The Crow Indians

E494031

The Crow Indians is an influential ethnographic study by anthropologist Robert H. Lowie that provides a comprehensive account of the culture, social organization, and traditions of the Crow people of the Northern Plains.

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The Crow Indians canonical 1

Statements (46)

Predicate Object
instanceOf book
ethnographic study
academicDiscipline Native American studies
cultural anthropology
author Robert H. Lowie NERFINISHED
countryOfOrigin United States of America
surface form: United States
describes Crow ceremonial life
Crow clan structure
Crow economic life
Crow gender roles
Crow kinship system
Crow life cycle rituals
Crow political organization
Crow religious practices
Crow warfare practices
documents Crow adaptation to reservation life
Crow child-rearing practices
Crow leadership roles
Crow marriage customs
Crow mourning practices
Crow myth and folklore
Crow naming practices
Crow oral traditions
Crow relations with neighboring tribes
Crow ritual specialists
ethnographicRegion Montana NERFINISHED
Northern Plains NERFINISHED
features analysis of Crow belief systems
analysis of Crow social structure
historical accounts of Crow life
participant observation data
focusesOn culture of the Crow people
social organization of the Crow people
traditions of the Crow people
genre anthropology
ethnography
hasPerspective Boasian anthropology tradition
influenced 20th-century ethnographic methods
later studies of Plains Indians
language English
mainSubject Crow Nation NERFINISHED
Crow people NERFINISHED
timePeriodDescribed early 20th century Crow society
late 19th century Crow society
usedAs reference work on the Crow Nation
university textbook in anthropology

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Robert H. Lowie notableWork The Crow Indians