― 587 ―
REFERENCES
This bibliography contains the full citations for all works referred to in this volume, including the “Further Reading” sections found with each individual introduction.
CAL-HB | California, ed. Robert F. Heizer. Vol. 8 of the Smithsonian Handbook of North American Indians, ed. William C. Sturtevant (1978). Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution. |
IJAL | International Journal of American Linguistics. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. |
IJAL-NATS | International Journal of Linguistics, Native American Texts Series. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. |
JAF | Journal of American Folklore. Boston and New York: Houghton, Mifflin and Co. for the American Folklore Society. |
NNC | News from Native California: An Inside View of the California Indian World. Berkeley: Heyday Books. |
RSCOIL | Reports from the Survey of California and Other Indian Languages. Berkeley: Survey of California and Other Indian Languages, University of California. |
UCAR | University of California Anthropological Records. Berkeley: University of California Press. |
UCPAAE | University of California Publications in Archaeology and Ethnology. Berkeley: University of California Press. |
UCPL | University of California Publications in Linguistics. Berkeley: University of California Press. |
― 588 ―
Angulo, Jaime de. 1990. Indians in Overalls. San Francisco: City Lights Books.Angulo, Jaime de, and L. S. Freeland. 1930.
“The Achumawi Language.”
IJAL7: 77–120.Angulo, Gui de. 1931a.
“Karok Texts.”
IJAL6.3–4: 194–226.Angulo, Gui de. 1931b.
“Two Achumawi Tales.”
JAF44.172: 125–136.Apodaca, Paul. 1997.
“Completing the Circle.”
Review of My Dear Miss Nicholson … Letters and Myths, by William R. Benson. NNC 11.1 (fall): 32–34.Applegate, Richard. 1972.
“Ineseño Chumash Grammar.”
Ph.D. diss., University of California at Berkeley.Applegate, Richard. 1975.
“Chumash Narrative Folklore as Sociolinguistic Data.”
Journalof California and Great Basin Anthropology2: 188–197.Arvidson, Lucy. 1976. Alaawich (Our Language): First Book of Words in the Tübatulabal Language of Southern California. Banning, Calif.: Malki Museum Press.Barrett, Samuel A.1919.
“The Wintun Hesi Ceremony.”
UCPAAE14.1: 437–448.Barrett, Samuel A.1933. Pomo Myths.
“Bulletin of the Public Museum of the City of Milwaukee 15. Milwaukee”
.Bass, Howard, and Green Rayna, prods. 1995. Heartbeat: Voices of First Nations Women. Washington: Smithsonian/Folkways Records (CD SF 40415).Bauman, James. 1980.
“Chimariko Placenames and the Boundaries of Chimariko Territory.”
In American Indian and Indo-European Studies: Papers in Honorof Madison S. Beeler, ed. Kathryn Klar, Margaret Langdon, and Shirley Silver, 11–29. The Hague: Mouton Publishers.Bauman, James, with Ruby Miles and Ike Leaf. 1979. Pit River Teaching Dictionary.
“National Bilingual Materials Development Center, Rural Education, University of Alaska”
.Baumho, Martin A., and David L. Olmsted. 1964.
“Note, on Palaihnihan Culture History: Glottochronology and Archaeology.”
In Studies in Californian Linguistics, ed. W. Bright. UCPL 34: 1–12.Beals, Ralph. 1933.
“Ethnography of the Nisenan.”
UCPAAE31.6: 335–414.Bean, Lowell John, and Thomas Blackburn. 1976. Native Californians: A Theoretical Retrospective. Socorro, N.Mex.: Ballena Press.Bean, Lowell John, and Florence C. Shipek. 1978.
“Luiseño.”
CAL-HB: 550–563.Bean, Lowell John, and Charles R. Smith. 1978.
“Serrano.”
CAL-HB: 570–574.Bean, Lowell John, and Sylvia Brakke Smith. 1978.
“Gabrielino.”
CAL-HB: 538–549.Bean, Lowell John, and Sylvia Brakke Vane. 1978.
“Cults and Their Transformations.”
CAL-HB: 662–672.Bedoian, Vic, and Roberta Llewellyn. 1995.
“Interview with Edna Guerrero.”
NNC8.4 (spring): 40.― 589 ―
Beeler, Madison. 1979.
“Barbareño Chumash Text and Lexicon.”
In Festschriftfor Archibald A. Hill, vol. 2, ed. M. A. Jazayery et al., 171–193. The Hague: Mouton.Benedict, Ruth. 1924.
“A Brief Sketch of Serrano Culture.”
American Anthropologist n.s.26:366–394.Benedict, Ruth. 1926.
“Serrano Tales.”
JAF39.151: 1–17.Bennett, Ruth S.1981. Hupa Spelling Book. Arcata, Calif.: Center for Community Development, Humboldt State University.Benson, William Ralganal. 1932.
“The Stone and Kelsey Massacre on the Shoresof Clear Lake in 1849.”
Quarterly of the California Historical Society11.3:266–273.Benson, William Ralganal. 1997. “My Dear Miss Benson … ”: Letters and Myths. Ed. Maria del Carmen Gasser. Pasadena, Calif.: Bickley Printing Company.Berman, Howard. 1980.
“Two Chukchansi Coyote Stories.”
In Coyote Stories II, ed. Martha B. Kendall. IJAL-NATS, Monograph 6: 56–70.Bevis, William. 1974.
“American Indian Verse Translations.”
College English35: 693–703.Bibby, Brian. 1992.
“The Grindstone Roundhouse.”
NNC6.3 (summer): 12–13.Bibby, Brian. 1996. The Fine Art of California Indian Basketry. Sacramento: Crocker Art Museum in association with Heyday Books.Bibby, Brian., ed. 1992. Living Traditions: A Museum Guide for Native American Peopleof California. Vol. 2: North-Central California. Sacramento: California Native American Heritage Commission.Blackburn, Thomas. 1975. December's Child: A Book of Chumash Oral Narratives. Berkeley: University of California Press.Blackburn, Thomas, and Kat Anderson, eds. 1993. Before the Wilderness: Environmental Management by Native Californians. Ballena Press Anthropological Papers 40. Menlo Park, Calif.: Ballena Press.Bommelyn, Loren, and Berneice Humphrey. 1985. Booklet of Tolowa Stories. 2ded. Crescent City, Calif.: Tolowa Language Committee and the Del Norte County Title IV-A American Indian Education Program.Bommelyn, Loren, and Berneice Humphrey. 1987. Xus We-Yo': Tolowa Language. 2d ed.. Crescent City, Calif.: Tolowa Language Committee.Bommelyn, Loren, and Berneice Humphrey. 1995. Now You're Speaking Tolowa. Happy Camp, Calif.: Naturegraph Publishers.Boscana, Geronimo. 1933 [1846]. Chinigchinich: A Revised and Annotated Version of Alfred Robinson's Translation of Father Geronimo Boscana's Historical Account of the Belief, Usages, Customs, and Extravagencies[!] of the Indians of This Mission of San Juan Capistrano Called the Acagchemem Tribe. Ed. P. T.Hanna. Santa Ana, Calif.: Fine Arts Press.― 590 ―
Bright, William. 1957. The Karok Language. UCPL 13.Bright, William. 1968. A Luiseño Dictionary. UCPL 51.Bright, William. 1977.
