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摘要
摘要
Anthropologists George A. Dorsey and Alfred L. Kroeber joined forces to record and preserve the rich cultural traditions of the Arapaho Indians, long split into two bands. Dorsey had done fieldwork with the Southern Arapaho after they moved from Colorado to Oklahoma and would soon be known for his study of their Sun Dance. Kroeber had visited the Northern Arapaho, who were still living in Wyoming. Traditions of the Arapaho , first published in 1903, is the result of their collaboration. This collection of tales bears witness to the religious feeling, imagination, and humor of the Arapaho. Beginning with creation myths, Dorsey and Kroeber offer stories about Found-in-Grass, Blood-Clot-Boy, Badger-Woman, Blue-Feather, White Dog, the Rolling Stone, Porcupine, and the Woman Who Climbed to the Sky. Entities marvelous and mundane--water monsters, speckled horses, dancing ducks, cannibalistic dwarves--populate these vibrant tales, where spirit permeates everything, and everything has meaning.
目录
Sources of American Indian Oral Literature | p. ii |
Introduction to the Paperback Edition | p. v |
Introduction | p. xxxi |
1 --Origin Myth (fragmentary) | p. 1 |
2 --Origin Myth (fragmentary) | p. 3 |
4 --The Origin of Culture | p. 7 |
6 --The Flood and Origin of the Ceremonial Lodges | p. 13 |
7 --Origin of the Ceremonial Lodges | p. 20 |
9 --Origin of the Ceremonial Lodges | p. 21 |
10 --Lime-Crazy | p. 22 |
Ii --Lime-Crazy | p. 29 |
13 --Origin of the Buffalo Lodge and the Sacred Bundle | p. 42 |
14 --Origin of the Buffalo Lodge | p. 49 |
16 --Nih'ānçan Loses His Eyes | p. 49 |
17 --Nih'ānçan Loses His Eyes | p. 50 |
18 --Nih'ānçan and the Magic Arrows | p. 51 |
19 --Nih'ānçan and the Dwarf's Arrow | p. 52 |
20 --Nih'ānçan and Coyote | p. 54 |
21 --Nih'Ançan and Coyote | p. 55 |
24 --Nih'ānçan's Feast of Beaver Stolen by Coyote | p. 56 |
25 --Nih'ānçan and the Beavers | p. 57 |
26 --Nih'ānçan and the Dancing Ducks | p. 58 |
27 --N Ih'ānçan and the Dancing Ducks | p. 59 |
28 --Nih'ānçan and the Elks | p. 60 |
31 -Nihānçan Fecit Ut Membrum Virile Demigret | p. 63 |
29 --Nih'ānçan Penem Trans Flumen Mittit | p. 63 |
32 --Nih'ānçan Pursued by the Rolling Stone | p. 64 |
33 --Nih'ānçan Pursued by the Rolling Stone.1from Informants J | p. 65 |
34 --Nih'ānçan Pursued by the Rolling Stone | p. 68 |
35 --Nih'ānçan Pursued by the Rolling Skull | p. 69 |
36 --Nih'ānçan Disguises Himself as a Woman | p. 70 |
37 -Nih'ānçan and the Two Maidens | p. 73 |
39 -Nih'ānçan and His Mother-In-Law | p. 74 |
40 --One-Eyed-Sioux and His Mother-In-Law | p. 75 |
41 --Nih'1010nçan Usurps a Father's Place; Origin of Death | p. 77 |
42 --Nih'ānçan and His Daughter | p. 78 |
44 --Nih'ānçan and the Seven Sisters | p. 82 |
45 --Nih'ānçan and the Seven Sisters | p. 86 |
46 --Nih'ānçan and Panther-Young-Man | p. 88 |
47 --Nih'ānçan and Whirlwind-Woman | p. 96 |
48 --Nih'ānçan and Whirlwind-Woman | p. 97 |
49 --Nih'ānçan and the Bear-Women | p. 98 |
50 --Nih'ānçan and the Bear-Women | p. 101 |
51 --Nih'ānçan and the Young Men Race for Wives | p. 103 |
52 --Nih'ānçan and the Mice's Sun Dance | p. 105 |
53 --Nih'ānçan and the Mice's Sun Dance | p. 107 |
54 --Nih'ānçan Cuts His Hair | p. 108 |
55 --Nih'ānçan Cuts His Hair | p. 109 |
56 --Nih'ānçan Goes Fishing | p. 110 |
