i688 The Cornell Reading Courses 



REFERENCES FOR PROGRAM 15 

 PRIMITIVE WOMAN AS PATRON OF RELIGION 



GROUP I 



Mason, Otis T. 



1907 Woman's share in primitive culture, Chapter XI. 



(Compilation) 



Handbook of American Indians north of Mexico. Smith- 

 sonian Institution, Bureau of American Ethnology. Bulletin 

 30, part I, p. 46-47 (Altar); part 2, p. 365-371 (Religion), 

 662-664 (Symbolism), 787-795 (Totem and totem poles). 



Goddard, Pliny Earle 



1913 Indians of the Southwest, p. 107-126. 



Wissler, Clark 



1912 North American Indians of the plains, p. 97-102, 105, 119. 



GROUP II 



Bourke, John G. 



1887-88 The medicine-men of the Apache. Ninth annual report 

 of the Bureau of Ethnology to the secretary of the 

 Smithsonian Institution for 1887-88, p. 451-496. 



Converse, Harriet Maxwell, and Parker, Arthur Caswell 



1908 Myths and legends of the New York State Iroquois. New 



York State Museum. Museum bulletin 125. 



Fewkes, Jesse Walter 



1894-95 Tusayan snake ceremonies. Sixteenth annual report of 

 the Bureau of American Ethnology to the secretary of 

 the Smithsonian Institution for 1894-95, p. 267-312. 



Kingsley, Mary H. 



1899 West African studies. Chapter VII. 



Mooney, James 



1885-86 The sacred formulas of the Cherokees. vSeventh annual 

 report of the Bureau of Ethnology to the secretary of 

 the Smithsonian Institution for 1885-86, p. 301-397. 



1892-93 The ghost-dance religion and the vSioux outbreak of 1890. 

 Fourteenth annual report of the Bureau of Ethnology 

 to the secretary of the Smithsonian Institution for 1892- 

 93, part 2, p. 641-1136. 



Morgan, Lewis H. 



1901 League of the Ho-de'-no-sau-nee, or Iroquois. (Edited by 

 Herbert M. Lloyd.) 



