Traditional Festivals: A Multicultural Encyclopedia, Volume 2This illustrated reference work covers a wide range of festivals that have sacred origins and are or have been part of a folk tradition, a world religion, or a major civilization. Traditional Festivals: A Multicultural Encyclopedia travels around the world and across the centuries to uncover an often unexpected richness of meaning in some of the major sacred festivals of the world's religions, the hallowed calendars of ancient civilizations, and the seasonal celebrations of tribal cultures. From Akitu to Yom Kippur, its 150+ entries look at the content and context of these festivals from a number of perspectives (including those relating to theology, anthropology, folklore, and social theory), tracing their historical development and variations across cultures. Readers will get a vivid sense of what each festival means to the people celebrating it; how each captures its culture's beliefs, hopes and fears, founding myths, and redemptive visions; and how each expresses the universal need of humans to connect their lives to a timeless spiritual dimension. |
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Page 370
It also Dances and Ghost Dances with “ picnics ” and functioned as a repository
of elements of vari “ fairs . ” Yet by the 1920s , the term , first spread in ous dances
drawn from other organizations . By this sense through the popular press at the ...
It also Dances and Ghost Dances with “ picnics ” and functioned as a repository
of elements of vari “ fairs . ” Yet by the 1920s , the term , first spread in ous dances
drawn from other organizations . By this sense through the popular press at the ...
Page 371
Dance and large drum played by male singers seated on the ground around it .
By the 1960s , women's versions of the Traditional Dance and Fancy Dance had
become accepted , aside from their own Jingle Dance in the North ( of Great ...
Dance and large drum played by male singers seated on the ground around it .
By the 1960s , women's versions of the Traditional Dance and Fancy Dance had
become accepted , aside from their own Jingle Dance in the North ( of Great ...
Page 451
Most of them have to do with a temporary lodge built to hold sacred dances , so
the Arikara call it House of Whistling ( since dancers pray by blowing through
eagle bone whistles ) , while the Ute , Shoshone , Plains Cree , and Plains
Ojibwa ...
Most of them have to do with a temporary lodge built to hold sacred dances , so
the Arikara call it House of Whistling ( since dancers pray by blowing through
eagle bone whistles ) , while the Ute , Shoshone , Plains Cree , and Plains
Ojibwa ...
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Traditional Festivals: A Multicultural Encyclopedia, Volume 1 Christian Roy No preview available - 2005 |
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