Academic literature on the topic 'Zuni mythology'

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Journal articles on the topic "Zuni mythology"

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Vail, Gabrielle. "VENUS LORE IN THE POSTCLASSIC MAYA CODICES: DEITY MANIFESTATIONS OF THE MORNING AND EVENING STAR." Ancient Mesoamerica 28, no. 2 (2017): 475–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0956536116000274.

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AbstractThis study explores the mythology surrounding the appearances and disappearances of Venus from the sky and the role the morning and evening star aspects of Venus played in Maya divinatory and astronomical texts. Ethnographic and ethnohistoric sources link the morning star aspect of Venus with a series of bearded hunting deities. Representations of these figures—armed with the accoutrements of Venus—have recently been identified in the hunting almanacs of the Madrid Codex. Other codical manifestations of Venus include the rain deity Chaak, who appears as both the morning and evening sta
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Books on the topic "Zuni mythology"

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Benedict, Ruth. Zuni mythology. Martino Pub., 2007.

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Cushing, Frank Hamilton. The mythic world of the Zuni. University of New Mexico Press, 1988.

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3

Geneste, Éric. Kachina: Messagers des dieux hopis et zuñis = messengers of the Hopi and Zuñi gods. Somogy, 2011.

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Barton, Wright, ed. Classic Hopi and Zuni kachina figures. Museum of New Mexico Press, 2006.

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Bird, Linderman Frank. Native American myths and legends: Collections of traditional stories from the Sioux, Blackfeet, Chippewa, Hopi, Navajo, Zuni and others. Red and Black Publishers, 2013.

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Zuñi folk tales. University of Arizona Press, 1986.

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Meditations with animals: A Native American bestiary from the voices of Creek, Natchez, Chickasaw, Winnebago, Haida, Tlingit, Kwakuitl, Zuni, Navajo, Apache, Santo Domingo, Sioux, Osage, Anasazi. Bear, 1986.

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Zui shou du zhe xi ai de shen hua gu shi. Guang ming ri bao chu ban she, 2011.

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ill, Wu Jianfeng, ed. Wo zui xi ai de Zhongguo shen hua. Tian xia yuan jian chu ban gu fen you xian gong si, 2009.

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Shen gui ji: Qi jin wei zhi zui wan mei de Zhonghua shi qian shen hua shi. Xin shi jie chu ban she, 2006.

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Book chapters on the topic "Zuni mythology"

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"An Introduction to Zuñi Mythology* 1." In An Anthropologist at Work, edited by Benedict Ruth and Mead Margaret. Routledge, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315082387-21.

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"Hopi Religion The author gratefully acknowledges the assistance of Alice Schlegel in the preparation of this chapter. Alice Schlegel, a professor of anthropology at the University of Arizona, has maintained contacts among the Hopi for over twenty years and has written extensively on gender aspects of Hopi society and religion as well as comparative studies of adolescence. The sources for the data on sex/gender aspects of Hopi culture and religion are primarily the works of Alice Schlegel; the interpretations are predominantly due to her insights; and quotations not otherwise noted are from her writings: “The Adolescent Socialization of the Hopi Girl ,” Ethnology 12 (1973): 440–462; “Hopi Joking and Castration Threats,” Linguistics and Anthropology: In Honor of C.F. Voegelin , ed. M. D. Kinkade , H. Hale , & O. Werner ( Lisse, Netherlands : Peter de Ridder Press, 1975): 521–529; “Male and Female in Hopi Thought and Action,” in Sexual Stratification: A Cross-Cultural View , ed. A. Schlegel ( New York : Columbia University Press, 1977): 245–269; “Sexual Antagonism Among the Sexually Egalitarian Hopi ,” Ethos 7 (1979): 124–141; “Hopi Gender Ideology of Female Superiority ,” Quarterly Journal of Ideology 8/4 (1984): 44–52; “Fathers, Daughters, and Kachina Dolls ,” European Review of Native American Studies 3/1 (1989): 7–10; “Gender Meanings: General and Specific,” in Beyond the Second Sex: New Directions in the Anthropology of Gender , ed. P. R. Sanday & R. G. Goodenough ( Philadelphia : University of Philadelphia Press, 1990): 23–41; and “The Two Aspects of Hopi Grandmotherhood” (manuscript). The data for most other aspects of Hopi religion are from the writings of Armin Geertz, as well as extensive personal conversations with him, for which the author is most grateful. Of Geertz’s many publications, the most relevant to this chapter are the following: “A Reed Pierced the Sky: Hopi Indian Cosmography on Third Mesa, Arizona,” Numen 31 (1984): 216–241; Hopi Indian Altar Iconography ( Leiden : E. J. Brill, 1987); with Michael Lomatuway’ma , Children of Cottonwood: Piety and Ceremonialism in Hopi Indian Puppetry ( Lincoln : University of Nebraska Press, 1987) (it is to be noted that the orthography for Hopi words are from this work); “Hopi Hermeneutics: Ritual Person Among the Hopi Indians of Arizona,” in Concepts of Person in Religion and Thought ( Berlin : de Gruyter, 1990): 309–335; and “Structural Elements in Uto-Aztecan Mythology: The Hopi Example” (manuscript). The material on ritual is in large part from Mischa Titiev , Old Oraibi: A Study of the Hopi Indians of Third Mesa ( Cambridge : Peabody Museum, 1944). For Maasaw, Ekkehart Malotki and Michael Lomatuway’ma , Maasaw: Profile of a Hopi God ( Lincoln : University of Nebraska Press, 1987) is important, as is Hamilton A. Tylor , Pueblo Gods and Myths ( Norman : University of Oklahoma Press, 1964) for deities in general. Also referred to for this chapter are Leo W. Simmons , ed., Sun Chief: The Autobiography of a Hopi Indian ( New Haven : Yale University Press, 1942) for a male perspective; and Tracy Pintchman , “Speculative Patterns in Hopi Cosmology ,” Studies in Religion 22 (1993): 351–364. The data on Papago religion is from Ruth M. Underhill , Papago Woman ( New York : Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1979). The analysis of Zuni culture is from John W. M. Whiting et al., “The Learning of Values,” in People of Rimrock: A Study of Values in Five Cultures , ed. Evon Vogt and Ethel M. Albert ( Cambridge : Harvard University Press, 1967): 83–125/107." In Through the Earth Darkly : Female Spirituality in Comparative Perspective. Bloomsbury Academic, 1996. http://dx.doi.org/10.5040/9781350005631.ch-009.

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