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New Voices for Old Words
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Table of Contents

Contributors

Foreword

Introduction

DAVID J. COSTA

 

Editing a Gros Ventre (White Clay) text

TERRY BROCKIE AND ANDREW COWELL

Gros Ventre text:

The Gros Ventres Go to War

 

Redacting Premodern Texts without Speakers: the Peoria Story of

Wiihsakacaakwa

DAVID J. COSTA

Peoria text:

Wiihsakacaakwa Aalhsoohkaakani (Wiihsakacaakwa Story)

 

Editing and Using Arapaho-Language Manuscript Sources: A

Comparative Perspective

ANDREW COWELL

Arapaho texts:

A Name-Changing Prayer

Nihʼoo3oo and His Friend the Beaver Catcher: Diving

through the Ice

 

Highlighting Rhetorical Structure through Syntactic Analysis: An

Illustrated Meskwaki Text by Alfred Kiyana

AMY DAHLSTROM

Meskwaki text:

A Man Who Fasted Long Ago

 

Three Nineteenth-Century Munsee Texts: Archaisms, Dialect

Variation, and Problems of Textual Criticism

IVES GODDARD

Munsee texts:

A Youth and His Uncle

Moshkim

Origin Myth

On Editing Bill Leaf's Meskwaki Texts

LUCY THOMASON

Meskwaki text:

Bill Leaf's Story of Red-Leggins

 

Challenges of Editing and Presenting the Corpus of Potawatomi

Stories Told by Jim and Alice Spear to Charles Hockett

LAURA WELCHER

Potawatomi text:

Jejakos Gigabé (Crane Boy)

 

The Words of Black Hawk: Restoring a Long-Ignored Bilingual

GORDON WHITTAKER

Sauk text:

The Nekanawîni ('My Words') of Mahkatêwimeshikêhkêhkwa

Index

About the Author

David J. Costa is the program director of the Language Research Office at the Myaamia Center at Miami University. He is the author of The Miami-Illinois Language (Nebraska, 2003).

Reviews

"This book offers a significant contribution to tribal pedagogy."-Paul Zolbrod, Tribal Colllege “These carefully edited texts, in eight Algonquian languages no longer widely spoken, show how premodern records can be made accessible to readers interested in the traditional narratives and linguistic styles of an earlier time. They provide models for future philological studies as well as reliable data on some little-known languages.”-David H. Pentland, professor of Algonquian studies at the University of Manitoba  

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