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Native North American Peoples - Religion, Native North American Peoples - General & Miscellaneous, Folklore - General & Miscellaneous, Native North American Peoples - Folklore
Foklore of the Winnebago Tribe by David Lee Smith β€” book cover

Foklore of the Winnebago Tribe

by David Lee Smith, Robert J. Conley
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Overview

The oral tradition of the Winnebago, or Ho-Chunk, people ranges from creation myths to Trickster stories and histories of the tribe. It is particularly strong in animal tales, as storyteller and tribal historian David Lee Smith vividly demonstrates in Folklore of the Winnebago Tribe, a collection drawn from the Smithsonian Institution and other sources, including the work of contemporaries. Smith himself contributes fourteen tales.

In the book we meet relatively recent characters such as Ho-poe-kaw (Glory-of-the-Morning), the famed and formidable woman chief who battled many other tribes as well as whites, threw historic alliances into disarray, and - although she often discomfited the French - married a Frenchman. We also encounter traditional figures, Trickster, talking dogs, Eagle, Owl, and Rabbit, moving through the chronicles of these Woodland people who stemmed from the Great Lakes region. The tales incorporate both the visionary and the down-to-earth. Some are deeply moving. Some, reflecting earlier items, are full of violence.

About the Author, David Lee Smith

David Lee Smith is Director of Indian Studies at Little Priest Tribal College, Winnebago, Nebraska, and Tribal Historian of the Winnebago Tribal of Nebraska.

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Book Details

Published
November 1, 1997
Publisher
University of Oklahoma Press
Pages
180
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780806129761

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