Skip to content Skip to sidebar Skip to footer

Widget HTML #1

[Download] "Notes on the Kiowa Sun Dance" by Leslie Spier " Book PDF Kindle ePub Free

Notes on the Kiowa Sun Dance

📘 Read Now     📥 Download


eBook details

  • Title: Notes on the Kiowa Sun Dance
  • Author : Leslie Spier
  • Release Date : January 28, 2011
  • Genre: Social Science,Books,Nonfiction,
  • Pages : * pages
  • Size : 106 KB

Description

The Kiowa sun dance is the prerogative of the individual who owns the sacred image, the tai'me. He deputes the ancillary offices where he sees fit, although there is a well-defined tendency for them to be hereditary. The predominant idea of this image is that of a war medicine. Thus the dance is fundamentally like that of the Crow, but it differs from it in two important respects. First, the Kiowa rites cluster about only one particular medicine, whereas among the Crow, any one of a number of medicine dolls may be used in the ceremony. The question arises whether the dozen minor Kiowa images, which are sometimes brought into the dance, were more recently acquired or constructed in order to reproduce the functions of the tai'me, or whether one medicine doll has completely overshadowed all the others, as seemed about to happen among the Crow. The evidence favors the first view, since no rites, other than those attendant on any personal medicine, are described, or even intimated, for the minor images. The second difference is, that while the Crow shaman invokes his medicine for any one who appeals to him for aid, acting only in a directive capacity, the Kiowa tai'me owner is himself the principal suppliant. Were it not for the hereditary bias in the distribution of ceremonial functions, the Kiowa sun dance would be the prerogative of one man as completely as that of the Crow is, when the latter is once under way. The hereditary principle does not appear in the military societies except in the ownership of the medicine lance or arrow (zĂŤ'bo).


Ebook Free Online "Notes on the Kiowa Sun Dance" PDF ePub Kindle