“Coyote Steals Fire (Karok).”
In Northern California Texts, ed. Victor Golla and Shirley Silver. IJAL-NATS2.2: 3–9.Bright, William. 1978a. Coyote Stories. IJAL-NATS, Monograph 1.Bright, William. 1978b.
“Karok.”
CAL-HB: 180–189.Bright, William. 1979.
“A Karuk Myth in ‘Measured Verse’: The Translation of a Performance.”
Journal of California and Great Basin Anthropology1: 117–123.Bright, William. 1980a.
“Coyote Gives Salmon and Acorns to Humans (Karok).”
In Coyote Stories 2, ed. Martha Kendall. IJAL -NATS, Monograph 6: 46–52.Bright, William. 1980b.
“Coyote's Journey.”
American Indian Culture and Research Journal4.1–2: 21–48.Bright, William. 1982a. Bibliography of the Languages of Native California.
“Native American Bibliography Series 3”
. Metuchen, N.J.: The Scarecrow Press.Bright, William. 1982b.
“Poetic Structure in Oral Narrative.”
In Spoken and Written Language, ed. Deborah Tannen, 171–184. Norwood, N.J.: Ablex Publishing.Bright, William. 1984. American Indian Linguistics and Literature. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter.Bright, William. 1993. A Coyote Reader. Berkeley: University of California Press.Bright, William. 1994a.
“Myth, Music, and Magic: Nettie Reuben's Karuk Love Medicine.”
In Coming to Light, ed. Brian Swann, 764–771. New York: Random House.Bright, William. 1994b.
“Oral Literature of California and the Intermountain Region.”
In Dictionary of Native American Literature, ed. Andrew Wiget, 47–52. New York: Garland Press.Brumble, H. David. 1988. American Indian Autobiography. Berkeley: Universityof California Press.Burns, Ken. 1996. The West. Dir. Steven Ives. Alexandria, Va.: PBS Video.Callaghan, Catherine A.1977.
“Coyote the Impostor.”
In Northern California Texts, ed. Victor Golla and Shirley Silver. IJAL -NATS 2.2: 10–16.Callaghan, Catherine A.1978.
“Fire, Flood, and Creation.”
In Coyote Stories, ed. William Bright. IJAL -NATS 1: 62–86.Campbell, Lyle, and Marianne Mithun. 1979. The Languages of Native America: History and Comparative Assessment. Austin: University of Texas Press.Castillo, Edward. 1978.
“The Impact of Euro-American Exploration and Settlement.”
CAL-HB: 99–127.Chafe, Wallace. 1980. The Pear Stories: Cognitive, Cultural, and Linguistic Aspectsof Narrative Production. Norwood, N.J.: Ablex Publishing.Chafe, Wallace. 1994. Discourse, Consciousness, and Time: The Flow and Displacementof Consciousness in Speaking and Writing. Norwood, N.J.: Ablex Publishing.Chase-Dunn, Christopher, and Mahua Sarkar. 1993.
“Plac, Names and Intersocietal Interaction: Wintu Expansion into Hokan Territory in Late Prehistoric Northern California.”
Paper presented at the Thirteenth Annual Meeting of the Society for Economic Anthropology, Durham, N.H., April 23, 1993.― 591 ―
Chase-Dunn, Christopher, S. Edward Clewett, and Elaine Sundahl. 1992.
“A Very Small World-Syste, in Northern California: The Wintu and Their Neighbors.”
Paper presented at the Fifty-Seventh Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology, Pittsburgh, Pa., April 8–12.Cook, Sherburne F.1943.
“The Conflict between the California Indian and White Civilization”
, 1: The Indian versus the Spanish Mission.” Ibero-Americana21. Berkeley.Cook, Sherburne F.1978.
“Historical Demography.”
CAL-HB: 91–98.Costo, Rupert, and Jeannette Henry Costo. 1987. The Missions of California: ALegacy of Genocide. San Francisco: Indian Historical Press for the American Indian Historical Society.Couro, Ted, and Christina Hutcheson. 1973. Dictionary of Mesa Grande Diegueño: 'Iipay Aa-English / English-'Iipay Aa. Banning, Calif.: Malki Museum Press.Couro, Ted, and Margaret Langdon. 1975. Let's Talk 'Iipay Aa: An Introductionto the Mesa Grande Diegueño Language. Ramona, Calif.: Ballena Press.Crawford, James. 1983. Cocopa Texts. UCPL 100.Crawford, James. 1992. Language Loyalties: A Source Book on the Official English Controversy. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Crawford, Judith. 1976.
“Seven Mohave Myths.”
In Yuman Texts, ed. Margaret Langdon. IJAL -NATS 1.3: 31–42.Crozier-Hogle, Lois, and Darryl Babe Wilson. 1997. Surviving in Two Worlds:Contemporary Native American Voices. Austin: University of Texas Press.Cuero, Delfina. 1970. The Autobiography of Delfina Cuero, a Diegueño Indian. As told to Florence C. Shipek. Banning, Calif.: Malki Museum Press and the Morongo Indian Reservation.Curtin, Jeremiah. 1898. Creation Myths of Primitive America, in Relation to the Religious History and Development of Mankind. Boston: Little, Brown.(Reprint, New York: Benjamin Blom, 1967.)Dangberg, Grace. 1927.
“Washo Texts.”
UCPAAE22.3: 391–443.Demetracopoulou, Dorothy. 1933.
“The Loon Woman Myth: A Study in Synthesis.”
JAF46: 101–128.Demetracopoulou, Dorothy. 1935.
“Wintu Songs.”
Anthropos30: 483–494.Demetracopoulou, Dorothy, and Cora Du Bois. 1932.
“A Study of Wintu Mythology.”
JAF45.178: 375–500.Densmore, Frances. 1932. Yuman and Yacqui Music. Bureau of American Ethnology Bulletin 110. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office.Devereux, George. 1948.
“Mohave Coyote Tales.”
JAF61: 233–255.― 592 ―
Dixon, Roland. 1902.
“Maidu Myths.”
Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History17.2: 33–118. New York: The Knickerbocker Press.Dixon, Roland. 1905.
“The Northern Maidu.”
Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History17.3: 119–346. New York: The Knickerbocker Press.Dixon, Roland. 1910.
“The Chimariko Indians and Language.”
UCPAAE5.5: 293–380.Dixon, Roland. 1912. Maidu Texts. Publications of the American Ethnological Society 4: 1–241. Leyden: E. J. Brill.Dozier, Deborah. 1997. The Heart Is Fire: The World of the Cahuilla Indians of Southern California. Berkeley: Heyday Books.Drucker, Philip. 1937.
“The Tolowa and Their Southwest Oregon Kin.”
UCPAAE36: 221–300.Du Bois, Cora. 1935.
“Wintu Ethnography.”
UCPAAE36.1: 1–148.Du Bois, Cora. 1939.
“The 1870 Ghost Dance.”
UCAR3.1: 1–151.Du Bois, Cora, and Dorothy Demetracopoulou. 1931.
“Wintu Myths.”
UCPAAE28.5: 279–403.Eargle, Dolan H.1986. The Earth Is Our Mother: A Guide to the Indians of California, Their Locales, and Historic Sites. San Francisco: Trees Company Press.Eargle, Dolan H.1992. California Indian Country: The Land and the People. San Francisco: Trees Company Press.Finck, Franz Nikolaus. 1899. Die Araner Mundart: Ein Betrag zur Erforschungdes Westirischen. Marburg: N. G. Elwert'sche Verlagsbuchhandung.Forde, C. Darryl. 1931.
“Ethnography of the Yuma Indians.”
UCPAAE28.4: 83–278.Foster, Michael K.1996.
“Language and the Culture History of North America.”
In Languages, ed. Ives Goddard. Vol. 17 of the Smithsonian Handbookof North American Indians, ed. William Sturtevant. Washington, D.C.:Smithsonian Institution.Freeland, Lucy S.1947.
“Western Miwok Texts with Linguistic Sketch.”
IJAL13.1: 31–46.Freeland, Lucy S.1982. Freeland's Central Sierra Miwok Myths, ed. Howard Berman. RSCOIL 3.Gamble, Geo rey. 1978. Wikchamni Grammar. UCPL 89.Gamble, Geo rey. 1980.
“How People Got Their Hands.”
In Coyote Stories II, ed. Martha B. Kendall. IJAL- NATS, Monograph 6: 53–55.Gamble, Geo rey., ed. 1994. Yokuts Texts. Native American Texts Series [n.s.] 1. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter.Garth, Thomas R.1953.
“Atsugewi Ethnography.”
UCAR14.2: 129–212.Garth, Thomas R.1978.
“Atsugewi.”
CAL-HB: 236–243.Gayton, Anna. 1935.
“Areal Affiliations of California Folktales.”
American Anthropologist37.4: 582–599.― 593 ―
Gayton, Anna. 1948.
“Yokut, and Western Mono: Ethnography.”
UCAR10.1–2: 1–302.Gayton, Anna, and Stanley Newman. 1940.
“Yokuts and Western Mono Myths.”
UCAR5.1: 1–110.Gendar, Jeannine. 1995. Grass Games and Moon Races: California Indian Gamesand Toys. Berkeley: Heyday Books.Gi ord, Edward Winslow. 1918.
“Clans and Moieties in Southern California.”
UCPAAE18: 1–285.Gi ord, Edward Winslow. 1926.
“Yuma Dreams and Omens.”
JAF39.151: 58–69.Gi ord, Edward Winslow. 1955.
“Central Miwok Ceremonies.”
UCAR14.4: 261–318.Gi ord, Edward W., and Gwendoline Block. 1930. California Indian Nights Entertainments: Stories of the Creation of the World, of Man, of Fire, of the Sun, of Thunder, etc.; of Coyote, the Land of the Dead, the Sky Monsters, Animal People, etc. Glendale, Calif.: Arthur H. Clark. (Reprint, Lincoln: Universityof Nebraska Press, Bison Books, 1990.)Goddard, Ives. 1996.
“Introduction.”
In Languages, ed. Ives Goddard. Vol. 17of The Handbook of North American Indians. Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution Press.Goddard, Ives., ed. 1996. Languages. Vol. 17 of the Smithsonian Handbook of North American Indians, ed. William Sturtevant. Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution.Goddard, Pliny Earle. 1903–1904.
“Life and Culture of the Hupa.”
UCPAAE1.1: 1–88.Goddard, Pliny Earle. 1904.
“Hupa Texts.”
UCPAAE1.2: 89–368.Goddard, Pliny Earle. 1909.
“Kato Texts.”
UCPAAE5.3: 65–238.Goddard, Pliny Earle. 1914.
“Chilula Texts.”
UCPAAE10.7: 289–379.Goddard, Pliny Earle. 1921–1923.
“Wailaki Texts.”
IJAL2.3/4: 77–135.Goldschmidt, Walter. 1951.
“Nomlaki Ethnography.”
UCPAAE42.4: 303–443.Goldschmidt, Walter. 1978.
“Nomlaki.”
CAL-HB: 341–349.Golla, Victor. 1984a. Hupa Stories, Anecdotes, and Conversations. Told by Louisa Jackson, Ned Jackson, and Minnie Reeves. Recorded, transcribed, and translated by Victor Golla. Arcata, Calif.: The Hoopa Valley Tribe.Golla, Victor. 1996.
“Mary Haas.”
[Obituary.] SSILA Newsletter 15.2 (July). Arcata, Calif.: Society for the Study of the Indigenous Languages of the Americas.Golla, Victor. 1996. “Review of The Old Coyote of Big Sur.” SSILA Newsletter15.1: 7–8. Arcata, Calif.: Society for the Study of the Indigenous Languages of the Americas.Golla, Victor., ed. 1984b. The Sapir-Kroebe, Correspondence: Letters between Edward Sapir and A. L. Kroeber, 1905–1925. RSCOIL 6.Golla, Victor, and Shirley Silver, eds. 1977. Northern California Texts. IJAL -NATS 2.2.Gould, Richard A.1978.
