"Words of the Huron" is an investigation into
seventeenth-century Huron culture through a kind of linguistic
archaeology of a language that died midway through the twentieth
century.
John L. Steckley explores a range of topics, including: the
construction of longhouses and wooden armour; the use of words for
trees in village names; the social anthropological standards of
kinship terms and clans; Huron conceptualizing of European-borne
disease; the spirit realm of "orenda"; Huron nations and kinship
groups; relationship to the environment; material culture; and the
relationship between the French missionaries and settlers and the
Huron people.
Steckley's source material includes the first dictionary of any
Aboriginal language, Recollect Brother Gabriel Sagard's Huron
phrasebook, published in 1632, and the sophisticated Jesuit
missionary study of the language from the 1620s to the 1740s,
beginning with the work of Father Jean de Brebeuf. The only book of
its kind, "Words of the Huron" will spark discussion among
scholars, students, and anyone interested in North American
archaeology, Native studies, cultural anthropology, and
seventeenth-century North American history.
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