They are also among the last fluent speakers of the Anishinaabay language known as Anishinaabaymowin. Aki-wayn-zih is a story about the land and its spiritual relationship with the Anishinaabayg, from the beginning of...
Univ. Of Minnesota Press, 1992. — 176 p.
Shows and describes Ojibwa daily life, looks at how they have adapted to modern times, and documents continuing traditions and rituals.
University of Nebraska Press, 2018. — 246 p. In Ojibwe Stories from the Upper Berens River Jennifer S. H. Brown presents the dozens of stories and memories that A. Irving Hallowell recorded from Adam (Samuel) Bigmouth, son of Ochiipwamoshiish (Northern Barred Owl), at Little Grand Rapids in the summers of 1938 and 1940. The stories range widely across the lives of four generations...
University of Nebraska Press, 2018. — 246 p. In Ojibwe Stories from the Upper Berens River Jennifer S. H. Brown presents the dozens of stories and memories that A. Irving Hallowell recorded from Adam (Samuel) Bigmouth, son of Ochiipwamoshiish (Northern Barred Owl), at Little Grand Rapids in the summers of 1938 and 1940. The stories range widely across the lives of four generations...
Minnesota Historical Society Press, 1988. — 238 p. Winner of the 1989 Canadian Historical Association Regional History Certificate of Merit. Among Anglo-Canadian fur traders of the early 19th century, George Nelson (1786-1859) stands out for his interest in the life and ways of the Native people he encountered. His letter-journal gives a more detailed portrayal of Algonquian...
University of Manitoba Press, 2016. — 264 p. A Two-Spirit Journey is Ma-Nee Chacaby’s extraordinary account of her life as an Ojibwa-Cree lesbian. From her early, often harrowing memories of life and abuse in a remote Ojibwa community riven by poverty and alcoholism, Chacaby’s story is one of enduring and ultimately overcoming the social, economic, and health legacies of...
Introduction and edition by Colin G. Calloway — Penguin Books, 2012. — 240 p. In this well-researched and deeply felt account, Brenda J. Child, a professor and a member of the Red Lake Ojibwe tribe, gives Native American women their due, detailing the many ways in which they have shaped Native American life. She illuminates the lives of women such as Madeleine Cadotte, who became...
Toronto, ON: University of Toronto Press, 1957. (Reprinted 1973). — 82 p. — (Quetico Foundation Series, No. 1.) A fascinating picture of the industrious life of the Ojibwa before the coming of the white man. The Indians lived in an intimate relationship with the forest and the spiritual forces they found in nature. They were completely dependent on wild game, trees, and plants for...
Minnesota Historical Society Press, 1979. — 204 p. An authoritative source for the tribal history, customs, legends, traditions, art, music, economy, and leisure activities of the Ojibwe people. Frances Densmore was one of the first ethnologists to specialize in the study of American Indian music and culture. Her book, first published in 1929, remains an authoritative source...
Syracuse University Press, 2009. — 240 p. Traditional Anishinaabe (Ojibwe or Chippewa) knowledge, like the knowledge systems of indigenous peoples around the world, has long been collected and presented by researchers who were not a part of the culture they observed. The result is a colonized version of the knowledge, one that is distorted and trivialized by an ill-suited...
Routledge, 2014. — 316 p. — (Vitality of Indigenous Religions Series). Very few studies have examined the worldview of the Anishinaabeg from within the culture itself and none have explored the Anishinaabe worldview in relation to their efforts to maintain their culture in the present-day world. This book fills that gap. Focusing mainly on the Minnesota Anishinaabeg, Lawrence...
Univ. Of Minnesota Pressq 2017. — 217 p. Long before it came to be known as Duluth, the land at the western tip of Lake Superior was known to the Ojibwe as Onigamiising, “the place of the small portage.” There the Ojibwe lived in keeping with the seasons, moving among different camps for hunting and fishing, for cultivating and gathering, for harvesting wild rice and maple...