“Tolowa.”
CAL-HB: 128–136.― 594 ―
Grant, Campbell. 1965. The Rock Paintings of the Chumash: A Study of California Indian Culture. Berkeley: University of California Press.Grey, Herman. 1970. Tales from the Mohaves. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press.Halpern, Abraham M.1976.
“Kukumat Became Sick—a Yuma Text.”
In Yuman Texts, ed. Margaret Langdon. IJAL -NATS 1.3: 5–25.Halpern, Abraham M.1984.
“Quechan Literature.”
In Spirit Mountain: An Anthology of Yuman Story and Song, ed. Leanne Hinton and Lucille Watahomigie. Sun Tracks10. Tucson: Sun Tracks and University of Arizona Press.Halpern, Abraham M.1988.
“Southeaster, Pomo Ceremonials: The Kuksu Cult and its Successors.”
UCAR29.Halpern, Abraham M.1997. Kar'úk: Native Accounts of the Quechan Mourning Ceremony. Ed. Amy Miller and Margaret Langdon. UCPL 128.Hamley, Je rey Louis. 1994.
“Cultura. Genocide in the Classroom: A Historyof the Federal Boarding School Movement in American Indian Education, 1875–1920.”
Ph.D. dissertation, Harvard University.Harrington, John Peabody. 1907–1957.
“The Papers of John Peabody Harrington in the Smithsonian Institution, 1907–1957”
. National Anthropological Archives, Washington, D.C. (Microfilm edition, Millwood, N.Y.: Krauss International, 1984.)Harrington, John Peabody. 1908.
“A Yuma Account of Origins.”
JAF21: 324–348.Harrington, John Peabody. 1921–1922 and 1928.
“Chimariko Field Notes. The Papers of John Peabody Harrington in the Smithsonian Institution, 1907–1957”
. National Anthropological Archives, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C. (Microfilm edition: Vol. 2, Northern and Central California, Chimariko/Hupa, Reels 20–24, 31, and 35. Millwood, N.Y.: Krauss International, 1984.)Harrington, John Peabody. 1930.
“Karok Texts.”
IJAL6.2: 121–161.Harrington, John Peabody. 1932.
“Karok Indian Myths.”
Bureau of American Ethnology Bulletin 107. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office.Hatch, James. 1958.
“Tachi Yokuts Music.”
Kroeber Anthropological Society Papers19: 47–66. Berkeley.Heizer, Robert F.1978a.
“History of Research.”
CAL-HB: 6–15.Heizer, Robert F.1978b.
“Mythology: Regional Patterns and History of Research.”
CAL-HB: 654–657.Heizer, Robert F.1993. The Destruction of California Indians: A Collection of Documentsfrom the Period 1847 to 1865 in Which are Described Some of the Things That Happened to Some of the Indians of California. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press.Heizer, Robert F., ed. 1955.
“California Indian Linguistic Records: The Mission Indian Vocabularies of H. W. Henshaw.”
UCAR15.2: 85–202.Heizer, Robert F., ed. 1978. California. Vol. 8 of the Smithsonian Handbook of North American Indians, ed. William Sturtevant. Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution.― 595 ―
Heizer, Robert F., and Alan J. Almquist. 1971. The Other Californians: Prejudiceand Discrimination under Spain, Mexico, and the United States to 1920. Berkeley: University of California Press.Heizer, Robert F., and M.A. Whipple, eds. 1951. The California Indians: A Source Book. Berkeley: University of California Press.Heizer, Robert F., Karen N. Nissen, and Edward Castillo. 1975. Californi, Indian History: A Classified and Annotated Guide to Source Materials. Ballena Press Publications in Archaeology, Ethnology and History 4. Ramona, Calif.:Ballena Press.Herzog, George. 1928.
“The Yuman Musical Style.”
JAF41.160: 183–231.Heth, Charlotte. 1992. Songs of Love, Luck, Animals, and Magic: Music of the Yurok and Tolowa Indians. Recorded Anthology of American Music. New York: New World Records (NW 297).Hill, Jane H., and Roscinda Nolasquez. 1973. Mulu'wetam (The First People):Cupeño Oral History and Language. Banning, Calif.: Malki Museum Press.Hill, Kenneth C.1967.
“A Grammar of the Serrano Language.”
Ph.D. diss., University of California at Los Angeles.Hill, Kenneth C.1978.
“The Coyote and the Flood.”
In Coyote Stories, ed. William Bright. IJAL -NATS, Monograph 1: 112–116.Hill, Kenneth C.1980.
“The Seven Sisters.”
In Coyote Stories 2, ed. Martha Kendall. IJAL -NATS, Monograph 6: 97–103.Hinton, Leanne. 1984. Havasupa, Songs: A Linguistic Perspective. Tübingen: G. Narr.Hinton, Leanne. 1994a. Flutes of Fire: Essays on California Indian Languages. Berkeley: Heyday Books.Hinton, Leanne. 1994b.
“Ashes, Ashes: John Peabody Harrington—Then and Now.”
In Flutes of Fire: Essays on California Indian Languages, 195–210. Berkeley: Heyday Books.Hinton, Leanne. 1994c.
“Song: Overcoming the Language Barrier.”
In Flutes of Fire:Essays on California Indian Languages, 39–44. Berkeley: Heyday Books.Hinton, Leanne. 1994d.
“Songs without Words.”
In Flutes of Fire: Essays on California Indian Languages, 145–151. Berkeley: Heyday Books.Hinton, Leanne. 1996.
“Breath of Life/Silen, No More: The Native California Language Restoration Workshop.”
NNC10.1 (fall): 13–16.Hinton, Leanne, and Susan L. Roth. 1992. Ishi's Tale of Lizard. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux.Hinton, Leanne, and Lucille Watahomigie, eds. 1984. Spirit Mountain: An Anthology of Yuman Story and Song. Sun Tracks 10. Tucson: Sun Tracks and University of Arizona Press.― 596 ―
Holmes-Wermuth, Carol. 1994.
“Tübatulabal.”
