Ute : NT19.

Included WorkCalloway, Donald Goodwin. Ute.
Included WorkStewart, Omer Call, 1908-1991.
Included WorkJanetski, Joel C. Culture summary, Ute.
Included WorkAdem, Teferi Abate.
Included WorkJones, J. A. (John Alan), 1923- Sun dance of the northern Ute.
Included WorkJorgensen, Joseph G., 1934-2008. Ethnohistory and acculturation of the northern Ute.
Included WorkLang, Gottfried O. (Gottfried Otto), 1919-2011 Economic development and self determination.
Included WorkMason, John Alden, 1885-1967 Myths of the Uintah Utes.
Included WorkRomeo, Stephanie. Concepts of nature and power, environmental ethics of the northern Ute.
Included WorkSmith, Anne M. (Anne Milne), 1900-1981. Ethnography of the northern Utes.
Included WorkSteward, Julian Haynes, 1902-1972 Uintah Ute bear dance, March, 1931.
Included WorkSteward, Julian Haynes, 1902-1972 Aboriginal and historical groups of the Ute Indians of Utah.
Included WorkSteward, Julian Haynes, 1902-1972 Native components of the White River Ute Indians.
Other author/creatorHuman Relations Area Files, inc.
SerieseHRAF world cultures
eHRAF world cultures. North America. UNAUTHORIZED
Contents Bibliography -- Ute / Donald Callaway, Joel C. Janetski, and Omer C. Stewart -- Culture summary, Ute / Joel C. Janetski and Teferi Abate Adem -- Sun Dance of the Northern Ute / J. A. Jones -- Ethnohistory and acculturation of the Northern Ute / Joseph Gilbert Jorgensen -- Economic development and self determination / Gottfried O. Lang -- Myths of the Uintah Utes / J. Alden Mason -- Concepts of nature and power / Stephanie Romeo -- Ethnography of the Northern Utes / Anne M. Smith -- Uintah Ute bear dance, March, 1931 ; Aboriginal and historical groups of the Ute Indians of Utah ; Native components of the White River Ute Indians / Julian H. Steward.
Abstract This collection of 11 documents and a culture summary cover Ute society from pre-contact times to the 1980s. Studies include the earliest systematic attempts at reconstructing pre-reservation Ute culture and society, with particular emphasis on organization and composition of bands, settlement patterns and land use practices, as remembered by elderly informants in the 1930s and 1940s. These works also include detailed first hand descriptions of a bear dance performance, a peyote meeting and the sun dance which the authors personally observed. Other topics include mythology, concepts of nature and power, effects of oil money and development intervention and, aspects of history. Ute society was internally divided into several, but continuously fluid, bands and the history and interaction of each band with the state and market forces varied greatly. The Ute are a Native American group located in Utah, Colorado, and New Mexico. At the time of European contact in the 1600s and 1700s, the Ute occupied much of central and eastern Utah and all of western Colorado, as well as minor portions of northwestern New Mexico, living as nomadic hunters and gatherers.
General noteTitle from Web page (viewed Mar. 30, 2010).
General noteThis portion of eHRAF world cultures was last updated in 2009 and is a revision and update of the microfiche file.
Bibliography noteIncludes bibliographic references.