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Image Not Available for Chippewa customs. Reprint ed. / with an introd. by Nina Marchatti Archabal.
Chippewa customs. Reprint ed. / with an introd. by Nina Marchatti Archabal.
Image Not Available for Chippewa customs. Reprint ed. / with an introd. by Nina Marchatti Archabal.

Chippewa customs. Reprint ed. / with an introd. by Nina Marchatti Archabal.

Author "Densmore, Frances."
Publisher St. Paul : Minnesota Historical Society Press
Date1979
ClassificationsMain Library Collection
Object numberE99.C6 D38 1979 / E99.C6 D38 1979 copy 2
Description"xii, 204 p., [45] leaves of plates : ill. ; 23 cm."

Reprint of the 1929 ed. published by the U.S. Govt. Print. Off., Washington, which was issued as Bulletin 86 of Smithsonian Institution's Bureau of American Ethnology.
Includes index.
Bibliography: p. 195-196.

Series

Publications of the Minnesota Historical Society
Bulletin (Smithsonian Institution. Bureau of American Ethnology) ; 86.
"Using information obtained between 1907 and 1925 from members of the Chippewa tribe, the Bureau of American Ethnology, and the United States National Museum, the book describes various Chippewa customs. Information, collected on six reservations in Minnesota and Wisconsin and the Manitou Rapids Reserve in Ontario, Canada, is provided concerning the tribe's name; totemic system; phonetics; dwellings; clothing; treatment of the face; hair care and arrangement; food; health measures; care, naming, government, pastimes, and playthings of children; puberty; courtship and marriage; death, burial, and mourning; significance of dreams; Midewiwin; stories and legends; music; dances; charms; games; the industrial year; chiefs; right of revenge; war customs; transportation; methods of measuring time, distance, and quantity; exchange of commodities within the tribe; payment of annuity; traders and trading posts; making and using fire; pipes; bows and arrows; snowshoes; making of pitch; torches; canoes; twine; fish nets; weaving mats, bags, bands, blankets of rabbit skin, and head ornament of moose hair; netting of belts; basketry; pottery; dyes; tanning; glue; musical instruments (drum, rattle, flute, clapper); articles made of stone, bone, and wood; applique work; memory devices; picture writing; decorative arts; and beadwork. Portraits, black and white illustrations, and reminiscences of the informants are provided throughout the book

Ojibwa Indians -- Social life and customs.
Native peoples -- Social life and customs.



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