In Native America in the Twentieth Century: An Encyclopedia, ed. Mary B. Davis, 660–661. New York: Garland Publishing.Hook, Harry, dir. 1992. The Last of His Tribe. A River City Production.Hudson, Travis, and Ernest Underhay. 1978. Crystals in the Sky: An Intellectual Odyssey Involving Chumash Astronomy, Cosmology, and Rock Art. Socorro, N.Mex.: Ballena Press.Hudson, Travis, Thomas Blackburn, Rosario Curletti, and Janice Timbrook, eds. 1977. The Eye of the Flute: Chumash Traditional History and Ritual. Astold by Fernando Librado Kitspawit to John P. Harrington. Santa Barbara: Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History.Hudson, Travis, Janice Timbrook, and Melissa Rempe, eds. 1978. Tomol: Chumash Watercraft as Described in the Ethnographic Notes of J. P. Harrington. Socorro, N.Mex.: Ballena Press.Hurtado, Albert L.1988. Indian Survival on the California Frontier. New Haven: Yale University Press.Hyde, Villiana Calac. 1971. An Introduction to the Luiseño Language. Ed. Ronald Langacker et al. Banning, Calif.: Malki Museum Press.Hyde, Villiana Calac, and Eric Elliott. 1994. Yumáyk Yumáyk (Long Ago). UCPL 125.Hymes, Dell. 1976.
“Louis Simpson's ‘The Deserted Boy.’”
Poetics5.2: 119–155.Hymes, Dell. 1977.
“Discovering Oral Performance and Measured Verse in American Indian Narrative.”
New Literary History8: 431–457.Hymes, Dell. 1980.
“Particle, Pause, and Pattern in American Indian Narrative Verse.”
American Indian Culture and Research Journal4.4: 7–51.Hymes, Dell. 1981. ‘In vain I tried to tell you’: Essays on Native American Ethnopoetics. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press.Hymes, Dell. 1983.
“‘Gitskux and His Older Brother’: A Clackamas Chinook Myth.”
In Smoothing the Ground: Essays on Native American Oral Literature, ed. Brian Swann, 129–170. Berkeley: University of California Press.Hymes, Dell. 1992.
“Use All There Is to Use.”
In On the Translation of Native American Literatures, ed. Brian Swann, 83–124. Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution.Hymes, Dell. 1994a.
“Helen Sekaquaptewa's ‘Coyote and the Birds’: Rhetorical Analysis of a Hopi Coyote Story.”
Anthropological Linguistics34: 45–72.Hymes, Dell. 1994b.
“Ethnopoetics, Oral Formulaic Theory, and Editing Texts.”
Oral Tradition9.2: 330–370.Hymes, Dell. 1995.
“Reading Takelma Texts: Frances Johnson's ‘Coyote and Frog.’”
In Fields of Folklore: Essays in Honor of Kenneth Goldstein, ed. Roger D. Abrahams, 90–159. Bloomington, Ind.: Trickster Press.Jackson, Robert H., and Edward Castillo. 1995. Indians, Franciscans, and Spanish Colonization: The Impact of the Mission System on California Indians. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press.― 597 ―
Jacobs, Melville. 1959. The Content and Style of an Oral Literature: Clackamas Chinook Myths and Tales. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.James, Carollyn. 1989.
“A Field Linguist Who Lived His Life for His Subjects.”
Smithsonian Magazine 15.1 (April): 153–174.Je ers, Robinson. 1983. Cawdor. California Writers of the Land 1. Covello, Calif.: Yolla Bolly Press.Joughlin, Roberta, and Salvadora Valenzuela. 1953.
“Cupeño Genesis.”
El Museo [n.s.] 1.4: 16–23.Keeling, Richard. 1985.
“Contrast of Song Performance Style as a Function of Sex Role Polarity in the Hupa Brush Dance.”
Ethnomusicology29.2:185–212.Keeling, Richard. 1991. Guide to Early Field Recordings (1900–1949) at the Lowie Museumof Anthropology. Berkeley: University of California Press.Keeling, Richard. 1992. Cry for Luck: Sacred Song and Speech among the Yurok, Hupa, and Karuk Indians of Northwest California. Berkeley: University of California Press.Kendall, Martha. 1980. Coyote Stories 2. IJAL -NATS, Monograph 6.Kinkade, M. Dale. 1987.
“Bluejay and His Sister.”
In Recovering the Word: Essays on Native American Literature, ed. Brian Swann and Arnold Krupat, 255–296. Berkeley: University of California Press.Kroeber, Alfred L.1907a.
“Shoshonean Dialects of California.”
UCPAAE4.3: 65–166.Kroeber, Alfred L.1907b.
“Indian Myths of South Central California.”
UCPAAE4.4: 167–250.Kroeber, Alfred L.1917.
“California Kinship Systems.”
UCPAAE12.9: 339–396.Kroeber, Alfred L.1925. Handbook of the Indians of California. Berkeley: California Book Company.Kroeber, Alfred L.1932.
“Yuki Myths.”
Anthropos27.5–6: 905–939.Kroeber, Alfred L.1939.
“Culture and Natural Areas of Native North America.”
UCPAAE38: 1–242.Kroeber, Alfred L.1951.
“A Mohave Historical Epic.”
UCAR11.2.Kroeber, Alfred L.1953.
“Seven Mohave Myths.”
UCAR11.1.Kroeber, Alfred L.1963.
“Yokuts Dialect Survey.”
UCAR11.3: 177–251.Kroeber, Alfred L.1972.
“More Mohave Myths.”
UCAR27.Kroeber, Alfred L.1976. Yurok Myths. Berkeley: University of California Press.Kroeber, Alfred L., and Edward Gi ord. 1949.
“World Renewal: A Cult Systemof Native Northwest California.”
UCAR13.1: 1–156.Kroeber, Alfred L., and Edward Gi ord. 1980. Karok Myths. Ed. Grace Buzaljko. Berkeley: University of California Press.― 598 ―
Kroeber, Karl. 1981. Traditional American Indian Literatures: Texts and Interpretations. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press.Kroeber, Theodora. 1959. The Inland Whale. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.Kroeber, Theodora. 1963. Ishi in Two Worlds: A Biography of the Last Wild Indian in North America. Berkeley: University of California Press.Kroeber, Theodora. 1964. Ishi, Last of His Tribe. Berkeley: Parnassus Press.Krupat, Arnold. 1992. Ethnocriticism: Ethnography, History, Literature. Berkeley: University of California Press.Krupat, Arnold. 1993. New Voices in Native American Literary Criticism. Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution Press.Laird, Carobeth. 1975. Encounter with an Angry God: Recollections of My Life withJohn Peabody Harrington. Banning, Calif.: Malki Museum Press.Laird, Carobeth. 1984. Mirror and Pattern: George Laird's World of Chemehuevi Myth. Banning, Calif.: Malki Museum Press.Lang, Julian. 1993.