Washington: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1951. — 204 pp. — (Smithsonian Institution, Bureau of American Ethnology, Bulletin 146). In the 1930s, anthropologist Hilger traveled to nine reservations in Minnesota, Wisconsin, and Michigan to record traditional Chippewa methods of raising children. Her study captures the essential details of Chippewa child life and provides a...
McClelland & Stewart Publishers, 1987. — 192 p.
"Ojibway Ceremonies" provides a unique and fascinating glimpse of Ojibway culture before its disruption by European civilization. It is the story of the Ojibway told through the ceremonies which dominated the most important occasions and stages of their existence. As a young boy grows up, we see him develop through his involvement...
McClelland & Stewart, 2014. — 188 p. The Ojibway Indians were first encountered by the French early in the seventeenth century along the northern shores of Lakes Huron and Superior. By the time Henry Wadsworth Longfellow immortalized them in The Song of Hiawatha, they had dispersed over large areas of Canada and the United States, becoming known as the Chippewas in the latter....
McClelland & Stewart, 2014. — 188 p. Rarely accessible to the general public, Ojibway mythology is as rich in meaning, as broad, as deep, and as innately appealing as the mythologies of Greece, Rome, and other Western civilizations. In Ojibway Heritage Basil Johnston introduces his people's ceremonies, rituals, songs, dances, prayers, arid legends. Conveying the sense of wonder...
University of Minnesota Press, 1993. — 296 p. In this volume, Minnesota Anishinaabe elder Maude Kegg of the Mille Lacs Reservation reminisces about her childhood. Building birchbark and reedmat wigwams, boiling maple sap into syrup and harvesting turtles and wild rice are related in lyric detail. Dictated to John D. Nichols in Kegg’s native language, these compelling stories of...
University of Minnesota Press, 2021. — 200 p. Award-winning author Linda LeGarde Grover interweaves family and Ojibwe history with stories from Misaabekong (the place of the giants) on Lake Superior. Long before there was a Duluth, Minnesota, the massive outcropping that divides the city emerged from the ridge of gabbro rock running along the westward shore of Lake Superior. A...
University of Toronto Press, 2016. — 356 p. "Naamiwan’s Drum" follows the story of a famous Ojibwe medicine man, his gifted grandson, and remarkable water drum. This drum, and forty other artefacts, were given away by a Canadian museum to an American Anishinaabe group that had no family or community connections to the collection. Many years passed before the drum was returned to...
Michigan State University Press, 2016. — 196 p. Francis Pegahmagabow (1889–1952), an Ojibwe of the Caribou clan, was born in Shawanaga First Nation, Ontario. Enlisting at the onset of the First World War, he served overseas as a scout and sniper and became Canada’s most decorated Indigenous soldier. After the war, Pegahmagabow settled in Wasauksing First Nation, Ontario, where he...
Columbia University Press, 2009. — 382 p. — (Religion and American Culture). Like many Native Americans, Ojibwe people esteem the wisdom, authority, and religious significance of old age, but this respect does not come easily or naturally. It is the fruit of hard work, rooted in narrative traditions, moral vision, and ritualized practices of decorum that are comparable in...
Oxford University Press, 2000. — 265 p. In the early nineteenth century, Protestant missionaries evangelical hymns into the Ojibwe language, regarding this music not only as a shared form of worship but also as a tool for rooting out native cultural identity. But for many Minnesota Ojibwe today, the hymns emerged from this history of material and cultural dispossession to...
Edited by Kim Anderson. — University of Manitoba Press, 2019. — 304 p. This book shares the life story of Anishinaabe artist Rene Meshake in stories, poetry, and Anishinaabemowin “word bundles” that serve as a dictionary of Ojibwe poetics. Meshake was born in the railway town of Nakina in northwestern Ontario in 1948, and spent his early years living off-reserve with his...
