Coast Salish BibliographyCoast Salish Culture: an Outline BibliographyBrian Thom, McGill University, updated January 2, 2006[Click here to download Jan P. van Eikj's excellent Annotated Bibliography of Salish Linguistics (.pdf format)]This bibliography is an attempt to compile much of the scholarly research on contemporary and historic Coast Salish cultures. I have not attempted to include any archaeological or theoretical linguistic work, nor does it refer to (for the most part) primary historical and archival documents.My bibliographic database was last substantively updated in early 2005. As publications on Coast Salish cultures continue to emerge, I will attempt to keep this list up-to-date. Future iterations of this bibliography will likely include an online bibliographic database.I apologize in advance for any errors or obvious omissions. Please email me if changes could be suggested.BibliographyAmoss, Pamela. (1977). Strategies of Reorientation: The Contribution of Contemporary Winter Dancing to Coast Salish Identity and Solidarity. Arctic Anthropology, 14, 77-93.Amoss, Pamela. (1977). The Power of Secrecy among the Coast Salish. In Raymond Fogelson & Richard Adams (Eds.), The Anthropology of Power: Ethnographic Studies from Asia, Oceania and the New World. (pp. 131-139). New York: Academic Press.Amoss, Pamela. (1978). Coast Salish Spirit Dancing: The Survival of an Ancestral Religion. Seattle: University of Washington Press.Amoss, Pamela. (1981). Coast Salish Elders. In Pamela Amoss & Stevan Harrell (Eds.), Other Ways of Growing Old: Anthropological Perspectives. (pp. 227-261). Stanford: Stanford University Press.Amoss, Pamela. (1981). Cultural Centrality and Prestige for the Elderly: The Coast Salish Case. In Christine Fry (Ed.), Dimensions: Aging, Culture and Health. (pp. 47-63). New York: JF Bergin Publishers.Amoss, Pamela. (1982). Resurrection, Healing, and 'the Shake': The Story of John and Mary Slocum. In Michael Williams (Ed.), Charisma & Sacred Biography. (pp. 87-109). Chambersburg: American Academy of Religious Studies.Amoss, Pamela. (1984). A Little More than Kin, and Less than Kind: The Ambiguous Northwest Coast Dog. In Jay Miller & Carol Eastman (Eds.), The Tsimshian and their Neighbours of the North Pacific Coast. (pp. 292-305). Seattle: University of Washington Press.Amoss, Pamela. (1987). The Fish God Gave Us: The First Salmon Ceremony Revived. Arctic Anthropology, 24, 56-66.Amoss, Pamela. (1999). Coyote Looks at Grandmother: Puget Sound Salish Grandmothers in Myth and Message. In Marjorie Schweitzer (Ed.), American Indian Grandmothers: Traditions and Transitions.(pp. 79-101). Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press.Anderson, Alexander. (1858). Handbook and Map to the Gold Region of Frazer's and Thompson's Rivers with Table of Distances, to which is appended Chinook Jargon - Language used, etc. etc. San Francisco: J.J. Le Count.Anderson, Alexander. (1863). Notes on the Indian Tribes of British North America and the Northwest Coast, Communication to George Gibbs, esq by Alex. C. Anderson. The Historical Magazine, 7, 59-81.Anderson, Bern. (1939). The Vancouver Expedition: Peter Puget's Journal of the Exploration of Puget Sound. Pacific Northwest Quarterly, 30, 177-217.Andrade, Manuel. (1931). Quileute Texts. New York: Columbia University Press.Fediuk, Karen and Brian Thom (2003). Contemporary & Desired Use of Traditional Resources in a Coast Salish Community: Implications for Food Security and Aboriginal Rights in British Columbia. Paper Presented at the Annual Meetings of the Society for Ethnobiology, 27 Mar 2003, Seattle. Thom, Brian (2003). Intangible Property Within Coast Salish First Nations Communities, British Columbia. Paper Presented at the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) North American Workshop on Intellectual Property and Traditional Knowledge. Ottawa, September 8, 2003.Appleby, Geraldine. (1961). Tsawwassen Legends. ms. Vancouver, UBC Special Collections and Archives. Arnett, Chris. (1997). The Terror of the Coast:The 1863 Colonial War on the East