“The Dances and Regalia.”
NNC7.3 (fall-winter): 34–41.Lang, Julian. 1994. Ararapíkva: Creation Stories of the People. Berkeley: Heyday Books.Langdon, Margaret. 1976. Yuman Texts. IJAL -NATS 1.3.LaPena, Frank R.1978.
“Wintu.”
CAL-HB: 324–340.LaPena, Frank, Craig D. Bates, and Steven Medley, eds. 1993. Legends of theYosemite Miwok. Yosemite National Park, Calif.: The Yosemite Association.Latta, Frank. 1936. California Indian Folklore, as told to F. F. Latta by Wah-nomkot, Wah-hum-chah, Lee-mee [and others]. Shafter, Calif.: Shafter Press.Lee, Dorothy [Demetracopoulou]. 1940.
“A Wintu Girl's Puberty Ceremony.”
New Mexico Anthropologist4.4: 57–60.Lee, Dorothy [Demetracopoulou]. 1944.
“Linguistic Reflection of Wintu Thought.”
IJAL10.4: 181–187.Lee, Dorothy [Demetracopoulou]. 1959. Freedom and Culture. Englewood Cli s, N.J.: Prentice-Hall.Lévi-Strauss, Claude. 1981. The Naked Man. Introduction to a Science of Mythology 4. New York: Harper and Row. (Translation of L'Homme Nu [Paris: Plon, 1971].)Loeb, Edwin. 1926.
“Pomo Folkways.”
UCPAAE19.2: 149–405.Lord, Alfred. 1960. The Singer of Tales. Harvard Studies in Comparative Literature 24. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.Lowie, Robert H.1963.
“Washo Texts.”
Anthropological Linguistics5.7: 1–30. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.Luthin, Herbert W.1991.
“Restorin. the Voice in Yanan Traditional Narrative: Prosody, Performance, and Presentational Form.”
Ph.D. diss., University ofCalifornia at Berkeley.Luthin, Herbert W.1994.
“Two Stories from the Yana: ‘The Drowning of Young Buzzard's Wife’ and ‘A Story of Wildcat, Rolling Skull.’”
In Coming to Light, ed. BrianSwann, 717–736. New York: Random House.― 599 ―
Manriquez, L. Frank. 1998. Acorn Soup. Berkeley: Heyday Books.Margolin, Malcolm. 1978. The Ohlone Way. Berkeley: Heyday Books.Margolin, Malcolm. 1993. The Way We Lived: California Indian Stories, Songs, and Reminiscences. Berkeley: Heyday Books.Margolin, Malcolm, and Yolanda Montijo, eds. 1995. Native Ways: CaliforniaIndian Stories and Memories. Berkeley: Heyday Books.Matthiessen, Peter. 1979.
“Stop the GO Road.”
Audubon Magazine 81.1 (January): 49–84.Mayfield, Thomas Je erson, and Malcolm Margolin. 1993. Indian Summer: Traditional Life among the Choinumne Indians of California's San Joaquin Valley. Berkeley: Heyday Books and The California Historical Society.McKibbin, Grace, and Alice Shepherd. 1997. In My Own Words: Stories, Songs, and Memories of Grace McKibbin, Wintu. Berkeley: Heyday Books.McLendon, Sally. 1975. A Grammar of Eastern Pomo. UCPL 71.McLendon, Sally. 1982.
“Meaning, Rhetorical Structure, and Discourse Organization in Myth.”
In Analyzing Discourse: Text and Talk, ed. Deborah Tannen, 284–305. Washington, D.C.: Georgetown University Press.McLendon, Sally. 1990.
“Pomo Baskets: The Legacy of William and Mary Benson.”
Native Peoples4.1: 26–33.McLendon, Sally, and Michael J. Lowy. 1978.
“Eastern Pomo and Southeastern Pomo.”
CAL-HB: 306–323.McLendon, Sally, and Robert L. Oswalt. 1978.
“Pomo: Introduction.”
CAL-HB: 274–288.Merriam, C. Hart. 1910. The Dawn of the World: Myths and Weird Tales Told bythe Mewan Indians of California. Cleveland: Arthur Clark..Merriam, C. Hart. 1930.
“The New River Indians Tol-hom-tah-hoi.”
American Anthropologist32: 280–293.Miller, Wick. 1967. Uto-Aztecan Cognate Sets. UCPL 48.Miller, Wick. 1972. New, Natekwinappeh: Shoshoni Stories and Dictionary. Anthropological Papers 94. Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press.Mithun, Marianne. 1993.
“Frances Jack, 1912–1993.”
[Obituary.] NNC7.3 (summer): 11–13.Mixco, Mauricio. 1983. Kiliwa Texts: ‘When I have donned my crest of stars.’ Anthropological Papers 107, Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press.Moratto, Michael J.1984. California Archaeology. Orlando, Fla.: Academic Press.Mourning Dove, a Yurok/English Tale. 1993. Berkeley: Heyday Books.Munro, Pamela. 1976. Mojave Syntax. New York: Garland.Nettl, Bruno. 1965.
“The Songs of Ishi: Musical Styles of the Yahi Indians.”
Musical Quarterly51.3: 460–477.Nevin, Bruce E.1991.
“Obsolescence in Achumawi: Why Uldall Too?”
In Papers from the American Indian Languages Conferences, Held at the University of California, Santa Cruz, July and August 1991. Occasional Papers on Linguistics 16: 97–127. Carbondale: Department of Linguistics, Southern Illinois University.― 600 ―
Nevin, Bruce E.1998.
“Aspects of Pit River Phonology.”
Ph.D. diss., University of Pennsylvania.Newman, Stanley A.1940.
“Linguistic Aspects of Yokuts Narrative Style.”
UCAR5.1: 4–8.Newman, Stanley A.1944. Yokuts Language of California. Viking Fund Publications on Anthropology 2. New York: Viking Fund.Nichols, Johanna. 1992. Linguistic Diversity in Time and Space. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Nichols, Michael P.1981.
“Old California Uto-Aztecan.” RSCOIL 1: 5–41”
. Berkeley: Survey of California and Other Indian Languages, University of California.Nolasquez, Roscinda, and Anne Galloway. 1979. I'i Muluwit: First Book ofWords in the Cupeño Indian Language of Southern California. Pala, Calif.:Alderbooks.Norton, Jack. 1979. Genocide in Northwestern California: When Our Worlds Cried. San Francisco: Indian Historian Press.Ochoa Zazueta, Jesús Ángel. 1976. Ya'abú ti'nñar jaspuy'pai (Esta es la EscrituraPai'pai). Cuadernos de Trabajo 2. Mexicali: Colección Paisano, UniversidadAutónoma de Baja California.Olmsted, David L.1966. Achumawi Dictionary. UCPL 45.Olmsted, David L.1984. A Lexicon of Atsugewi. RSCOIL 5.Oswalt, Robert. 1961.