University of Nebraska Press, 2010. — 328 p. Cary Miller’s "Ogimaag: Anishinaabeg Leadership, 1760–1845" reexamines Ojibwe leadership practices and processes in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. At the end of the nineteenth century, anthropologists who had studied Ojibwe leadership practices developed theories about human societies and cultures derived from...
Minnesota Historical Society Press, 2014. — 248 p. When Ojibwe historian Brenda Child uncovered the Bureau of Indian Affairs file on her grandparents, it was an eye-opening experience. The correspondence, full of incendiary comments on their morals and character, demonstrated the breathtakingly intrusive power of federal agents in the early twentieth century. While telling her...
Edited by Lee Boisvert. — University of Michigan Press, 2006. — 184 p. In the captivating art of the oral tradition - told in the author's own voice - Keewaydinoquay, Stories from My Youth brings to life the childhood years of a Michigan woman of both Native American and white descent. Presented here with the clarity and charm of a master storyteller, the words of...
University of Toronto Press, 2014. — 384 p. Within nineteenth-century Ojibwe/Chippewa medicine societies, and in communities at large, animals are realities and symbols that demonstrate cultural principles of North American Ojibwe nations. Living with Animals presents over 100 images from oral and written sources - including birch bark scrolls, rock art, stories, games, and...
Foreword by Melissa L. Meyer — University of Oklahoma Press, 1996. — 176 p. In reminiscing about his early years on Minnesota’s White Earth Reservation at the turn of the century, John Rogers reveals much about the life and customs of the Chippewas. He tells of food-gathering, fashioning bark canoes and wigwams, curing deerskin, playing games, and participating in sacred rituals....
University of Toronto Press, 1991. — 334 p.
The Ojibwa have lived in Ontario longer than any other ethnic group. Until now, however, their history has never been fully recorded. Peter Schmalz offers a sweeping account of the Ojibwa in which he corrects many long-standing historical errors and fills in numerous gaps in their story. His narrative is based as much on Ojibwa oral...
Introduction by Louise Erdrich — Penguin Classics, 2003. — 308 p. John Tanner's fascinating autobiography tells the story of a man torn between white society and the Native Americans with whom he identified. John Tanner was born on the Kentucky River around 1780. He spent most of his life with the Ojibwa tribe, and disappeared in 1846. Bestselling author Louise Erdrich grew up...
Introduction by Louise Erdrich — Penguin Classics, 2003. — 308 p. John Tanner's fascinating autobiography tells the story of a man torn between white society and the Native Americans with whom he identified. John Tanner was born on the Kentucky River around 1780. He spent most of his life with the Ojibwa tribe, and disappeared in 1846. Bestselling author Louise Erdrich grew up...
Introduction by Louise Erdrich — Penguin Classics, 2003. — 308 p. John Tanner's fascinating autobiography tells the story of a man torn between white society and the Native Americans with whom he identified. John Tanner was born on the Kentucky River around 1780. He spent most of his life with the Ojibwa tribe, and disappeared in 1846. Bestselling author Louise Erdrich grew up...
Minnesota Historical Society Press, 2001. — 282 p. A language carries a people's memories, whether they are recounted as individual reminiscences, as communal history, or as humorous tales. This collection of stories from Anishinaabe elders offers a history of a people at the same time that it seeks to preserve the language of that people. As fluent speakers of Ojibwe grow...
Minnesota Historical Society Press, 2010. — 112 p. A compelling, concise narrative that traces the history of the Ojibwe people in Minnesota, exploring cultural practices, challenges presented by more recent settlers, and modern-day discussions of sovereignty and identity. With insight and candor, noted Ojibwe scholar Anton Treuer traces thousands of years of the complicated...