Coast of Vancouver Island & the Gulf Islands. Vancouver: Talonbooks.Assu, Harry, & Joy Inglis. (1989). Assu of Cape Mudge: recollections of a Coast Indian Chief. Vancouver, B.C: University of British Columbia Press.Barnett, Homer. (1937). Culture Element Distributions: IX Gulf of Georgia Salish. Anthropological Records, University of California, 1, 221-295.Barnett, Homer. (1939). Culture Element Distributions: IX Gulf of Georgia Salish. Anthropological Records, 1, 221-295.Barnett, Homer. (1939). The Coast Salish of Canada. American Anthropologist, 40, 118-141.Barnett, Homer. (1944). Underground Houses of the British Columbian Coast. American Antiquity, 9, 265-270.Barnett, Homer. (1955). The Coast Salish of British Columbia. Eugene: University of Oregon Press.Barraclough, William. (1969). Dogs that were Indigenous to the Pacific North-west Coast. B.C.Historical News, May, 6-13.Barsh, Russel. (1996). Puget Sound Indian Demography, 1900-1920. Ethnohistory, 43, 65-98.Bennett, Marilyn. (1975). Indian Fishing and its Cultural Importance in the Fraser River System. Vancouver: Union of B.C. Indian Chiefs and Department of Environment.Bierwert, Crisca. (1982). Sahoyaleekw: Weaver's Art. Seattle: Thomas Burke Memorial Washington State Museum.Bierwert, Crisca. (1986). Dissertation. Tracery in the Mistlines: A Semiotic Account of Sto:lo Culture. Department of Anthropology, University of Washington; Bierwert, Crisca. (1993). 'Poetic Fancy': A Glimpse at the Translative Commentary of Martin J. Sampson. In Arnold Krupat (Ed.), New Voices in Native American Literacy Criticism. (pp. 529-542). Washington: Smithsonian Institution Press.Bierwert, Crisca. (1996). Lushootseed Texts: An Introduction to Puget Salish Narrative Aesthetics. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press.Bierwert, Crisca. (1998). Remembering Chief Seattle: Reversing Cultural Studies of a Vanishing Native American. American Indian Quarterly, 22, 280-304.Bierwert, Crisca. (1999). Brushed by Cedar, Living by the River: Coast Salish Figures of Power. Tucson: University of Arizona Press.Boas, Franz. (1887). Notes on the Ethnology of British Columbia. Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society, 24, 422-428.Boas, Franz. (1887). Zur Ethnologie Britisch-Kolumbiens. Petermanns Geographische Mitteilungen, 33, 129-133.Boas, Franz. (1888). Myths and Legends of the Çatloltq of Vancouver Island. The American Antiquarian, 10, 201-211-366-373.Boas, Franz. (1889). Notes on the Snanaimuq. American Anthropologist, 2, 321-328.Boas, Franz. (1889). Preliminary Notes on the Indians of British Columbia. Report of the Fifty Eighth Meeting of the British Association for the Advancement of Science, 236-242.Boas, Franz. (1889). The Indians of British Columbia. Transactions of the Royal Society of Canada for 1889, 6, 47-57.Boas, Franz. (1890). First General Report on the Indians of British Columbia. Report of the Fifty Ninth Meeting of the British Association for the Advancement of Science, 801-855.Boas, Franz. (1891). The Lku'ñgen, Second General Report on the Indians of British Columbia. Report of the sixtieth Meeting of the British Association for the Advancement of Science, 562-582.Boas, Franz. (1894). The Indian Tribes of the Lower Fraser River. Report of the 64th Meeting of the British Association for the Advancement of Science, 454-463.Boas, Franz. (1916). Transformer Myths. In Franz Boas (Ed.), Tsimshian Mythology (in) Thirty-First Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution 1909-1010. (pp. 586-610). Washington: Government Printing Office.Boas, Franz. (1981). Indian Folktales from British Columbia. The Malahat Review, 45-77.Boas, Franz. (2002). Indian Myths and Legends from the North Pacific Coast of America. Vancouver: Talonbooks.Bouchard, Randy and Kennedy, Dorothy (1974). Utilization of Fishes, Beach Foods, and Marine Animals by the Tl'úhus (Klahoose) Indian People of British Columbia. unpublished ms. Victoria, British Columbia Indian Language ProjectBouchard, Randy, & Dorothy Kennedy. (1977). Lillooet Stories. Victoria: Provincial Archives of