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         Native American Religions:     more books (107)
  1. Indians of North America: Native American Religion
  2. Native American Religion (Indians of North America) (Indians of North America Se by Nancy; Porter, Frank W., 3rd (editor) Bonvillain, 1995-01-01
  3. THE ENCYCLOPEDIA OF NATIVE AMERICAN RELIGIONS: An Introduction
  4. The Encyclopedia of Native American Religions Hardcover by Arlene Hirschfelder Paulette Molin, 1992
  5. Weaving Ourselves into the Land: Charles Godfrey Leland, Indians, and the Study of American Religions. [Subtitle]: (SUNY Series in Native American Religions.) by Thomas C. Parkhill, 1997-01-01
  6. General Conference Mennonite Missions and Native American Religions (Part II) / Mennonite Parlors and Living Rooms / Corn Is Five Cents a Stalk / The Course of Special Needs / Radical Reformation and Mennonite Bibliography, 1988 (Mennonite Life, Volume 44, Number 2, June 1989)
  7. General Conference Mennonite Missions and Native American Religions (Part I) / A Peace of Religion or a Religion of Peace / Cornelius Herman Suckau: Mennonite Fundamentalist? / Rebuilding Eden Mennonite Church, Moundridge, Kansas (Mennonite Life, Volume 44, Number 1, March 1989)
  8. Encyclopedia of Native American Religions An Introduction - 1999 publication. by Arln BHirschfldr, 1999
  9. Encyclopedia of Native American Religions.
  10. Spirit Wars: Native North American Religions in the Age of Nation Building by Ronald Niezen, 2000-08-28
  11. Native American Religions: North America (Religion, History and Culture)
  12. The Solidarity of Kin: Ethnohistory, Religious Studies, and the Algonkian-French Religious Encounter (Suny Series in Native American Religions) by Kenneth M. Morrison, 2002-07
  13. Coming Down from Above: Prophecy, Resistance, and Renewal in Native American Religions (Civilization of the American Indian) by Lee Irwin, 2008-12-31
  14. Native American Religion (Indians of North America) by Nancy Bonvillain, Frank W. Porter, 1995-06

41. Chegg.com: Native American Religions By Gill, Sam | 0534626009 | 9780534626006
Rent and Save a ton on Native American Religions by Gill, Sam Gill, Sam D..ISBN 0534626009 EAN 9780534626006
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Native American Religions
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EDITION: 2 Edition Type: Revised BINDING: PUBLISHER: CENGAGE Learning (09/08/2004) PAGES: This product is not available.
SUMMARY NATIVE AMERICAN RELIGIONS: AN INTRODUCTION provides an overview of the latest research and thought in this area. Gill presents an academically and humanistically useful way of appreciating and understanding the complexity and diversity of Native American religions and establishes them as a significant field within religious studies. In addition, aspects of European-American history are examined in a search for sources of widespread misunderstandings about the character of Native American religions. SUMMARY NATIVE AMERICAN RELIGIONS: AN INTRODUCTION provides an overview of the latest research and thought in this area. Gill presents an academically and humanistically useful way of appreciating and understanding the complexity and diversity of Native American religions and establishes them as a significant field within religious studies. In addition, as...

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Native american religions 1,592 results from 221 stores, including Native American Religions (World Religions), Native American Religions, Weaving Ourselves into the Land
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43. Native American Religions
Objectives. Chapter Two presents an overview of North American religions. It includes discussions of the nature of the spirit world and ways in which Native Americans contact
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Native American Religions

44. Syllabus - Native American Religions
Florida International University University Park Campus - Miami, Florida. Undergraduate Course Religious Studies (REL 3380) or Liberal
http://www2.fiu.edu/~wiedmand/nareligions/narelsyllabus2004.htm
COURSE SYLLABUS
NATIVE AMERICAN RELIGIONS
Spring 2004 - Thursdays 6:25 to 9:05
Florida International University- University Park Campus - Miami, Florida Undergraduate Course: Religious Studies (REL 3380) or Liberal Studies (IDS 4920-03) (Subject to change up until first class meeting)
Version of January 9, 2004
Bottom of Page Lead Instructor: Dennis Wiedman, Ph.D. Anthropologist
Room PC 543. Phone: 305-348-2262. Email: Dennis.Wiedman@fiu.edu
Web Page: www.fiu.edu/~wiedmand Jim Huchingson,  Ph.D., Professor of Religious Studies Room DM 305B. Phone 305-348-3348. Email: huchings@fiu.edu Mary Lou Pfeiffer, LL.M. Adjunct Instructor of Religious Studies Room DM 306. Phone 305-348-2186. Email: mpfeif01@fiu.edu

COURSE DESCRIPTION
This course is an introduction to Native American religions and spirituality. It focuses on the diverse religious communities of North American Indians with a special emphasis on myths, rituals, and beliefs ranging from individual practices to organized religions. These different ways of seeing, sensing and listening form entire lifeways that are reflected in the arts, music, dance, poetry, narrative, architecture and social organizations.

