A Cross-Cultural Look at Child-Stealing Witches
One of the important figures in Lummi mythology is Ch'eni, the Giant Woman (Ts'uXaelech) who comes during the night and steals children. When I first read the story of Ch'eni, I was struck by the similarity of this story to the well-known German tale by the Grimm brothers, 'Hanse...
Main Author: | Bird, Sonya |
---|---|
Other Authors: | Department of Linguistics, University of Arizona |
Language: | en_US |
Published: |
University of Arizona Linguistics Circle
2000
|
Online Access: | http://hdl.handle.net/10150/226602 |
Similar Items
-
Parent-child relationships as a cause of stealing
by: Taylor, Olga Louise
Published: (1957) -
The Research of Parent-child Relationship and Juvenile Stealing
by: Li, Yueh Ying, et al.
Published: (1994) -
New generation witches : the teenage witch as cultural icon and lived identity
by: Johnston, Hannah E.
Published: (2004) -
«WE UNITE WITCH CULTURE»
by: S. Terzich
Published: (2017-09-01) -
Stealing a look on your way to life: public art and the relationship to landscape architecture
by: Marajh, Tamara
Published: (2009)