An edition of Ishi in Two Worlds a Biogr (1961)

Ishi człowiek dwóch światów / c Teodora Kroeber ; z przedmową Lewisa Gannetta, przełożyła Janina Mroczkowska.

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Ishi człowiek dwóch światów / c Teodora Kroeb ...
Theodora Kroeber
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January 24, 2024 | History
An edition of Ishi in Two Worlds a Biogr (1961)

Ishi człowiek dwóch światów / c Teodora Kroeber ; z przedmową Lewisa Gannetta, przełożyła Janina Mroczkowska.

Wyd. 1.
  • 4.00 ·
  • 3 Ratings
  • 50 Want to read
  • 3 Currently reading
  • 4 Have read

The biography of Ishi, the last Yana Indian of California, who died in 1916.

Publish Date
Language
Polish
Pages
208

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Previews available in: English

Edition Availability
Cover of: Ishi in two worlds
Ishi in two worlds: a biography of the last wild Indian in North America
2002, University of California Press
in English
Cover of: Ishi człowiek dwóch światów / c Teodora Kroeber ; z przedmową Lewisa Gannetta, przełożyła Janina Mroczkowska.
Cover of: Ishi in two worlds
Cover of: Ishi in Two Worlds
Ishi in Two Worlds: A Biography of the Last Wild Indian in North America
February 1, 1964, University of California Press
Paperback in English - 1st paper-bound edition edition
Cover of: Ishi in two worlds

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Book Details


Edition Notes

Bibliography: p. 201-208.

Published in
Kraków

The Physical Object

Pagination
208 p., 16 p. of plates :
Number of pages
208

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL13631647M
OCLC/WorldCat
36456397

Work Description

Naiomi Alderman described the book as follows in the Guardian Newspaper;
"On 29 August 1911, a 50-year-old man, a member of the Yahi group of the Native American Yana people, walked out of the forest near Oroville, California, and was captured by the local sheriff. He was known at the time and popularised in the press as “the last wild Indian”.

He called himself “Ishi” – a word in the Yahi language that means simply “man”. He was the very last of his people, and had been living in the wilderness alone, travelling to places he remembered from the time when his tribe had flourished, in the hope of finding some remnant of those he’d grown up with. When he realised they were truly all gone, when a series of forest fires meant he was close to starvation, he allowed himself to be found and taken in.

Knowing that he was the last surviving Yahi, Ishi was desperate to communicate some of the culture that would be entirely lost when he was gone. He ended up living with the director of the museum of anthropology at the University of California, Alfred Kroeber. He taught Kroeber as much as he could: demonstrated the skills of flint-knapping, explained his language, told the stories of his people one last time so they could be written down and preserved. He was particularly fond of children, Kroeber recorded. Ishi died in 1916, of tuberculosis. After his death, Alfred’s wife, Theodora, wrote a remarkable book about him, Ishi in Two Worlds, which relays as much of the Yahi culture as the anthropologists were able to record, and talks about Ishi’s own accounts of his life. To read it is to touch an intricate and beautiful civilisation that is now entirely gone, a place that can only be momentarily resurrected by an imaginative act, as unreachable as an alien world.

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Download catalog record: RDF / JSON / OPDS | Wikipedia citation
January 24, 2024 Edited by Merge works
December 15, 2009 Edited by WorkBot link works
November 8, 2009 Edited by 83.9.233.139 Edited without comment.
April 27, 2009 Edited by ImportBot add OCLC number
August 29, 2008 Created by ImportBot Imported from Western Washington University MARC record