45. ASU Libraries: Native American Religions, Myths And Origin Stories
The Labriola National American Indian Data Center resources on Native American Religions, Myths and Origin Stories.
http://www.asu.edu/lib/archives/religion.htm
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    Labriola Center The following bibliography lists reference material dealing with Native American religions, myths and origin stories. These resources include material found in the Labriola Center in the University Libraries at Arizona State University, websites, and other research facilities. This subject guide is also located on the Labriola Center website at http://www.asu.edu/lib/archives/labriola.htm
    Religion is a basic attribute of humanity cherished by mankind in all ages, races and cultures. This subject guide attempts to provide an overview of research pertaining to Native American religious beliefs, practices and histories.
    Overall, a large body of material exists about Native American worldview and sacred beliefs in spirits, the Native American Church, peyote religion, Plains Sun Dances, Navajo Chants, Pueblo ceremonialism, guardian spirits and vision quests, Inuit masks, Iroquois thanksgiving rites, shamanism, and medicine objects. Within this core of research contains the mythology and origin stories of many Native American peoples which incorporates many mythical figures, elemental and seasonal phenomenon, and landmarks and sacred sites.
    Books
    Encyclopedia of Native American Religions , Arlene Hirschfelder. New York : Facts on File, 1992. A comprehensive reference publication on Native American religions and their components and historical antecedents, myths, and origin stories.

46. Course Syllabus: ANT 358 Critical Issues In The Study Of Native American Religio
This course takes a critical issues approach to the study of Native American Religions. Our approach is also multivocal, respectfully listening to all sides of the debate over
http://puffin.creighton.edu/bucko/courses/syllabi/ant358_syllabus.html
Embossed Copper Effigy: Mississippian Culture Etowah Mounds , Georgia
Critical Issues in the Study of
Native American Religions
Spring 2010 AMS/ANT/NAS/THL 358
Fr. Raymond A Bucko, S.J.

Creighton Hall - Room
Tu Th 9:30 - 10:45 AM
Spring Semester 2010
Course Schedule

COURSE DESCRIPTION
COURSE GOALS AND OBJECTIVES Through reading a variety of articles and books by Native and non-Natives on the topics of Native Religions and critiques of the study of these religions, through open discussions of the ciritique of the study of Native religions themselves and the manner in which they are studies, and by writing a research paper in which the student integrates classroom learning with a deeper investigation of a specific topic, this course seeks to fulfill these goals:
  • Students will know the cultural and historical contexts Native religions and evaluate for themselves their value and integrity.
  • Students will learn, analyze and debate the issues that Native peoples present about the study of Native religions.
  • Students will be able to identify basic approaches to the study of Native religions and evaluate their merits and deficiencies.

47. The History Of Native American Religion
A description and brief history of the Native American religion.
http://www.indians.org/articles/native-american-religion.html
Native American Native American
Native Americans

Native American Ancestry

Native American Art
...
Northwest Native American Ceremonial Masks
Native American Religion
Native American religion is hard to explain. This is because there were very many tribes the religious principles were passed down verbally. Many of these groups had their own beliefs though many of them were similar in the major aspects. Native American religion tends to focus around nature. The landscape, animals, plants, and other environmental elements play a major role in the religion of Native Americans. Many of the legends passed down were an attempt to explain events that occurred in nature. Native American religion includes a number of practices, ceremonies, and traditions. These ceremonies may be in honor of a number of events. The practice of taking certain hallucinogens was commonly used to gain greater insight or communicate with the gods. Ceremonies may include feasts, music, dances, and other performances. Symbolism, especially with animals, is often a common part of Native American religion. Animals were used to represent certain ideas, characteristics, and spirits. Some Native American tribes used animals to tell the story of creation. Some creation stories, one by the Tlingit Indians, were centered on a raven. In the past, Native American religion was not classified as a religion. Their beliefs were not understood and the complexity of their religion was not seen. This was partly the result of not having a written set of guidelines.

48. NATIVE AMERICAN RELIGIONS
NATIVE AMERICAN RELIGIONS Spring 2005 Thursdays 625 to 905 PM Florida International University - University Park Campus - PCA 150 Undergraduate Course Anthropology (ANT 4211- U05
http://www2.fiu.edu/~wiedmand/nareligions/flyerNAReligion2005.pdf

49. Teaching About Native American Religions
Teaching Native American Religions The following is a series of discussions concerning the teaching of Indian religions outside of their own cultural context.
http://puffin.creighton.edu/lakota/teaching.html
Teaching Native American Religions
The following is a series of discussions concerning the teaching of Indian religions outside of their own cultural context. Ron Grimes has also published an article on this topic in The American Indian Quarterly , Volume 20, Number 3 (1996), pages 433-450. The title of the article is: This May Be a Feud, But It Is Not a War: An Electronic, Interdisciplinary Dialogue on Teaching Native Religions From: Ron Grimes, U Colorado Boulder (at the time)
MX%"nn.chat@gnosys.svle.ma.us"
6-MAY-1993 18:51:48.40
Subj: Teach. Nat. Am. Rel.
I am submitting this query simultaneously to two electronic discussion groupsone on religious studies, the other on Native American issuesto invite reflection on three questions: 1. Should or should not European Americans be teaching courses on Native American religions? 2. If we should not, why not, and what would be the results of our deferral? 3. If we should, how best can we proceed? I am giving much thought these days to the question of cultural imperialism, especially in two of its forms, namely, religious and academic imperialism. While on leave, I have been asked by the Department of Religious Studies at the University of Colorado, Boulder, to teach a very large, publicly visible introductory course on Native American religions. Vine Deloria teaches here. So does Sam Gill. So does Ward Churchill. So does Deward Walker. Even without David Carrasco, soon on his way to Princeton, this is an sizeable concentration of authorities, of various sorts, on indigenous cultures, politics, law, and religions. Ordinarily, I teach courses on indigenous religions at Wilfrid Laurier, a small Canadian university where I can do what I do in relative obscurity, that is, at considerable remove from indigenous populations of the American Southwest, where I do most of my field work, and at a considerable remove from high-profile scholars whose names are regularly associated with Native American studies.

50. Native American Religions
More from this user
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