LinkBack Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes
  #1   Report Post  
gonefishiing
 
Posts: n/a
Default

i would not recomend looking for the place i mentioned
it is a sacred lakota place
and i was only there by special invitation
i have most always found the lakota to be friendly and helpful
some are not and the bitterness is evident.
and i would say understandable.
gf.

"katysails" wrote in message
...
Finding things on your own when you're not Lakota could be
problematic....we bought some stuff at the store there (and took a picture
of a cow standing on top of a 12 ft pile of rubble). Very friendly to me
in that store, but not to Mr Sails....
"gonefishiing" wrote in message
...
been thru the badlands several times
once while traveling across the country for 2 years in the mid 1980's
i also have some startling photos of the badlands

after that: several times work related and with students
no, i never made it to chief crazy horse or mt. rushmore for that matter.
crow dogs paradise is a special unknown place on the lakota res.
but you'll have to find it on your own!
amazing...........have not thought about this for some time.
gf.


"katysails" wrote in message
...
I took some cool pictures when we were in the Badlands....it was a day
when the sunlight was really filtered so the effect on the mud strata
interesting to shoot....
Did you go to the museum at Chief Crazy Horse Mountain? Wish they would
get that doen so we could go see it finished.







  #2   Report Post  
katysails
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Have you read _Honta Yo_? It's one of the best books I've ever read....

"gonefishiing" wrote in message
...
i would not recomend looking for the place i mentioned
it is a sacred lakota place
and i was only there by special invitation
i have most always found the lakota to be friendly and helpful
some are not and the bitterness is evident.
and i would say understandable.
gf.

"katysails" wrote in message
...
Finding things on your own when you're not Lakota could be
problematic....we bought some stuff at the store there (and took a
picture of a cow standing on top of a 12 ft pile of rubble). Very
friendly to me in that store, but not to Mr Sails....
"gonefishiing" wrote in message
...
been thru the badlands several times
once while traveling across the country for 2 years in the mid 1980's
i also have some startling photos of the badlands

after that: several times work related and with students
no, i never made it to chief crazy horse or mt. rushmore for that
matter.
crow dogs paradise is a special unknown place on the lakota res.
but you'll have to find it on your own!
amazing...........have not thought about this for some time.
gf.


"katysails" wrote in message
...
I took some cool pictures when we were in the Badlands....it was a day
when the sunlight was really filtered so the effect on the mud strata
interesting to shoot....
Did you go to the museum at Chief Crazy Horse Mountain? Wish they
would get that doen so we could go see it finished.








  #3   Report Post  
gonefishiing
 
Posts: n/a
Default

no i have not
what is this book?
gf.

"katysails" wrote in message
...
Have you read _Honta Yo_? It's one of the best books I've ever read....



  #4   Report Post  
katysails
 
Posts: n/a
Default

It was a book written in tandem about the Lakota...the author wrote the
basic story, then went to the Lakota and had it translated into their
language and then went back and translated that into English so that it
would be truly representative of their history. It is a great book. If you
are interested in the history of the Sioux nation, it is probably one of the
best.
"gonefishiing" wrote in message
...
no i have not
what is this book?
gf.

"katysails" wrote in message
...
Have you read _Honta Yo_? It's one of the best books I've ever read....





  #5   Report Post  
gonefishiing
 
Posts: n/a
Default

thanks
i will look it up
gf.

"katysails" wrote in message
...
It was a book written in tandem about the Lakota...the author wrote the
basic story, then went to the Lakota and had it translated into their
language and then went back and translated that into English so that it
would be truly representative of their history. It is a great book. If
you are interested in the history of the Sioux nation, it is probably one
of the best.
"gonefishiing" wrote in message
...
no i have not
what is this book?
gf.

"katysails" wrote in message
...
Have you read _Honta Yo_? It's one of the best books I've ever read....









  #6   Report Post  
DSK
 
Posts: n/a
Default

katysails wrote:
... (about 'Hanta Yo')...


Yes, that is really a great book. I read it as a teenager and was bowled
over...

It was a book written in tandem about the Lakota...the author wrote the
basic story, then went to the Lakota and had it translated into their
language and then went back and translated that into English so that it
would be truly representative of their history. It is a great book. If you
are interested in the history of the Sioux nation, it is probably one of the
best.


Agreed... a must for anybody interested in American culture and history.

DSK


  #7   Report Post  
gonefishiing
 
Posts: n/a
Default

i did a search on amazon.com and came up empty
anyone have an isbn number
katie?
dsk?

gf.
thanks

"DSK" wrote in message
. ..
katysails wrote:
... (about 'Hanta Yo')...


