Bibliography, etc. Note:
"Appendix A: Pamela T. Amoss publications": pages 219-222.
Includes bibliographical references (pages 200-218).
Formatted Contents Note:
Foreword / Maureen and Roy Carlson -- Preface / Jay Miller -- Editor's preface / Darby C. Stapp and Jay Miller -- Chapter sources -- Part I. My intellectual history -- Part II. Religions. Chapter 1. The fish god gave us: the first salmon ceremony revived -- Chapter 2. The indian shaker church -- Chapter 3. Resurrection, healing, and "the shake": the story of John and Mary Slocum -- Chapter 4. Symbolic substitution in the indian shaker church -- Chapter 5. Strategies of reorientation: the contribution of contemporary winter dancing to Coast Salish identity and solidarity -- Part III. Relationships. Chapter 6. Preface to Coast Salish spirit dancing -- Chapter 7. The Nooksack people -- Chapter 8. Coast Salish elders -- Chapter 9. Cultural centrality and prestige for the elderly: the Coast Salish case -- Chapter 10. The power of secrecy among the Coast Salish -- Chapter 11. A little more kin, and less than kind: the ambiguous Norwest coast dog -- Chapter 12. Hair of the dog: unraveling pre-contact Coast Salish social stratification -- Part IV. Reviews. Chapter 13. Melville Jacobs -- Chapter 14. Erna Gunther (1896-1982) -- Chapter 15. Myron Eells and the Puget Sound Indians -- Chapter 17. Dictionary of Puget Salish -- Chapter 18. Ancient Modocs of California and Oregon -- Chapter 19. Valley of the spirits -- Chapter 20. The Upper Skagit Indians of Western Washington -- Chapter 21. The Salish people: the local contribution of Charles Hill-Tout -- Part V. Reflections -- Part VI. References -- Appendix. Pamela T. Amoss Publications.