Papers of the ... Algonquian Conference, Volume 28Carleton University, 1997 - Algonquian Indians |
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Page 48
... Ojibwa did not really consider people , regardless of their racial background , as " Native " unless they conformed to Ojibwa customs and mores . The Métis in particular were caught " in between " these Ojibwa and a very small emergent ...
... Ojibwa did not really consider people , regardless of their racial background , as " Native " unless they conformed to Ojibwa customs and mores . The Métis in particular were caught " in between " these Ojibwa and a very small emergent ...
Page 49
... Ojibwa communities together , the Métis differed radically both linguistically and occupationally from their Ojibwa neighbours . Most Métis employed the Ojibwa language in the trading arena , but almost all spoke French or English in ...
... Ojibwa communities together , the Métis differed radically both linguistically and occupationally from their Ojibwa neighbours . Most Métis employed the Ojibwa language in the trading arena , but almost all spoke French or English in ...
Page 67
... Ojibwa . For myth - making cannot be considered all one sided : the Ojibwa were , after all , expert myth makers and there is no reason to believe that external viewpoints ever dampened creativity within their own communities . Indeed ...
... Ojibwa . For myth - making cannot be considered all one sided : the Ojibwa were , after all , expert myth makers and there is no reason to believe that external viewpoints ever dampened creativity within their own communities . Indeed ...
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Common terms and phrases
Aboriginal academic agreement Ahenakew Algonquian Conference Algonquian languages American animal Anishnaabe argument-type associated Band Batchewana beaver Beothuk Canada Canadian chief Conne River construction council Cree words cultural dance Dennis discourse discussion dish elder English evidence example experience extrametricality fishing Garden River head-marking language hunting grounds Indian Affairs Indian Agent individual inflected Island First Nation Jarvis John Keating Keating's Lake Huron land language Linguistics living Maliseet Mercredi metaphor Métis Mi'kmaq Miawpukek Micmac myth narrative Naskapi Native Newfoundland nominal predicate non-verbal predication noun Ojibwa ôma Ontario Hydro Ottawa paper person Plains Cree political position Potawatomi Potawatomi language Press racism relation reported rêve Robinson Treaties s/he Saugeen Sault sensory sentencing circles social speakers story suffix surrender sweat lodge syllable tikanagan Toronto totem traditional treaty University verb village Walpole Island wampum belt Wawanosh Wesucechak Wikwemikong William