<br><font size=2 face="sans-serif">The University of Nebraska Press is
going to reprint my 2001 Routledge monograph on the Omaha Dance Lodges.
Finally it will be in an afordable paperback.</font>
<br>
<br><font size=2 face="sans-serif">This provides me an opportunity to attach
an afterword that begins a discussion about these circular structures among
other Great Plains tribes and their relation (or not) to the Omaha Dance
and/or<i> Hethushka</i>. I want to gather together some of the current
thinking on these structures and offers some speculations.</font>
<br>
<br><font size=2 face="sans-serif">I have looked at the SiouanList archives
related to the Grass Dance and <i>Hethushka</i>.</font>
<br>
<br><font size=2 face="sans-serif">I recall that Loretta Fowler mentions
the Omaha Dance among the Arapahoe, and circular structures used for social
events among the Gros Ventre in her books.</font>
<br>
<br><font size=2 face="sans-serif">I have references to the Lakota at Pine
Ridge doing the "Omaha Dance" in circular structures built for
that purpose in the late 1800s. I am aware of circular lodges among the
Osage and Pawnee in Oklahoma, but with little details about their construction
and uses.</font>
<br>
<br><font size=2 face="sans-serif">It has been suggested that investing
in these structures seems to be an early Reservation phenomenon since folks
were no longer nomadic and restrained from other cultural practices.</font>
<br>
<br><font size=2 face="sans-serif">Are you aware of any other occurences
of such structures?</font>
<br>
<br><font size=2 face="sans-serif">Thank you for considering this inquiry,</font>
<br>
<br><font size=2 face="sans-serif">Regards,</font>
<br>
<br><font size=2 face="sans-serif">Mark Awakuni-Swetland<br>
<br>
mawakuni-swetland2@unl.edu<br>
Office: 402-472-3455<br>
FAX: 402-472-9642<br>
<br>
oNska abthiN!</font>