St. Paul, MN: Borealis Books, 2010. — xix, 295 p. : ill., maps. On June 27, 1868, Hole in the Day (Bagonegiizhig) the Younger left Crow Wing, Minnesota, for Washington, DC, to fight the planned removal of the Mississippi Ojibwe to a reservation at White Earth. Several miles from his home, the self-styled leader of all the Ojibwe was stopped by at least twelve Ojibwe men and...
Minnesota Historical Society Press, 2021. — 208 p. The traditional practices of one Ojibwe family, carried out through the seasons of the year and across the seasons of life, demonstrating the enduring power of culture and identity. Today's Ojibwe people have maintained a dazzling array of deep, beautiful, adaptive ways of connecting to the spiritual, natural, and human beings...
American Philosophical Society, 1983. — 244 p. The study describes and analyzes traditional Ojibwa religion and the changes it has undergone through the last three centuries, emphasizing the influence of Christian missions to the Ojibwas in effecting religious change, and examining the concomitant changes in Ojibwa culture and environment through the historical period. Christopher...
University of Minnesota Press, 1984. — 184 р. — ISBN10: 0816613060; ISBN13: 978-0816613069. Ranging in time and space from Madeline Island and the reservations of northern Minnesota to the urban reservation of Minneapolis-St. Paul, Vizenor recounts the experiences of the Chippewa and their encounters with the white people who named them.
2nd Edition. — Minnesota Historical Society Press, 2009. — 448 p. — (Edited by Theresa M. Schenck). William W. Warren's "History of the Ojibway People" has long been recognized as a classic source on Ojibwe history and culture. Warren, the son of an Ojibwe woman, wrote his history in the hope of saving traditional stories for posterity even as he presented to the American...
2nd Edition. — Minnesota Historical Society Press, 2009. — 448 p. — (Edited by Theresa M. Schenck). William W. Warren's "History of the Ojibway People" has long been recognized as a classic source on Ojibwe history and culture. Warren, the son of an Ojibwe woman, wrote his history in the hope of saving traditional stories for posterity even as he presented to the American...
Edited by Wendy Makoons Geniusz and Brendan Fairbanks. — University Of Minnesota Press, 2015. — 112 p. In the first ninety-five years of her life, Dorothy Dora Whipple has seen a lot of history, and in this book that history, along with the endangered Ojibwe language, sees new life. A bilingual record of Dorothy’s stories, ranging from personal history to cultural teachings,...
Arbeiter Ring Publishing, 2018. — 168 p. In this deeply engaging oral history, Doug Williams, Anishinaabe elder, teacher and mentor to Leanne Betasamosake Simpson, recounts the history of the Michi Saagiig Nisnaabeg, tracing through personal and historical events, and presenting what manifests as a crucial historical document that confronts entrenched institutional narratives of...
Arbeiter Ring Publishing, 2018. — 168 p. In this deeply engaging oral history, Doug Williams, Anishinaabe elder, teacher and mentor to Leanne Betasamosake Simpson, recounts the history of the Michi Saagiig Nisnaabeg, tracing through personal and historical events, and presenting what manifests as a crucial historical document that confronts entrenched institutional narratives of...
Выходные данные неизвестны. Перевод weshki (сокращенный). Мать Пола Баффало, оджибвейская шаманка, незадолго до своей смерти сказала Полу, своему старшему сыну, что ей приснился сон, открывший, как однажды придет какой-то человек, чтобы написать о традиционном индейском образе жизни. Она сказала Полу, что тогда он должен будет рассказать то, чему она учила его: "Ты старший, я...
Пер. с англ. Ю.Я.Ретеюма, ред. и предисловие Ю.П.Аверкиевой. — М.: Изд-во Иностранной литературы, 1963. — 360 с. Рассказ о похищении и приключениях Джона Теннера (переводчика на службе США в Со-Сент-Мари) в течение тридцатилетнего пребывания среди индейцев в глубине Северной Америки. Книга Джона Теннера "Тридцать лет среди индейцев" вышла в Нью-Йорке в 1830 г. и была переведена...
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