British Columbia.Bouchard, Randy, & Dorothy Kennedy. (1991). Tsawwassen Ethnography and Ethnohistory. In Arcas Consulting Archeologists (Ed.), Archaeological Investigations at Tsawwassen, B.C. Port Coquitlam: Arcas Consulting Ltd.Bouchard, Randy, & Dorothy Kennedy. (1995). A Review of the Native Indian History of the Craig Bay Area, Parksville, B.C. Report on file, Archaeology Branch, Victoria.Boushard, Randy and Dorothy Kennedy (eds) (1985). Indian Myths and Legends from the North Pacific Coast of America. Bouchard, Randy and Kennedy, Dorothy. Translated by Dietrich Bertz, from Verhandlungen der Berliner Gesellschaft für Anthropologie, Ethnologie und Urgeschichte. 1895. Victoria, BC Indian Language Project. Boxberger, Daniel, & Bruce Miller. (1997). Evolution or History? A Response to Tollefson. Ethnohistory, 44, 135-138.Boxberger, Daniel. (1988). In and Out of the Labor Force: The Lummi Indians and the Development of the Commercial Salmon Fishery of North Puget Sound, 1880-1900. Ethnohistory, 35, 161-190.Boxberger, Daniel. (1988). The Lummi Indians and the Canadian / American Pacific Salmon Treaty. American Indian Quarterly, 12, 299-311.Boxberger, Daniel. (1989). To Fish in Common: The Ethnohistory of Lummi Indian Salmon Fishing. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press.Boxberger, Daniel. (1994). Lightning Boldts and Sparrow Wings: A Comparison of Coast Salish Fishing Rights in British Columbia and Washington State. Native Studies Review, 9, 1-13.Boyd, Colleen E. (2001). Changer is Coming: History, Identity and the Land Among the Lower Elwha Klallam Tribe of the North Olympic Peninsula. PhD Dissertation, Department of Anthropology, University of Washington.Boyd, Robert. (1994). Smallpox in the Pacific Northwest: The First Epidemics. BC Studies, 101, 5-40.Boyd, Robert. (1996). Commentary on Early Contact-Era Smallpox in the Pacific Northwest. Ethnohistory, 43, 307-328.Boyd, Robert. (1999). The Coming of the Spirit of Pestilence: Introduced Infectious Diseases and Population Decline among Northwest Coast Indians, 1774-1874. Vancouver: UBC Press.Brealy, Kenneth. (1998). Travels from Point Ellice: Peter O'Reilly and the Indian Reserve System in British Columbia. BC Studies, 115/116, 180-236.Brebber, Darlene, Willy Good, & Frank Robinson. (1993). Art the Coast Salish Way. Nanaimo: Nanoose First Nations and Nanaimo School District #68.British Columbia (1916) Evidence Heard Before the Royal Commission on Indian Affairs for the Province of British Columbia, 1913-1916. ms. microfilm roll 460. Victoria, British Columbia Archives and Records Service.British Columbia, Government of. (1987). Papers Connected with the Indian Land Question 1850-1875, 1877. Victoria: Queen's Printer.Brown, Doug. (1994). Rock Painting and Place: A Study of Pictograph Placement in Sto:lo Territory. unpublished ms. 1994. Vancouver, University of British Columbia Department of Anthropology and Sociology.Brown, Robert. (1864). Vancouver Island Exploration. Victoria: Harries and Company.Brown, Robert. (1868). On the Vegetable Products, used by the North-West American Indians as Food and Medicine, in the Arts, and in Superstitious Rites. Transactions of the Botanical Society of Edinburgh, 9, 378-396.Calhoun, Francy. (1946). Four Puget Sound Folktales. Journal of American Folklore, 59, 40-44.Calkins, Harry. (1977). Art Legacy of the Coast Salish. Puget Soundings, 26-29.Cameron, Laura. (1996). Listening for Pleasure. Native Studies Review, 11, 109-129.Canada, Government of. (1927). Special Joint Committee of the Senate and Hosue of Commons Appointed to Inquire into the Claims of the Allied Indian Tribes of British Columbia, as set forth in their Petition Submitted to Parliament in June 1926: Report and Evidence. Ottawa: F. A. Acland.Carkin, Helen, & Norman Lerman. (1968). Once Upon an Indian Tale. New York.Carleson, Keith (ed). (2001). A Stó:lo-Coast Salish Historical Atlas. Vancouver: Douglas & McIntyre.Carlson, Keith (1993). Leadership Review: The Indian Act Election System, Traditional Stó:lo Socio-political Structures, and Recommendations