The girl who married the bear : a masterpiece of Indian oral tradition

Type
Book
Authors
Catharine McClellan ( McClellan, Catharine )
 
Category
General Library Collection  [ Browse Items ]
Publication Year
1970 
Publisher
Volume
Pages
58 
Subject
Indigenous peoples -- Yukon -- Folklore 
Abstract
"One of the most popular stories of the southern Yukon Indians—the Inland Tlingit, Tagish, and Southern Tutchone—is about a girl who was taken away by a bear after she had insulted it. He first appears in human form, and she marries him and has children by him. Later her brothers kill the bear, who is their brother-in-law, and the girl returns home. However, when her brothers urge her to don a bearskin against her wishes, she turns into a bear forever and kills her brothers. The two chief themes that the story develops are conflict between consanguine and affinal loyalties and the uneasy balance of harmony between animals and humans. The Yukon Indians also link this tale to their ritual observances for the corpses of bears, since the bear taught his wife what should be done and she instructed her brothers.

The appendix includes eleven versions of this story, each with a brief introductory description of the narrator and the circumstances under which the story was told. Some of the variations in the versions may be traced to the particular life circumstances of the individual story-tellers."--page ix. 
Description
x, 58 pages ; 25 cm. 
Biblio Notes
Includes bibliographical references.  
Number of Copies

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