The epic of Qayaq : the longest story ever told by my people /
Material type: TextPublication details: Ottawa : Carleton University Press : Carleton University Art Gallery ; Seattle : University of Washington Press, 1995.Description: xx, 119 pages : illustrations (some color) ; 21 x 23 cmContent type:- text
- unmediated
- volume
- 0295975318
- 9780295975313
- 0886292670
- 9780886292676
- 0886292654
- 9780886292652
- Qayaq (Legendary character)
- Inuit -- Alaska -- Folklore
- Legends -- Alaska
- Eskimos -- Alaska -- Folklore
- Inuits -- Alaska -- Folklore
- Légendes -- Alaska
- Qayaq (Personnage légendaire)
- Eskimos
- Inuit
- Legends
- Qayaq (Legendary character)
- Qayaq (Personnage légendaire)
- Inuits -- États-Unis -- Alaska -- Folklore
- Légendes -- États-Unis
- Indians of North America -- Authors
- 398.2/089/9710798 20
- E99.E7 O424 1995
Item type | Current library | Shelving location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Catalogues | Carleton University, AVRC | Open-stacks | E99.E7 O424 1995 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Not for loan | 16050026017 |
Includes bibliographical references.
The Epic of Qayaq: The Longest Story Ever told By My People / Oman, Lela Kiana -- Qayaq's Life with his Parents -- Qayaq Associates with Birds and Animals and a Man who Transforms into an Animal -- Qayaq Visits the Umialik's Village -- The Influence of Ancestors Is Particularly Stressed -- The Story of the Big Flood as it Was Told by Qayaq's Wife -- From Another Storyteller: How a Young Orphan Boy Grew Up to Be the Umialik whose Daughter Became Qayaq's Wife -- Qayaq Receives the Uplifting Influence of Ptarmigans and Caribou -- Qayaq Visits Two Communities, One in Alaska and One in Canada -- Qayaq Goes to a Western Community at the Mouth of the Yukon River and a Tlingit Village to the Southeast -- Qayaq Visits the Headwaters of the Selawik River and Eventually Finds his Way Home.
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