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John Reed Swanton

Personal Information

Born January 1, 1873
Died January 1, 1958 (85 years old)
Gardiner, United States
Also known as: John R. Swanton, John Reed, Swanton
24 books
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19 readers

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Books

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Tiny Bat and the ball game

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A retelling of a traditonal Indian legend from the southeastern United States in which a contest between two rival groups of animals is peaceably resolved.

Anthropology in North America

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Papers presented by the American Anthropological Association and the American Folk-Lore Society to the nineteenth International Congress of Americanists, October 1914. Topics include mythology, religion, physical anthropology, material culture etc. of North American Indians.

Creek religion and medicine

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"Weaving together a wide array of historical sources with oral accounts gathered from fieldwork, this study provides a valuable overview of traditional Creek (Muskogee) religion and medicine. John R. Swanton visited the Creek Nation in the early twentieth century and learned about many important aspects of Creek religious life and medicine. Subjects covered in this book include Creek conceptions of the cosmos; religious stories; death and the afterlife; spiritual forces and beings; various rituals, including the Busk ceremony; prohibitions; the power and skills of different religious practitioners; the cultural force of witchcraft; and herbal and spiritual remedies. Many of these beliefs and practices have been present throughout Creek history and persist today. Creek Religion and Medicine showcases the vibrant culture of an enduring southeastern Native people."--BOOK JACKET.

Early history of the Creek Indians and their neighbors

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Deals with all nations once belonging to the Creek Confederacy: Hitchiti, Alabama, and Choctaw groups; Tuskegee, Guale, Yamasee, Cusabo, Chatot, Osochi; Muskogee and Natchez branches; Uchean and Timuquanan stock; South Florida Indians; Tamahiti.

Source material on the history and ethnology of the Caddo Indians

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The Caddo Indians originally lived in Texas and Louisiana.

Tlingit myths and texts

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These myths and texts were collected at Sitka and Wrangell, Alaska, in early 1904, at the same time as the material contained in the writer's paper on the Social Condition, Beliefs, and Linguistic Relationship of the Tlingit Indians published in the twenty-sixth Annual Report of the Bureau.