Yes, that is really a great book. I read it as a teenager and was bowled
over...

It was a book written in tandem about the Lakota...the author wrote the
basic story, then went to the Lakota and had it translated into their
language and then went back and translated that into English so that it
would be truly representative of their history. It is a great book. If
you are interested in the history of the Sioux nation, it is probably one
of the best.


Agreed... a must for anybody interested in American culture and history.

DSK




  #8   Report Post  
DSK
 
Posts: n/a
Default

gonefishiing wrote:
i did a search on amazon.com and came up empty
anyone have an isbn number
katie?
dsk?


They've got it... although fewer (12) than I would have thought. I may
pick up a copy myself.

http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg...19333?v=glance

One of the changes in the U.S. that I like the least is the fading of
pioneer spirit & values... after 3 generations raised by TV and having
consumer culture rammed down our throats... for that matter who even
reads books any more?

Regards
Doug King

  #9   Report Post  
Joe
 
Posts: n/a
Default

DSK wrote in message news:1Zthd.26687

Agreed... a must for anybody interested in American culture and history.

DSK


Total fiction BS DSK. Ask any injun.

Joe
  #10   Report Post  
MIB529
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Let's ask alt.native about Hanta Yo, though I'm pretty sure of the
response.

"katysails" wrote in message ...
It was a book written in tandem about the Lakota...the author wrote the
basic story, then went to the Lakota and had it translated into their
language and then went back and translated that into English so that it
would be truly representative of their history.


In particular, in archaic English. Her Lakota glossary is all wrong too.
(In fact, "hanta yo" best translates as "Scram!", and it implies only one
listener, usually a child.) Her knowledge of Lakota culture is even worse;
here are some of the worst offenses:

*The gratuitous sex scenes. Between ritualized fellatio and sodomizing
captives, to quote that hoochie in Smoke Signals, "That was a fine example
of the oral tradition." Seriously, though, I am Lakota, and I've never
heard of ritualized fellatio. And war was a time of celibacy, much like
how athletes avoid sex before the big game.
*The incorrect assumption that two generations of Dakota consciously
changed their dialect. The idea that language can change so rapidly is
dubious.
*The equally incorrect assumption that bifurcate merging kin terms are a
conscious choice; one could argue something far more convincingly about
lineal kin terms in English, which originally had a bifurcate collateral
system, much like Arabic or Chinese. (In fact, in the surviving Indian
languages, bifurcate merging seems to be the rule, not the exception.)
*The assertion that the Sun Dance was originally a woodlands ceremony,
which certainly explains why there's no evidence of anyone west of the
Mississippi doing it, but a lot of peoples on the plains do.
*The indefensible statement that words such as "admit", "assume", etc.
Apparently tokis, chuke, and a host of other words which translate
directly as words Hill said didn't exist, don't count.
*"The American Indian, even before Columbus, was the remnant of a very old
race in its final stage, a race that had attained perhaps the highest
working concept of individualism ever practiced." Between the 19th-century
bias obvious by the use of the word 'race' and the complete ignorance of
the nature of the Lakota economy, it's clear she's thinking with Ayn Rand
now.
*Her views of Lakota marriage. Her presentation of relationships between
co-wives is completely inaccurate, and she perpetuates the stereotype of
Indian men beating their wives. The thing is, Lakota women owned basically
all the property in the family, and if she wanted a divorce, she'd just
leave what things were his outside the tipi.
*"Archaic" Sioux. A secret language used before the white man came,
apparently now dead. How the hell do you speak a dead language which was
never written down?
*The claim that the Santee were the sole keepers of ancient traditions,
thus infurating the Itazipaco of the Cheyenne River reserve, where the
sacred pipe's really kept.

It is a great book. If you
are interested in the history of the Sioux nation, it is probably one of the
best.
"gonefishiing" wrote in message
...
no i have not
what is this book?
gf.

"katysails" wrote in message
...
Have you read _Honta Yo_? It's one of the best books I've ever read....



 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search
Display Modes

Posting Rules

Smilies are On
[IMG] code is Off
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
South Pacific Islands Courtesy Flags Geoffrey W. Schultz Cruising 26 December 3rd 03 10:40 PM
Orestralia Invades and Occupies Solomon Islands jlrogers ASA 4 August 2nd 03 11:02 PM
Apostle Islands (WI) Trip Advice Sought Daniel-San Touring 3 July 10th 03 06:19 PM


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 06:19 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2025 BoatBanter.com.
The comments are property of their posters.
 

About Us

"It's about Boats"

 

Copyright © 2017