Article published In:
Constructing languages and publics
Edited by Susan Gal and Kathryn A. Woolard
[Pragmatics 5:2] 1995
► pp. 167183
References
Bauman, Richard
(1993) The nationalization and internationalization of folklore: The case of Schoolcraft’s “Gitshee Gauzinee.” Western Folklore 521:247-259. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
(1990) Poetics and performance as critical perspectives on language and social life. Annual Review of Anthropology 191:59-88. DOI logo  BoPGoogle Scholar
Bieder, Robert E
(1986) Science encounter the American Indian, 1820–1880. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press,Google Scholar
Bremer, Richard G
(1987) Indian agent and wilderness scholar: The life of Henry Rowe Schoolcraft. Mt. Pleasant: Clark Historical Library, Central Michigan University.Google Scholar
Briggs, Charles L
(1993) Metadiscursive practices and scholarly authority in folkloristics. Journal of American folklore 1061:387-4341 DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Briggs, Charles L. and Richard Bauman
(1992) Genre, intertextuality, and social power. Journal of linguistic anthropology 21:131-172. DOI logo  BoPGoogle Scholar
Clements, William M
(1990) Schoolcraft as textmaker. Journal of American folklore 1031:177-192. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Crow, Thomas
(1985) Painters and public life in eighteenth-century Paris. New Haven: Yale University Press.Google Scholar
Dippie, Brian W
(1982) The vanishing American. Lawrence: University Press of Kansas.Google Scholar
Freeman, John F
(1959) Henry Row e Schoolcraft. Ph.D. dissertation, History of American Civilization, Harvard University.
Hallowell, A. Irving
(1946) Concordance of Ojibwa narratives in the published works of Henry R. Schoolcraft. Journal of American folklore 591:136-153. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Marsden, Michael T
(1976) Henry Rowe Schoolcraft: A reappraisal. The old northwest 21:153-182.Google Scholar
McKenney, Thomas L
(1827) Sketches of a tour to the lakes. Baltimore: Fielding Lucas. Repr. ed. Minneapolis: Ross & Haines, 1959.Google Scholar
McNeil, W.K
(1992) New introduction. In Schoolcraft, Henry Rowe (1839) Algic researches, first series: Indian tales and legends. Repr. ed., Baltimore: Clearfield Co., 1-18.Google Scholar
Rhodes, Richard A
(1985) Eastern Ojibwa-Chippewa-Ottowa dictionary. Berlin: Mouton. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Sapir, Edward
(1921) Language. New York: Harcourt, Brace & World.  BoPGoogle Scholar
Schoolcraft, Henry Rowe
(1825) Travels in the central portions of the Mississippi Valley. New York: Collins and Hannay. Repr. ed. Millwood: Kraus Reprint Co., 1975.Google Scholar
(1839) Algic researches, first series: Indian tales and legends, 2 vols. New York: Harper & Bros. Reprinted. in one vol., Baltimore: Clearfield Co., 1992.Google Scholar
(1848) The Indian in his wigwam, or characteristics of the red race of America. New York: W.H. Graham.Google Scholar
(1851a) Personal memoirs of a residence of thirty years with the Indian tribes on the American frontiers. Philadelphia: Lippincott, Grambo & Co.Google Scholar
(1851b) The American Indians, their history, condition and prospects. Rochester: Wanzer, Foot & Co.Google Scholar
(1853) Information respecting the history, condition and prospects of the Indian tribes of the United States. Part I. Philadelphia: Libbincott, Grambo & Co.Google Scholar
(1856) The myth of Hiawatha and other oral legends, mythologie and allegoric, of the North American Indians. Philadelphia: J.B. Lippincott & Co.Google Scholar
(1962) The literary voyager or Muzzeniegun. ed. Philip P. Mason. East Lansing: Michigan State University Press.Google Scholar
Thompson, Stith
(1929) Tales of the North American Indians. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Valentine, Lisa
(1992) A vision for the future: an ethnographic exploration of contemporary Severn Ojibwa discourse. Unpublished manuscript.
Williams, Raymond
(1983) Keywords. Rev. ed. New York: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Zumwalt, Rosemary
(1978) Henry Rowe Schoolcraft, 1793–1864. The Kroeber Anthropological Society papers 53/541 (Spring/Fall 1976):44-57.Google Scholar
Cited by

Cited by 9 other publications

Bauman, Richard & Charles L. Briggs
2003. Voices of Modernity, DOI logo
Blommaert, Jan
2001. Context is/as Critique. Critique of Anthropology 21:1  pp. 13 ff. DOI logo
Blommaert, Jan
2005. Discourse, DOI logo
Briggs, Charles L.
1996. The Politics of Discursive Authority in Research on the “Invention of Tradition”. Cultural Anthropology 11:4  pp. 435 ff. DOI logo
Briggs, Charles L.
2002. Linguistic Magic Bullets in the Making of a Modernist Anthropology. American Anthropologist 104:2  pp. 481 ff. DOI logo
Goodman, Jane E.
2002. The Half‐Lives of Texts: Poetry, Politics, and Ethnography in Kabylia, Algeria. Journal of Linguistic Anthropology 12:2  pp. 157 ff. DOI logo
Goodman, Jane E.
2002. Writing empire, underwriting nation: discursive histories of Kabyle Berber oral texts. American Ethnologist 29:1  pp. 86 ff. DOI logo
MEEK, BARBRA A.
2006. And the Injun goes “How!”: Representations of American Indian English in white public space. Language in Society 35:01 DOI logo
Rudy, Jill Terry
2013. American Folklore Scholarship, Tales of the North American Indians, and Relational Communities. Journal of American Folklore 126:499  pp. 3 ff. DOI logo

This list is based on CrossRef data as of 20 march 2024. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers. Any errors therein should be reported to them.