for Change. ms. 1993. Chilliwack, Stó:lo Tribal Council. Carlson, Keith and Thom, Brian. (1995). Xwelitem - 'Hungry People:' The Euroamerican in Stó:lo History and Oral Narrative. Report Prepared for Parks Canada and Stó:lo Nation. Chilliwack, Stó:lo Nation Archives.Carlson, Keith. (1996). Stó:lo Exchange Dynamics. Native Studies Review, 11, 5-48.Carlson, Keith. (1996). The Lynching of Louie Sam. BC Studies, 109, 63-79.Carlson, Keith. (1996). You Are Asked To Witness: The Stó:lo in Canada's Pacific Coast History. Chilliwack: Stó:lo Heritage Trust.Carlson, Keith (1993). British-Canadian Attempts to Assimilate First Nations and Traditional Stó:lo Socio-Political Structures. ms. 1993. Chilliwack, Stó:lo Tribal Council.Castile, George. (1985). The Indians of Puget Sound: The Notebooks of Myron Eells. Seattle: University of Washington Press.Chamberlain, Alexander. (1907). Review. The Native Races of the British Empire, by C. Hill-Tout. American Anthropologist, 9, 608Clark, Ella. (1955). George Gibbs' Account of Indian Mythology in Oregon and Washington Territories. Oregon Historical Quarterly, 56, 293-325.Clark, Ella. (1960). Indian Legends of Canada. Toronto: McClelland & Stewart.Clark, Richard E. (1980). Point Roberts, USA: The History of a Canadian Enclave. Bellingham: Textype Publishing.Codere, Helen. (1948). The Swai'xwe Myth of the Middle Fraser River: The Integration of Two Northwest Coast Cultural Ideas. Journal of American Folklore, 61, 1-18.Codere, Helen. (1949). The Harrison Lake Physical Type. In Marian Smith (Ed.), Indians of the Urban Northwest. (pp. 175-185). New York: Columbia University Press.Cohen, Fay G. (1986). Treaties on Trial: The Continuing Controversy over Northwest Indian Fishing Rights. Seattle: University of Washington Press.Collier, Catherine. (1984). Cultural Fermentation and Social Change among the Northwest Coast Tribes. Nortorf, Germany: Völkerkundliche Arbeitsgemeinschaft.Collins, June. (1949). John Fornsby: The Personal Document of a Coast Salish Indian. In Marian Smith (Ed.), Indians of the Urban Northwest. (pp. 287-342). New York: Columbia University Press.Collins, June. (1950). Growth of Class Distinction and Political Authority Among the Skagit Indians During the Contact Period. American Anthropologist, 52, 342Collins, June. (1952). An Interpretation of Skagit Intragroup Conflict During Acculturation. American Anthropologist, 54, 347-355.Collins, June. (1952). The Mythological Basis for Attitudes Towards Animals Among Salish-Speaking Indians. Journal of American Folklore, 65, 353-359.Collins, June. (1966). Naming, Continuity, and Social Inheritance Among the Coast Salish of Western Washington. Papers of the Michigan Academy of Science, Arts, and Letters, 51, 425-436.Collins, June. (1974). Study of Religious Change Among the Skagit Indians, Western Washington. In D. Horr (Ed.), Coast Salish and Western Washington Indians IV. (pp. 619-675). New York: Garland Publishers.Collins, June. (1974). The Influence of White Contact on Class Distinctions and Political Authority among the Indians of Northern Puget Sound. In D. Horr (Ed.), Coast Salish and Western Washington Indians II. (pp. 89-204). New York: Garland Publishers.Collins, June. (1974). Valley of the Spirits: The Upper Skagit Indians of Western Washington. Seattle: University of Washington Press.Collins, June. (1977). The Upper Skagit Indians and the Skagit River. In Ronald DeLorme (Ed.), Of Man, Time and a River: The Skagit River, How Should it be Used? (pp. 1-6). Bellinghom: Center for Pacific Northwest Studies, Occasional Paper No. 10.Collins, June. (1979). Multilineal Descent: A Coast Salish Strategy. In Robert Hinshaw (Ed.), Current Anthropology: Essays in Honor of Sol Tax. (pp. 243-254). New York: Mouton Publishers.Collins, June. (1994). Kinship, Social Class, and Religion of Northwest Coast Peoples. In Raymond DeMallie & Alfonso Ortiz (Eds.), North American Indian Anthropology: Essays on Society and Culture.(pp. 82-107). Norman: University of Oklahoma Press.Crosby, Thomas. (1907). 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