Papers of the ... Algonquian Conference, Volume 28Carleton University, 1997 - Algonquian Indians |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 57
Page 98
We may recall that the culture hero / trickster Wisahketchak was always walking when things happened to him ( producing the present state of the world , and the stories whereby Cree persons learn about the world ) .
We may recall that the culture hero / trickster Wisahketchak was always walking when things happened to him ( producing the present state of the world , and the stories whereby Cree persons learn about the world ) .
Page 151
... which tends to name things rather than describing them as a process , as the Algonquian languages do displays a preference for thinking of things as one thing OR another rather than as one thing AND another , which results in a ...
... which tends to name things rather than describing them as a process , as the Algonquian languages do displays a preference for thinking of things as one thing OR another rather than as one thing AND another , which results in a ...
Page 152
Similarly , loons and whales are one thing and another — fellow persons and fellow animals and fellow singers — and as ... In his discussion of metaphor , Haskell ( 1987 : 263 ) asserts that whether two things are considered similar ...
Similarly , loons and whales are one thing and another — fellow persons and fellow animals and fellow singers — and as ... In his discussion of metaphor , Haskell ( 1987 : 263 ) asserts that whether two things are considered similar ...
What people are saying - Write a review
We haven't found any reviews in the usual places.
Contents
SYLVIE BERBAUM | 14 |
LAURA BUSZARDWELCHER | 34 |
MARY ANN CORBIERE | 71 |
Copyright | |
19 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Aboriginal Affairs agreement Algonquian American animal appears argument associated Band called Canada Canadian Carleton University century chief claims construction continued council Cree cultural dance Department described discourse discussion drawings effect elder English evidence example experience expression fact factors final fishing Garden ground human hunting Hydro Indian individual interests interpretative issues John Keating Lake land language learning Linguistics living means metaphor Mi'kmaq Nations Native needs nominal noted noun occur Ojibwa Ontario political position possible predication present Press question recorded referred relation reported reserve River sense shared social society sound speak speakers story things Toronto totem traditional treaty understanding University values verb Walpole Island