18th Annual Plains Indian Museum Pow Wow - Poster. - 1999 Archival » Archival Items Description Poster advertising the pow wow, held in the Robbie Pow Wow Garden of the Buffalo Bill Historical Center. Login or Register to create bookmarks.
Dance: Celebration and Resistance. Native American Indian Intertribal Powwow Performance Theses Author/Creator Ann Marguerite Axtmann Description Performance Studies Thesis (Ph. D.)--New York University, 1999. Login or Register to create bookmarks.
Dance Competitions Articles » General Author/Creator Pat Deiter Saskatchewan Indian, vol. 29, no. 2, Powwow Issue, 1999, p. 21 Description Contemporary powwow committee roles and their origins Login or Register to create bookmarks.
George Ceepeekous: Dancer Articles » General Saskatchewan Indian, vol. 29, no. 2, Powwow Issue, 1999, pp. 3, 6-7, 15, 17, 19, 22, 2 Description Reflections of a powwow Prairie Chicken Dancer. Login or Register to create bookmarks.
The Native American Powwow: A Contemporary Authentication of a Cultural Artifact Alternate Title The Native American Powwow: A Contemporary Authentication of a Cultural Artefact Theses Author/Creator Lita Mathews Description Educational Thought and Sociocultural Studies Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of New Mexico, 1999. Login or Register to create bookmarks.
The Northern Traditional Powwow Clothing Style and the United States Postal Service: A Study in Conflicting Meanings Theses Author/Creator Aaron Fry Description Art History Thesis (M.A.)--The University of New Mexico, 1999. Login or Register to create bookmarks.
Planning a Good Celebration Articles » General Author/Creator D. Tootoosis Saskatchewan Indian, vol. 29, no. 2, Powwow Issue, 1999, pp. 23-24 Description Outlines the committee work needed to stage a good powwow. Login or Register to create bookmarks.
Powwow Patter: Indian Emcee Discourse on Power and Identity Articles » Scholarly, peer reviewed Author/Creator Daniel J. Gelo Journal of American Folklore, vol. 112, no. 443, Winter, 1999, pp. [40-57] Description Comments on the important role the master of ceremonies or emcee plays in the success of the powwow. Login or Register to create bookmarks.
"We Don't Want Your Rations, We Want This Dance": The Changing Use of Song and Dance on the Southern Plains Articles » Scholarly, peer reviewed Author/Creator Clyde Ellis Western Historical Quarterly, vol. 30, no. 2, Summer, 1999, pp. 133-154 Description Studies the origins of the current powwow and the link to traditional forms of dance and belief. Login or Register to create bookmarks.