Dakota Dialects
Marino
mary.marino at usask.ca
Thu Jan 27 15:26:27 UTC 2005
At 11:00 PM 1/25/2005, you wrote:
>On Tue, 25 Jan 2005, Mary Marino wrote:
> > Parks and DeMallie don't actually say anything directly about Yanktonai
> > self-identification, but since 'dakhota' was one of the words they
> > elicited and which they offer among 20-odd sets showing the differences
> > among the 5 dialects, their Yanktonai respondents were clearly not
> > self-identifying as 'nakhota'. Maybe 'self-identification' in a
> > socio-cultural context is a different sort of mental operation from
> > responding to a dialect survey. This is by no means impossible, and is
> > part of what prompted my question.
>
>That's part of what I was wondering, too, along with the other issue Mary
>mentioned to Cory - that perhaps identification was influenced by the
>literature. I know that folks working with Dhegiha speakers on linguistic
>issues - which leads readily to culteral discussions - are widely referred
>to various standards with comments like "But of course if you're
>interested in that sort of thing why don't you just read (some relevant
>published source)." The impression I had was that Omaha elders like
>Wilson Wolfe (deceased) were much better read in the Omaha ethnographic
>literature than I was or may ever be. So I suspect Yanktonais are quite
>familiar with the report that Yanktonai(s) is an N-dialect, even though,
>ironically, very little investigation of the Yanktonais language has
>actually been done. (But I may be underestimating this through ignorance
>of less well known Dakotan materials.)
>
> > They don't actually discuss the origins of the 3-way analysis. Riggs
> > identified 4 forms of Sioux and reported the h-k-g correspondence and
> > seemed to assign as much importance to it, as to d-n-l.
>
>Which would indicate that the canonicalization of the d-n-l division was
>subsequent to Riggs. I wonder what the history of it was?
I think a part of the "history" might simply be its fatal attraction as a
linguistic/cultural cliche. Sound correspondence reflected in the *actual*
tribal names - one fact to remember instead of two, and easily memorable at
that. First-year textbook stuff.
> > You're right about the Council Fires. That tradition must predate the
> > westward expansion and socio-political elaboration of the Teton.
>
>I may be misunderstanding you, but I suspect that the socio-political
>elaboration of the Teton is less a consequence of their westward expansion
>than a post-Riggsian discovery of a pre-existing but previously unreported
>situation. There may well have been some elaboration during the
>expansion. In the same way the number of Santee divisions has probably
>decreased or at least changed under the impact of American and Ojibwe
>incursions. But I think there were already several Teton divisions
>comparable in nature to the Santee divisions by the time of contact. I
>think that the depiction of the seven Dakota Council Fires as we know it,
>with the Teton lumped into one Fire, arises from the logic of the
>presentation and from the circumstance that the presentation was of Santee
>origin.
>
>I don't know that there's any evidence at all for a formal Seven Council
>Fires alliance or entity, but there was clearly some prevailing notion of
>coherence arising from linguistic factors as well as others, and there
>could also easily have been inter-band meetings - the colonial powers and
>Americans arranged several themselves - in which the ideal of a Dakota
>unity was expressed. There is also a cultural tendency to organize things
>in fours and sevens.
>
>Given this milieu, if you asked a Santee-Sisseton speaker what the various
>Dakota groups were you might well get an elaboration in terms of seven
>groups. The bulk of these would be local Santee-speaking entities - the
>four Santee groups. This nice appropriate number of local entities could
>then be raised to the next appropriate number, seven, by adding to it
>three more distant clumps without differentiating within them groups
>comparable in size to the four Santee groups. It would be in some sense
>necessary to separate the Yankton from the Yanktonais, and to suppress the
>divisions of the Teton, no matter how much information was available about
>Yankton and Teton internal divisions, because only this approach would
>yield the necessary number three of additional groups. Of course, it
>would also be likely that less would be known about more distant groups.
>
>If an account of historical Dakota organization included the
>Yankton-Yanktonais and Teton at the same level of detail that the Seven
>Council Fires account uses for the Santee there would be more than seven
>Dakota groups. Alternatively, if the account presented the Santee at the
>same level that the Seven Council Fires accounts uses for the Yankton,
>Yanktonais and Teton, there would be fewer than seven groups. Either way
>it would probably do violence to the rhetorical and logical sense of the
>Seven Council Fires account's presenter. Furthermore, providing less
>detail about more distant and less well known groups, and more detail
>about well known local groups would probably also be in line with the
>presenter's sense of duty to the subject. It presents what can honestly
>be presented and elaborates where possible.
>
>So I think that distinguishment of seven bodies of Dakota speakers is a
>consequence not of there being seven inherent and comparable bodies, but
>of seven being a conventional number of elements in a catalog. If the
>first sources on Dakota subdivisions had been Teton or Yankton the catalog
>canonized in the literature would still probably have included seven
>groups, but the details would probably have been quite different -
>presumably four groups of Tetons or Yanktons and three of more distant
>others.
Well, this is way more than I had in mind, at any rate. To unpack the
essentials: 1) there is the number 7 (of whatever-it-is that we are
discussing: a culturally approved and valued number); 2) there is the
"oceti" (council fire) concept: elastic as a socio-political term (It
could be a territorial unit, or a band, or some other division of the
people), 3) there is the information possessed by a knowledgeable leader or
elder of the group's traditions and the existing divisions of the people in
a known region. These elements could configure in various ways to produce
all sorts of "oceti sakowin" sets of council-fire groups. Does this in
fact happen? I have only ever heard of one "oceti sakowin" list. Is the
oceti sakowin an important concept among Teton groups? I can only recall
reading about it in reference to Dakota groups.
My idea is simply this: if "oceti sakowin" were a single, invariant
tradition, it might go back to a time when the Teton, Yankton and Yanktonai
were three *single units* - on a par- at least in cultural understanding,
with the Santee, Wahpeton, Sisseton and Mdewakanton.
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