A shining trail to the Sun's Lodge : renewal through Blackfoot ways of knowing

viii, 112 leaves 28 cm. This research is focused on the teachings of the First Nations people which are grounded sacred stories and which continue to be recalled and recited through oral tradition. The teachings and lessons derived from the sacred stories can be described as ways of knowing. The stu...

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Main Authors: Weasel Traveller, Audrey, University of Lethbridge. Faculty of Education
Other Authors: Smith, David
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Lethbridge, Alta. : University of Lethbridge, Faculty of Education, 1997 1997
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10133/79
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spelling ftunivlethb:oai:opus.uleth.ca:10133/79 2023-05-15T16:15:39+02:00 A shining trail to the Sun's Lodge : renewal through Blackfoot ways of knowing Weasel Traveller, Audrey University of Lethbridge. Faculty of Education Smith, David 1997 application/pdf https://hdl.handle.net/10133/79 en_US eng Lethbridge, Alta. : University of Lethbridge, Faculty of Education, 1997 Education Thesis (University of Lethbridge. Faculty of Education) https://hdl.handle.net/10133/79 Ampskapi Piikani -- Rites and ceremonies Siksika -- Rites and ceremonies Ampskapi Piikani -- Alberta -- Social life and customs Siksika -- Alberta -- Social life and customs Dissertations Academic Thesis 1997 ftunivlethb 2021-06-27T07:20:02Z viii, 112 leaves 28 cm. This research is focused on the teachings of the First Nations people which are grounded sacred stories and which continue to be recalled and recited through oral tradition. The teachings and lessons derived from the sacred stories can be described as ways of knowing. The study explores the persistence of the traditional ways of knowing as a source for influencing First Nations individuals toward greater cultural identity and strength in their present lives. The thesis addresses the value of Peigan ways of knowing as a tool for creating greater meaning in life; for enhancing spiritual wisdom; and for developing insight into and appreciation of First Nation oral traditions. As well, the thesis explores Peigan ways of knowing as an available resource for empowering present day Peigan youth. In researching the First Nations ways of knowing, one Plains Indian group, the Peigan, of which the writer is a member, was used as reference source. The Peigan First Nation belongs to the Blackfoot Confederacy and presenlty resides in southern Alberta on the Peigan Indian Reserve. All participants of the research are members of the Peigan First Nation. The research will begin with an overview of the writer's personal experiences as a student in on-reserve and off-reserve school settings, and later as a worker in the counselling profession. The purpose and significance of the study will be presented as well as the research design within the qualitative methodology. Four individuals were selected as interview participants who were born and raised on the Peigan Reserve. The literature review will reflect current research on the significance of story in the First Nations culture and conclude with the presentation of the recent history of the North Peigan people. The interview data will then be presented with emphasis on the themes that surfaced. Six major themes arouse, which included, renewal and transformation, significance of sacred stories, transmitting culture through story, path of life, the teacher and learner relationship, and finally, the vision for Peigan-Blackfoot youth. The final chapter of the study begins with a summary of the findings and an overview of the themes that details finer points making up the major themes. The implications of and recommendations following the study precede the study's conclusion. Thesis First Nations University of Lethbridge Institutional Repository Indian
institution Open Polar
collection University of Lethbridge Institutional Repository
op_collection_id ftunivlethb
language English
topic Ampskapi Piikani -- Rites and ceremonies
Siksika -- Rites and ceremonies
Ampskapi Piikani -- Alberta -- Social life and customs
Siksika -- Alberta -- Social life and customs
Dissertations
Academic
spellingShingle Ampskapi Piikani -- Rites and ceremonies
Siksika -- Rites and ceremonies
Ampskapi Piikani -- Alberta -- Social life and customs
Siksika -- Alberta -- Social life and customs
Dissertations
Academic
Weasel Traveller, Audrey
University of Lethbridge. Faculty of Education
A shining trail to the Sun's Lodge : renewal through Blackfoot ways of knowing
topic_facet Ampskapi Piikani -- Rites and ceremonies
Siksika -- Rites and ceremonies
Ampskapi Piikani -- Alberta -- Social life and customs
Siksika -- Alberta -- Social life and customs
Dissertations
Academic
description viii, 112 leaves 28 cm. This research is focused on the teachings of the First Nations people which are grounded sacred stories and which continue to be recalled and recited through oral tradition. The teachings and lessons derived from the sacred stories can be described as ways of knowing. The study explores the persistence of the traditional ways of knowing as a source for influencing First Nations individuals toward greater cultural identity and strength in their present lives. The thesis addresses the value of Peigan ways of knowing as a tool for creating greater meaning in life; for enhancing spiritual wisdom; and for developing insight into and appreciation of First Nation oral traditions. As well, the thesis explores Peigan ways of knowing as an available resource for empowering present day Peigan youth. In researching the First Nations ways of knowing, one Plains Indian group, the Peigan, of which the writer is a member, was used as reference source. The Peigan First Nation belongs to the Blackfoot Confederacy and presenlty resides in southern Alberta on the Peigan Indian Reserve. All participants of the research are members of the Peigan First Nation. The research will begin with an overview of the writer's personal experiences as a student in on-reserve and off-reserve school settings, and later as a worker in the counselling profession. The purpose and significance of the study will be presented as well as the research design within the qualitative methodology. Four individuals were selected as interview participants who were born and raised on the Peigan Reserve. The literature review will reflect current research on the significance of story in the First Nations culture and conclude with the presentation of the recent history of the North Peigan people. The interview data will then be presented with emphasis on the themes that surfaced. Six major themes arouse, which included, renewal and transformation, significance of sacred stories, transmitting culture through story, path of life, the teacher and learner relationship, and finally, the vision for Peigan-Blackfoot youth. The final chapter of the study begins with a summary of the findings and an overview of the themes that details finer points making up the major themes. The implications of and recommendations following the study precede the study's conclusion.
author2 Smith, David
format Thesis
author Weasel Traveller, Audrey
University of Lethbridge. Faculty of Education
author_facet Weasel Traveller, Audrey
University of Lethbridge. Faculty of Education
author_sort Weasel Traveller, Audrey
title A shining trail to the Sun's Lodge : renewal through Blackfoot ways of knowing
title_short A shining trail to the Sun's Lodge : renewal through Blackfoot ways of knowing
title_full A shining trail to the Sun's Lodge : renewal through Blackfoot ways of knowing
title_fullStr A shining trail to the Sun's Lodge : renewal through Blackfoot ways of knowing
title_full_unstemmed A shining trail to the Sun's Lodge : renewal through Blackfoot ways of knowing
title_sort shining trail to the sun's lodge : renewal through blackfoot ways of knowing
publisher Lethbridge, Alta. : University of Lethbridge, Faculty of Education, 1997
publishDate 1997
url https://hdl.handle.net/10133/79
geographic Indian
geographic_facet Indian
genre First Nations
genre_facet First Nations
op_relation Thesis (University of Lethbridge. Faculty of Education)
https://hdl.handle.net/10133/79
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