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A bison and a bobtailed horse race across the sky, raising a trail
of dust behind them--leaving it, the Milky Way, to forever mark
their path. An unknown Arapaho teller shared this account with an
ethnographer in 1893, explaining how the race determined which
animal would be ridden, which would be food. Traditional American
Indian oral narratives, ranging from origin stories to trickster
tales and prayers, constitute part of the great heritage of each
tribe. Many of these narratives, gathered in the late nineteenth
and early twentieth centuries, were obtained or published only in
English translation. Although this is the case with many Arapaho
stories, extensive Arapaho-language texts exist that have never
before been published--until now. "Arapaho Stories, Songs, and
Prayers" gives new life to these manuscripts, celebrating Arapaho
oral narrative traditions in all the richness of their original
language.
Working with Alonzo Moss, Sr., and William J. C'Hair, two fluent
native speakers of Arapaho, Andrew Cowell retranscribes these
texts--collected between the early 1880s and the late 1920s--into
modern Arapaho orthography, and retranslates and annotates them in
English. Masterpieces of oral literature, these texts include
creation accounts, stories about the Arapaho trickster character
Nih'oo3oo, animal tales, anecdotes, songs, prayers, and ceremonial
speeches. In addition to a general introduction, the editors offer
linguistic, stylistic, thematic, and cultural commentary and
context for each of the texts.
More than any other work, this book affords new insights into
Arapaho language and culture. It expands the Arapaho lexicon,
discusses Arapaho values and ethos, and offers a uniquely informed
perspective on Arapaho storytelling. An unparalleled work of
recovery and preservation, it will at once become "the" reference
guide to the Arapaho language and its texts.
A bison and a bobtailed horse race across the sky, raising a trail
of dust behind them - leaving in their wake the Milky Way to
forever mark their path. An unknown Arapaho teller shared this
account with an ethnographer in 1893, explaining that the race
determined which animal would be ridden, which would be food.
Traditional American Indian oral narratives, ranging from origin
stories to trickster tales and prayers, constitute part of the
great heritage of each tribe. Many of these narratives, gathered in
the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, were obtained or
published only in English translation. Although this is the case
with many Arapaho stories, extensive Arapaho-language texts exist
that have never before been published - until now. Arapaho Stories,
Songs, and Prayers gives new life to these manuscripts, celebrating
Arapaho oral narrative traditions in all the richness of their
original language. Working with Alonzo Moss, Sr., and William J.
C'Hair, two fluent native speakers of Arapaho, Andrew Cowell
retranscribes these texts - collected between the early 1880s and
the late 1920s - into modern Arapaho orthography, and retranslates
and annotates them in English. Masterpieces of oral literature,
these texts include creation accounts, stories about the Arapaho
trickster character Nih'oo3oo, animal tales, anecdotes, songs,
prayers, and ceremonial speeches. In addition to a general
introduction, the editors offer linguistic, stylistic, thematic,
and cultural commentary and context for each of the texts. More
than any other work, this book affords new insights into Arapaho
language and culture. It expands the Arapaho lexicon, discusses
Arapaho values and ethos, and offers a uniquely informed
perspective on Arapaho storytelling. An unparalleled work of
recovery and preservation, it will at once become the reference
guide to the Arapaho language and its texts.
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