Jonathan Carver's Travels Through America, 1766-1768

Jonathan Carver's Travels Through America, 1766-1768
Author: Norman Gelb
Publisher:
Total Pages: 264
Release: 1993-02-09
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN:

It would go through several editions in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries and be translated into French, German, Dutch, and Greek. Out of print for more than a hundred years, this influential work is once again available due to the efforts of historian Norman Gelb. Written in a charmingly unpretentious style, and illustrated with reproduction of the original map and copper plates appearing in the original 1778 edition, Carver's book offers a unique firsthand account of an American continent untouched by European influence. But above all, Carver's depictions of the Naudowessies, with whom he spent an entire winter and among whom he was to become an honorary chief, provides one of the first in-depth accounts of day-to-day life in a Native American culture.

Indigenuity

Indigenuity
Author: Caroline Wigginton
Publisher: UNC Press Books
Total Pages: 326
Release: 2022-10-06
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 1469670380

For hundreds of years, American artisanship and American authorship were entangled practices rather than distinct disciplines. Books, like other objects, were multisensory items all North American communities and cultures, including Native and settler colonial ones, regularly made and used. All cultures and communities narrated and documented their histories and imaginations through a variety of media. All created objects for domestic, sacred, curative, and collective purposes. In this innovative work at the intersection of Indigenous studies, literary studies, book history, and material culture studies, Caroline Wigginton tells a story of the interweavings of Native craftwork and American literatures from their ancient roots to the present. Focused primarily on North America, especially the colonized lands and waters now claimed by the United States, this book argues for the foundational but often-hidden aesthetic orientation of American literary history toward Native craftwork. Wigginton knits this narrative to another of Indigenous aesthetic repatriation through the making and using of books and works of material expression. Ultimately, she reveals that Native craftwork is by turns the warp and weft of American literature, interwoven throughout its long history.

Bibliography of the Eskimo Language

Bibliography of the Eskimo Language
Author: James Constantine Pilling
Publisher:
Total Pages: 542
Release: 1887
Genre: Eskimo languages
ISBN:

List of works in or on the Eskimo dialects of Greenland, North America and Asia (including Aleut) with a chronological index of authors.