In Indian Tents: Wabanaki Oral Traditions: Penobscot, Passamaquoddy, and Mi'kmaq Folklore from the Northeastern Woodlands
Synopsis
In Indian Tents gathers traditional narratives told by Penobscot, Passamaquoddy, and Mi'kmaq storytellers, preserving tales of animal beings, culture heroes, transformations, moral testing, and the mysterious traffic between human and spirit worlds. Written in a clear late-Victorian prose, the book stands between folklore collection, children's literature, and early ethnography, retaining the cadence of oral narration while inevitably filtering it through a nineteenth-century literary sensibility. Its importance lies in its record of Wabanaki storytelling at a moment when Indigenous traditions were often misrepresented or ignored. Abby Langdon Alger, a New England writer with close interest in regional culture, approached these stories as both literary material and cultural testimony. Her proximity to Maine and the northeastern borderlands helped shape her attention to the Native communities whose oral traditions had long animated that landscape. Though marked by the assumptions of her era, her work reflects a genuine desire to listen, collect, and transmit narratives beyond dominant Anglo-American traditions. Readers interested in folklore, Native northeastern traditions, or the history of American literary collecting will find In Indian Tents rewarding and instructive. It should be read critically, but also appreciatively, as a valuable doorway into Wabanaki narrative imagination.
Publisher information
- Publisher: Sharp Ink
- ISBN: 9788028331351
- Dimensions: 229 x 152 x 3 mm
- Weight: 92g
- Languages: English
