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Overview2020 Choice Outstanding Academic Title Walks on the Ground is a record of Louis V. Headman’s personal study of the Southern Ponca people spanning seven decades, beginning with the historic notation of the Ponca people’s origins in the East. The last of the true Ponca speakers and storytellers entered Indian Territory in 1877, and most lived into the 1940s. In Ponca heritage, the history of individuals is told and passed along in songs of tribal members, and so Headman learned through singing with ceremonial singers such as Harry Buffalohead, Ed Littlecook, Oliver Littlecook, Eli Warrior, Dr. Sherman Warrior (son of Sylvester Warrior), Roland No Ear, and “Pee-wee” Clark. Headman’s father, Kenneth Headman, shared most of this history and culture with Louis during winter nights of storytelling. Other elders in the tribe confirmed Kenneth’s stories and insights and contributed to the history Louis Headman has written about the Ponca. Walks on the Ground traces changes in the tribe as reflected in educational processes, federal influences, and the dominant social structure and culture. Headman includes children’s stories and recognizes the contribution made by Ponca soldiers who served during both world wars, the Korean Conflict, the Vietnam War, Desert Storm, and the ongoing conflict in the Middle East. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Louis V. Headman , Sean O'NeillPublisher: University of Nebraska Press Imprint: University of Nebraska Press ISBN: 9781496241016ISBN 10: 1496241010 Pages: 568 Publication Date: 01 November 2024 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsList of Illustrations Foreword by Sean O’Neill Preface Acknowledgments Introduction Phonetic Key 1. Beginnings 2. Niobrara 3. Trade Agreements, Indian Treaties, and Indian Removal 4. Chief Standing Bear 5. Indian Territory 6. The Selection of Ponca Chiefs 7. The Ponca Reservation in Oklahoma 8. Ethnography 9. The Ponca Giveaway 10. The Old Ponca Heđúškà 11. New Heđúškà Dance Paraphernalia 12. The Ponca Singers 13. Ponca Heđúškà Songs 14. Family Structure and Kinship System 15. Marriage and Property 16. Clans of the Ponca 17. Ponca Names 18. Toys, Games, and Sports 19. Arts and Crafts 20. The Ponca Native American Church 21. The Christian Church in the Ponca Community 22. The Spirit World 23. The Funeral Rites 24. Ancient Ponca Burials and Practices 25. Ponca Medicine 26. Journey to the School House 27. Into the School House 28. Warriors of the Ponca 29. Political Governance Afterword Appendix: U.S. Treaty Obligations to Indian Tribes Notes Bibliography IndexReviews"""There are many audiences for this volume, but, read in tandem with Headman's Dictionary of the Ponca People (2019), it speaks most powerfully to the children, grandchildren, and great-grandchildren of the Ponca people. Here are the embers left to rekindle Ponca culture and language!""—Beth R. Ritter, Great Plains Quarterly ""Headman has produced an important work for the Great Plains region and for the growing literature of Indigenous-produced histories.""—Phoebe Labat, South Dakota History ""This superb history of the Ponca Nation is part of the University of Nebraska Press’s effort to publish First Nations’ histories written by native historians, rather than outsiders. . . . Throughout Headman amplifies, clarifies, and enriches topics, emphasizing Ponca as a distinct nation, though reduced in numbers over time. This substantial volume should be absorbed, not skimmed.""—A. B. Kehoe, Choice ""Headman positions himself as one in a long and ongoing chain of Ponca storytellers, and by bringing together voices of a prior generation of tribal elders and adapting those stories to a written format, Headman participates in the long history of Ponca resiliency and adaptation Walks on the Ground narrates.""—David Dry, Chronicles of Oklahoma “This book is a jewel because it presents an insider’s view drawn from the insights of Ponca elders with whom the author talked during many years while simultaneously bringing outside scholarly assessments into the mix. Specialists on the American Indian, whether anthropologists, archaeologists, sociologists, political scientists, or historians, as well as the general reader, will gain insights from the work.”—Blue Clark, professor of American Indian Studies at Oklahoma City University “A welcome model of how to do collaborative ethnography from within a culture and how to synthesize and evaluate information from multiple sources. . . . This volume, in an accessible way, leads the reader toward an understanding of how to see the Ponca as the Ponca see themselves.”—Regna Darnell, Distinguished University Professor of Anthropology and First Nations Studies at the University of Western Ontario" """A welcome model of how to do collaborative ethnography from within a culture and how to synthesize and evaluate information from multiple sources. . . . This volume, in an accessible way, leads the reader toward an understanding of how to see the Ponca as the Ponca see themselves.""--Regna Darnell, Distinguished University Professor of Anthropology and First Nations Studies at the University of Western Ontario-- (2/23/2019 12:00:00 AM) ""This book is a jewel because it presents an insider's view drawn from the insights of Ponca elders with whom the author talked during many years while simultaneously bringing outside scholarly assessments into the mix. Specialists on the American Indian, whether anthropologists, archaeologists, sociologists, political scientists, or historians, as well as the general reader, will gain insights from the work.""--Blue Clark, professor of American Indian Studies at Oklahoma City University-- (2/23/2019 12:00:00 AM) ""Headman has produced an important work for the Great Plains region and for the growing literature of Indigenous-produced histories.""--Phoebe Labat, South Dakota History ""Headman positions himself as one in a long and ongoing chain of Ponca storytellers, and by bringing together voices of a prior generation of tribal elders and adapting those stories to a written format, Headman participates in the long history of Ponca resiliency and adaptation Walks on the Ground narrates.""--David Dry, Chronicles of Oklahoma ""There are many audiences for this volume, but, read in tandem with Headman's Dictionary of the Ponca People (2019), it speaks most powerfully to the children, grandchildren, and great-grandchildren of the Ponca people. Here are the embers left to rekindle Ponca culture and language!""--Beth R. Ritter, Great Plains Quarterly ""This superb history of the Ponca Nation is part of the University of Nebraska Press's effort to publish First Nations' histories written by native historians, rather than outsiders. . . . Throughout Headman amplifies, clarifies, and enriches topics, emphasizing Ponca as a distinct nation, though reduced in numbers over time. This substantial volume should be absorbed, not skimmed.""--A. B. Kehoe, Choice" Author InformationLouis V. Headman (Ponca elder, Oklahoma) is the project coordinator of the Ponca Language Grant and pastor of the Church of the Nazarene in Ponca City. He is a coauthor of Dictionary of the Ponca People (Nebraska, 2020). Sean O’Neill is a professor of anthropology at the University of Oklahoma. He is a coauthor of Dictionary of the Ponca People (Nebraska, 2020). Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |