Yahoo Canada Web Search

  1. Ad

    related to: theodora kroeber - victoria

Search results

  1. Theodora Kroeber (/ ˈ k r oʊ b ər / KROH-bər; née Theodora Covel Kracaw; March 24, 1897 – July 4, 1979) was an American writer and anthropologist, best known for her accounts of several Native Californian cultures.

  2. Written by American author Theodora Kroeber, it was first published in 1961. Ishi had been found alone and starving outside Oroville, California, in 1911. He was befriended by the anthropologists Alfred Louis Kroeber and Thomas Waterman, who took him to the Museum of Anthropology in San Francisco.

    • Theodora Kroeber
    • 1961
  3. Why did Theodora Kroeber, who must have known about the fate of the brain, fail to write about it in the popular books about Ishi that she wrote in the late 1950s?

  4. (1897–1979), American writer and anthropologist. Kroeber is best known for two works on North American Indians, Ishi in Two Worlds (1961), an ALA Notable book for adults, and Ishi: Last ...

  5. Theodora Kroeber ( KROH-bər; née Theodora Covel Kracaw; March 24, 1897 – July 4, 1979) was an American writer and anthropologist, best known for her accounts of several Native Californian cultures.

  6. ISHI in Two Worlds tells the true story of the man known as the "last wild Indian in North America." His sudden appearance in 1911 stunned the country. His tribe was considered extinct, destroyed...

  7. People also ask

  8. Alfred and Theodora Kroeber Residence, “Semper Virens”: 1325 Arch Street. Cultural anthropologist Alfred L. Kroeber founded the anthropology department of the University of California, where he taught from 1901 to 1946.

  1. People also search for