РефератыИностранный языкAbAbout Coyote Essay Research Paper Sam D

About Coyote Essay Research Paper Sam D

About Coyote Essay, Research Paper


Sam D. Gill and Irene F. Sullivan


Coyote


Coyote is the figure who appears most widely in Native American stories; he is without


doubt the best known. The preeminent trickster, he may also take the role of culture


hero, although the aspects of culture and life he introduces often have a negative


side to them. To the Chinook he is Italapas. The Navajo term for Coyote is Ma?ii;


the Lakota word, Mica. He is Skinkuts in Kutenai and Isil in


Cupe?o. The Crow call him Old Man Coyote.


Coyote’s origins are not often told, but the Pima consider him the off-spring of the


moon (see Tcu-unnyikita). He often travels with a companion, sometimes a brother,


or with his family. Perhaps his most common companions are Fox (see also Achomawi Silver


Fox, who is a cocreator with Coyote) and Wolf (see Wolf Creates the Earth, Paiute;


and Sunawavi, Ute). Coyote also travels with the Alsea creator Suku, a bear,


with whom he names all the things created. Coyote plays an important role in the Navajo


emergence. The Kawaiisu team him with the bald-headed Pikagoyu, the Cheyenne


with Wihio, the Kutenai with Yaukekam. Woodtick (Coeur d’Alene) wants to


marry Coyote. The Kiowa figure Sendeh is capable of transforming into


Coyote. Coyote often mistreats his companions (see Ciciyogozi, Kawaiisu), but is


himself often tricked, as in the Huron tar baby story that depicts Pitch (Sanopi) as


Coyote’s antagonist. His trickery leads to Badger’s limitations. When Coyote


offends Rolling Rock, as told in a Pawnee story, the rock crushes him.


Coyote is always male, and his masculinity is exaggerated through frequent references


to his penis, often depicted as being so large that it requires a pack to carry it in.


Coyote’s lust is expressed in his desire for Changing Bear Maiden and by his


efforts to have sex with women by becoming a baby (see Penis Baby, although he


forgets to transform his penis. Coyote’s sexual desires even lead him to have incest with


his mother-in-law or his daughter (see Hummingbird). In the Kawaiisu story this act


leads to the departure of his children, who go to the sky and become stars in the Big


Dipper. In the Navajo story of Big Star Way, Coyote tricks Younger Brother in


order to sleep with Younger Brother’s wife. He often exchanges skins with an unsuspecting


hunter so that he may sleep with the hunter’s wife (see Ajilee). Coyote is often


credited with making pleasurable sexual intercourse by removing the teeth of vagina


dentata (see Korawini?i, Paiute) or by moving the genitals to their present


locations on the body. Coyote’s appetite for menstrual blood determines practices in the


Lakota girls’ puberty rite, Ta Tanka Lowanpi. In a Kawaiisu story, Coyote chooses


to eat carrion (see Food Choices of Animals).


As a culture hero, Coyote is widely held to be responsible for the finality of death


(see Nagaicho). According to the Maidu, he also introduces work and suffering (see Earth-Initiate,


Earth-Maker). The Apache believe Coyote had a role in the origin of Europeans (see Europeans,


Origin of). The Kawaiisu tell a story in which Coyote gambles for the release


of game (see Inipi), and he figures strongly in stories that tell of the release of


salmon. In a Nez Perce story he kills Mosquito (Wawa) by gorging him with


nose blood. The Zuni credit him with creating pubic hair (see Paiyatemu), while the


Kawaiisu refer to Coyote’s hair by the name used for moss (Pazimora). The Kawaiisu


describe his creation of the Pazimora, a people who live to the north of them. He


accompanies the Maidu creator Kodoyanpe, and is credited by the Pomo with stealing


the sun, thus making the world dark (see Madumda, who is Coyote’s brother,


the creator).


Coyote is often depicted as a curious fellow who wants to do what everyone else does,


regardless of his limitations. This often gets him into trouble, as in the widely told Eye


Juggler story (see Eyes, Substitution of). In some cultures, Coyote is not


only the wily trickster or the unpredictable culture hero, he is also a feared, malevolent


shape shifter, as in the Navajo Yenaldlooshi. See also Coyote and Eagle Steal


Light, but Cause Winter and Coyote and Moon.


Coyote and Eagle Steal Light, but Cause Winter


Zuni, Southwest


Coyote and Eagle are hunting companions. Coyote complains it is so dark he is


unable to find any game and suggests to Eagle that they travel west in search of light.


Coyote nearly drowns trying to cross a river over which Eagle easily flies. Eventually


they come to Kachina Village, where the kachinas have light. They keep it in


a box, opening it whenever they want light. Coyote and Eagle decide to borrow the box so


they can have light with which to hunt. Eagle carries the box, but Coyote argues that as a


chief, Eagle should not carry it. Eventually Eagle entrusts Coyote with the box.


Curious to examine its contents, Coyote hides in the grass and opens it. The moon and sun


slip out, taking the heat of the earth with them to the sky. This is why there is winter


(see Winter, Origin of). See also Light.


Coyote and Moon


Coeur d’Alene, Plateau


Coyote is originally chosen by the first humans to be the Moon, but


they become dissatisfied because he takes advantage of his position in the sky to watch


people on earth and divulge their secrets. He is replaced in the sky by Old-Man Chief


(SpoxanitcElt), who travels about the world inspecting things Coyote has left undone.


Coyote becomes angry because the Sun has killed some of his children. He cuts out


the Sun’s heart, and at once the earth becomes completely dark. Coyote attempts to carry


the Sun’s heart home in the dark but keeps failing. Finally he realizes he is getting


nowhere. He puts Sun’s heart back and light returns to earth.


From Dictionary of Native American Mythology. Oxford University Press, 1992.


Copyright ? by Sam D. Gill and Irene F. Sullivan.


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