“A Kashaya Grammar.”
Ph.D. diss., University of California at Berkeley.Oswalt, Robert. 1964. Kashaya Texts. UCPL 36.Oswalt, Robert. 1975. K'ahŝáya cahno kalikakh [Kashaya Word Book]. Rohnert Park: Kashaya Pomo Languages in Culture Project, Department of Anthropology, California State University at Sonoma.Oswalt, Robert. 1977.
“Retribution for Mate-Stealing.”
In Northern California Texts, ed. Victor Golla and Shirley Silver. IJAL -NATS 2.2: 71–81.Parsons, Thomas, ed. 1971. The Yurok Language, Literature, and Culture. Textbook, 2d ed. (mimeo). Arcata, Calif.: Center for Community Development, Humboldt State College.Pilling, Arnold R.1978.
“Yurok.”
CAL-HB: 137–154.Pitkin, Harvey. 1977.
“Coyote and Bullhead.”
In Northern California Texts, ed. Victor Golla and Shirley Silver. IJAL -NATS 2.2: 82–104.Pitkin, Harvey. 1984. Wintu Grammar. UCPL 94.Pitkin, Harvey. 1985. Wintu Dictionary. UCPL 95.Pope, Saxton T.1918.
“Yahi Archery.”
UCPAAE13.3.― 601 ―
Powers, Stephen. 1877. Tribes of California. Contributions to North American Ethnology 3. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Geographical and Geological Surveyof the Rocky Mountain Region.Pratt, Richard H.1964. Battlefield and Classroom: Four Decades with the American Indian, 1867–1904. New Haven: Yale University Press.Propp, Vladímir. 1968. Morphology of the Folktale. Austin: University of Texas Press.Radin, Paul. 1924.
“Wappo Texts: First Series.”
UCPAAE19.1: 1–147.Rawls, James J.1984. Indians of California: The Changing Image. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press.Reichard, Gladys. 1925.
“Wiyot Grammar and Texts.”
UCPAAE22.1: 1–215.Richardson, Nancy. 1992.
“The State of Our Languages.”
NNC 7.1 (winter): 40–41.Richardson, Nancy. 1994.
“Indian Language Is Happening in California.”
NNC8.3 (winter): 47–49.Ri e, Je, and Pamela Roberts, prods. and dirs. 1994. Ishi, the Last Yahi. Written by Ann Makepeace. Newton, N.J.: Shanachie Entertainment Corp.Roberts, Helen H.1933. Form in Primitive Music: An Analytical and Comparative Study of the Melodic Form of Some Ancient Southern California IndianSongs. New York: W. W. Norton.Robins, R. H.1958. Th. Yurok Language: Grammar, Texts, Lexicon. UCPL 15.Robins, R. H., and Norma McLeod. 1956.
“Fiv, Yurok Songs: A Musical and Textual Analysis.”
Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies18:592–609. University of London.Sackheim, Daniel, dir. 1996. Grand Avenue. Santa Monica, Calif.: Wildwood Enterprises and Elsboy Entertainment.Sapir, Edward. 1910.
“Yana Texts (together with Yana Myths, collected by Roland B. Dixon).”
UCPAAE9.1.Sapir, Edward. 1925.
“The Hokan Affinity of Subtiaba in Nicaragua.”
American Anthropologist27.3: 402–435 and 27.4: 491–527.Sapir, Edward. Forthcoming.
“Unpublished Yahi Texts (1915).”
In The Collected Worksof Edward Sapir, vol. 9, ed. Victor Golla, Leanne Hinton, Herbert W. Luthin, and Jean Perry. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter.Sapir, Edward, and Victor Golla. Forthcoming.
“Hupa Texts, with Notes and Lexicon.”
In The Collected Works of Edward Sapir, vol. 14, ed. Victor Gollaand Sean O'Neill. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter.Sapir, Edward, and Leslie Spier. 1943.
“Notes on the Culture of the Yana.”
UCAR3.3.Sarris, Greg. 1993. Keeping Slug Woman Alive: A Holistic Approach to AmericanIndian Texts. Berkeley: University of California Press.Sarris, Greg. 1994a. Grand Avenue. New York: Hyperion Press.― 602 ―
Sarris, Greg. 1994b. Mabel McKay: Weaving the Dream. Berkeley: University of California Press.Sarris, Greg, ed. 1994c. The Sound of Rattles and Clappers: A Collection of New California Indian Writing. Tucson: University of Arizona Press.Saubel, Katherine Siva, and Pamela Munro. 1981. Chem'ivillu': Let's SpeakCahuilla. Los Angeles: American Indian Studies Center, University of California.Schlicter, Alice. 1981. Wintu Dictionary. RSCOIL 2.Schlicter, Alice. 1986.
“The Origins and Deictic Nature of Wintu Evidentials.”
In Evidentiality: The Linguistic Coding of Epistemology, ed. Wallace Chafe and Johanna Nichols, 46–59. Norwood, N.J.: Ablex Publishing.Seaburg, William. 1977.
“A Wailaki (Athapaskan) Text with Comparative Notes.”
IJAL43: 327–332.Seiler, Hansjakob. 1970. Cahuilla Texts, with an Introduction. Indiana University Language Science Monographs 6. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.Shepherd, Alice [Schlicter].1989. Wintu Texts. UCPL 117.Sherzer, Joel. 1987.
“Poetic Structuring of Kuna Discourse: The Line.”
In Native American Discourse: Poetics and Rhetoric, ed. Joel Sherzer and AnthonyC. Woodbury, 103–139. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Sherzer, Joel, and Anthony C. Woodbury. 1987. Native American Discourse: Poetics and Rhetoric. Cambridge Studies in Oral and Written Culture. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Shipley, William. 1963. Maidu Texts and Dictionary. UCPL 33.Shipley, William. 1964. Maidu Grammar. UCPL 41.Shipley, William. 1978.
“Native Languages of California.”
CAL-HB: 80–90.Shipley, William. 1991. The Maidu Indian Myths and Stories of Hánc'ibyjim. Berkeley: Heyday Books.Shipley, William, and Richard Alan Smith. 1979.
