Description
Book Synopsis
Published through the Recovering Languages and Literacies of the Americas initiative, supported by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.
Dictionary of the Ponca People presents approximately five thousand words and definitions used by Ponca speakers from the late nineteenth century to the present. Until relatively recently, the Ponca language had been passed down solely as part of an oral tradition in which children learned the language at home by listening to their elders.
Almost every family on the southern Ponca reservation in Oklahoma spoke the language fluently until the 1940s, when English began to replace the Ponca language as children entered government boarding schools and were forced to learn English. In response to demand, Ponca language classes are now being offered to children and adults as people seek to gain knowledge of this important link to tradition and culture.
Theapproximately five thousand words in this volum
Trade Review
“As Chairman of the Ponca Tribe of Nebraska, I recently issued a State of Emergency as it relates to the near extinction of the Ponca Language in our Tribal Nation. Through assimilation and termination polices of the United States, our language is critically endangered. The Ponca Community Dictionary will be a vital tool in preserving and revitalizing the Ponca language. The Ponca Tribe of Nebraska will be utilizing it for future generations of Ponca speakers.”—Larry Wright Jr., chairman of the Ponca Tribe of Nebraska
“This dictionary is the culmination of decades of work and persistence to save a language the U.S. federal government worked hard to eradicate. As a first language Ponca speaker, Louis Headman has worked tirelessly with teachers, elders, and citizens of both the Ponca Tribe of Nebraska and Ponca Tribe of Oklahoma to record and preserve their language. Because of their efforts, the Ponca language will endure long after the boarding schools the Federal Government erected to eliminate it.”—Mary Kathryn Nagle, citizen of Cherokee Nation, partner at Pipestem Law P.C., and author of Waaxe’s Law
“As a descendent of Chief Headman, and nephew to Louis Headman, I can say emphatically that the importance of Ponca language preservation and maintenance cannot be overstated or taken for granted. It has been a journey to walk a few steps with my uncle who has been on a lifelong journey to accomplish this incredible and vast contribution to the future of Ponca speakers and singers.”—Randall Bruce Howe Ross, Ponca/Otoe
Table of Contents
Preface
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Notes on Ponca Pronunciation and Grammar
Part 1. Ponca to English
Part 2. English to Ponca
Bibliography