57 --Nih'ānçan Sharpens His Leg and Dives on the Ice | p. 111 |
58 --Nih'ānçcan Dives on the Ice | p. 112 |
59 --Medicine-Man Kingfisher Dives Through the Ice | p. 113 |
60 --Nih'ānçan Imitates His Host | p. 115 |
61 --Nih'ānçan Imitates His Host | p. 119 |
63 --The Woman and the Horse | p. 120 |
64 --How the Dwarfs Were Killed | p. 121 |
66 --The Cannibal Dwarf | p. 124 |
68 --The Dwarf Who Caught a Woman | p. 124 |
69 --Sleepy-Young-Man and the Cannibals | p. 125 |
70 --The Beheaded Ones | p. 126 |
71 --The Cannibal Babe | p. 136 |
73 --The Woman Who Gave Birth to a Water Monster | p. 136 |
74 --The Water Monster | p. 140 |
75 --The Water Monster Slain | p. 142 |
76 --The Man Who Became a Water Monster.1text, Informant A | p. 143 |
77 --Snake-Boy | p. 147 |
79 --The Woman Who Had Beaver Children | p. 150 |
80 --Bear, the Six Brothers and the Sister | p. 151 |
81 --Foot-Stuck-Child.1informant H | p. 152 |
82 --Foot-Stuck-Child | p. 160 |
84 --Tender-Foot Woman | p. 179 |
85 --Light-Stone | p. 181 |
86 --Badger-Woman | p. 190 |
88 --Badger-Woman | p. 192 |
89 --Nariniiha, the Substitute | p. 200 |
90 --The White Dog and the Woman | p. 203 |
91 --The White Dog and the Woman | p. 205 |
92 --The White Dog, the Woman, and the Seven Puppies | p. 207 |
93 --The She Bear and the Two Brothers | p. 209 |
94 --The: Adulterous Bear | p. 226 |
96 --The Bear Who Painted Himself | p. 228 |
101 --Thunder-Bird and White-Owl | p. 230 |
103 --The Skunk and the Rabbit | p. 231 |
104 --Turtle's War-Party | p. 236 |
105 --The Girl Who Became a Bear | p. 237 |
106 --Big Owl, Owner-Of-Bag | p. 238 |
107 --The Red Speckled Horse | p. 247 |
109 --The Man Who Sharpened His Foot | p. 258 |
110 --The Lame Warrior and the Skeleton | p. 259 |
112 --The Man Who Brought Back the Dead Body | p. 261 |
114 --The Faithless Woman and the Kiowa | p. 261 |
115 --Laughter | p. 263 |
117 --The White Buffalo Cow | p. 263 |
118 --The Eight Young Men Who Became Women | p. 264 |
119 --Journey to the Owners of Moon-Shells | p. 266 |
120 --Split-Feather | p. 267 |
121 --Spitting-Horn-Shell and Split-Rump | p. 269 |
122 -The White Crow | p. 272 |
123 --Man-Above and His Medicine | p. 275 |
124 --Skull Acts as Food-Getter | p. 277 |
125 --The Deceived Blind Man | p. 278 |
126 --The Deceived Blind Man.1informants J | p. 282 |
127 --The Deceived Blind Man and the Deserted Children.2informant H | p. 285 |
128 --The Deserted Children | p. 286 |
129 --The Young Man and His Father-In-Law | p. 293 |
130 --Blood-Clot-Boy | p. 294 |
131 --Blood-Clot-Boy and White-Owl | p. 298 |
132 --Blood-Clot-Girl.1informants J | p. 310 |
134 --The Porcupine and the Woman Who Climbed to the Sky | p. 311 |
135 --The Porcupine and the Woman Who Climbed to the Sky | p. 330 |
136 --The Porcupine and the Woman Who Climbed to the Sky | p. 332 |
137 --The Porcupine and the Woman Who Climbed to the Sky | p. 339 |
138 --The Porcupine and the Woman Who Climbed to the Sky | p. 340 |
140 --Found-In-Grass | p. 341 |
141 --Found-In-Grass | p. 350 |
142 --Found-In-Grass | p. 356 |
143 --Found-In-Grass | p. 378 |
144 --Blue-Bird, Buffalo-Woman, and Elk-Woman | p. 387 |
I45 --Blue-Feather, Buffalo-Woman, and Elk-Woman | p. 388 |
146 --Blue-Feather and Lone-Bull | p. 395 |
Abstracts | p. 419 |
Appendix 1 Contributors | p. 477 |
Appendix 2 Retranslations of Latin Passages | p. 479 |