“The Roles of Cognation and Di usion in a Theory of Maidun Prehistory.”
Journal of California and GreatBasin Anthropology—Papers in Linguistics1: 65–74.Silver, Shirley. 1978.
“Chimariko.”
CAL-HB: 205–210.Silverstein, Michael. 1979.
“Penutian: An Assessment.”
In The Languages ofNative America, ed. Lyle Campbell and Marianne Mithun, 650–691. Austin:University of Texas Press.Slagle, Allogan. 1987.
“The Native American Tradition and Legal Status: Tolowa Tales and Tolowa Places.”
Cultural Critique7: 103–118.Smith, Bertha. 1904. Yosemite Legends. San Francisco: Paul Elder and Co.Smith, Charles R.1978.
“Tübatulabal.”
CAL-HB: 437–445.Snyder, Gary. 1975.
“The Incredible Survival of Coyote.”
Western American Literature9: 255–272.― 603 ―
Sparkman, Philip Stedman. 1908.
“Culture of the Luiseño Indians.”
UCPAAE8.Spier, Leslie. 1955.
“Mohave Culture Items.”
Museum of Northern Arizona Bulletin 28. Flagsta, Ariz.: Northern Arizona Society of Science and Art.Spott, Robert, and Alfred L. Kroeber. 1942.
“Yurok Narratives.”
UCPAAE35.9: 143–256.Strong, William Duncan. 1929. Aboriginal Society in Southern California. (Reprint, with an introduction by Lowell John Bean, Banning, Calif.: MalkiMuseum Press, 1972.)Swann, Brian. 1993. Song of the Sky: Versions of Native American Song-Poems. Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press.Swann, Brian. 1996. Wearing the Morning Star: Native American Song-Poems. New York: Random House.Swann, Brian, ed. 1983. Smoothing the Ground: Essays in Native American Oral Literature. Berkeley: University of California Press.Swann, Brian, ed. 1992. On the Translation of Native American Literatures. Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution Press.Swann, Brian, ed. 1994. Coming to Light: Contemporary Translations of the Native Literatures of North America. New York: Random House.Swann, Brian, and Arnold Krupat, eds. 1987. Recovering the Word: Essays on Native American Literature. Berkeley: University of California Press.Taylor, Alexander. 1860–1863.
“Indianology of California.”
Column in The California Farmer and Journal of Useful Arts, vols. 13–20, February 22, 1860, toOctober 30, 1863.Tedlock, Dennis. 1983. The Spoken Word and the Work of Interpretation. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press.Teixeira, Rachel. 1996a.
“California Indian Stories and the Spirit.”
NNC9.4.Teixeira, Rachel. 1996b.
“Like Air We Breathe.”
NNC9.4.Thompson, Lucy. 1991 [1916]. To the American Indian: Reminiscences of a YurokWoman. Berkeley: Heyday Books.Uldall, Stuart, and William Shipley. 1966. Nisenan Texts and Dictionary. UCPL 46.Valory, Dale, comp. 1971.
“Guide to Ethnographic Documents (1–203) of the Department and Museum of Anthropology.”
University of California Archives, Bancroft Library, Berkeley.Vizenor, Gerald. 1989. Narrative Chance: Postmodern Discourse on Native American Indian Literatures. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press.Voegelin, [Carl] Charles F.1935.
“Tübatulabal Texts.”
UCPAAE34.3: 191–246.Voegelin, Carl F., and Erminie Wheeler Voegelin. 1931–1933.
“Tübatulabal Mythsand Tales.”
[Unpublished Manuscript #73.] Ethnological Documents of theDepartment and Museum of Anthropology. University of California Archives, Bancroft Library, Berkeley.― 604 ―
Voegelin, Erminie [Wheeler].1937.
“Tübatulabal Ethnography.”
UCAR2.1: 1–90.Wallace, William J.1978a.
“Post-Pleistocene Archaeology, 9000 to 2000 b.c.”
CAL-HB: 25–36.Wallace, William J.1978b.
“Hupa, Chilula and Whilkut.”
CAL-HB: 164–179.Wallace, William J.1978c.
“Southern Valley Yokuts.”
In CAL-HB: 448–461.Wallace, William J.1978d.
“Northern Valley Yokuts.”
In CAL-HB: 462–470.Wallace, William J.1978e.
“Comparative Literature.”
CAL-HB: 658–661.Wallace, William J., and J. S. Taylor. 1950.
“Hupa Sorcery.”
Southwestern Journal of Anthropology6: 188–196.Walters, Diane. 1977.
“Coyote and Moon Woman (Apwarukeyi).”
In NorthernCalifornia Texts, ed. Victor Golla and Shirley Silver. IJAL -NATS 2.2: 147–157.Waterman, T. T.1910.
“The Religious Practices of the Diegueño Indians.”
UCPAAE8.6: 271–358.Whistler, Kenneth W.1977a.
“Deer and Bear Children.”
In Northern California Texts, ed. Victor Golla and Shirley Silver. IJAL -NATS 2.2: 158–184.Whistler, Kenneth W.1977b.
“Wintun Prehistory: An Interpretation Based on Linguistic Reconstruction of Plant and Animal Nomenclature.”
Proceedings of the Annual Meeting of the Berkeley Linguistics Society3: 157–174.Whittemore, Kathrine. 1997.
“T, Converse with Creation: Saving California Indian Languages.”
Native Americas,114.3 (fall 1997): 46–53.Wilson, Darryl Babe. 1998. The Morning the Sun Went Down. Berkeley: Heyday Books.Wilson, Darryl Babe. Forthcoming. Yo-Kenaswi Usji (Necklace of Hearts). Tucson: Sun Tracksand the University of Arizona Press.Woiche, Istet. 1992 [1928].
“Annikadel: The History of the Universe as Told by theAchumawi Indians of California.”
Recorded and ed. C. Hart Merriam. Tucson: University of Arizona Press.Woodbury, Anthony C.1987.
“Rhetorical Structure in a Central Alaskan Yupik Eskimo Traditional Narrative.”
In Nativ. American Discourse: Poetics and Rhetoric, ed. Joel Sherzer and Anthony C. Woodbury, 176–239. Cambridge:Cambridge University Press.Yamane, Linda. 1995. When the World Ended—How Hummingbird Got Fire—How People Were Made: Rumsien Ohlone Stories. Told and illustrated by LindaYamane. Berkeley: Oyate Press.