Crossword clues for totem pole
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Totem pole \To"tem pole\ or Totem post \To"tem post\ A pole or pillar, carved and painted with a series of totemic symbols, set up before the house of certain Indian tribes of the northwest coast of North America, esp. Indians of the Koluschan stock.
Wiktionary
n. (context sculpture English) Native American sculpture made by carving trees.
WordNet
n. a tribal emblem consisting of a pillar carved and painted with totemic figures; erected by Indian tribes of the northwest Pacific coast
Wikipedia
Totem poles are monumental sculptures carved on poles, posts, or pillars with symbols or figures made from large trees, mostly western red cedar, by indigenous peoples of the Pacific Northwest coast of North America (northwestern United States and Canada's western province, British Columbia). The word totem derives from the Algonquian (most likely Ojibwe) word odoodem [], "his kinship group". The carvings may symbolize or commemorate cultural beliefs that recount familiar legends, clan lineages, or notable events. The poles may also serve as functional architectural features, welcome signs for village visitors, mortuary vessels for the remains of deceased ancestors, or as a means to publicly ridicule someone. Given the complexity and symbolic meanings of totem pole carvings, their placement and importance lies in the observer's knowledge and connection to the meanings of the figures.
Totem pole carvings were likely preceded by a long history of decorative carving, with stylistic features borrowed from smaller prototypes. Eighteenth-century explorers documented the existence of decorated interior and exterior house posts prior to 1800; however, due to the lack of efficient carving tools, sufficient wealth, and leisure time to devote to the craft, the monumental poles placed in front of native homes along the Pacific Northwest coast probably did not appear in large numbers until the late eighteenth or early nineteenth century. Trade and settlement initially led to the growth of totem pole carving, but governmental policies and practices of acculturation and assimilation sharply reduced totem pole production by the end of nineteenth century. Renewed interest from tourists, collectors, and scholars in the 1880s and 1890s helped document and collect the remaining totem poles, but nearly all totem pole making had ceased by 1901. Twentieth-century revivals of the craft, additional research, and continued support from the public have helped establish new interest in this regional artistic tradition.
Totem pole may refer to:
- Totem pole, the Native American artifact
- Ed Galloway's Totem Pole Park, in Rogers County, Oklahoma
- Totem pole output, also known as a push–pull output, a type of electronic circuit
- The Totem Pole (Tasmania), a rock spire/sea stack in Tasmania, Australia
- Melaleuca decussata, a plant species with the common name Totem Poles
- Totem Pole, one of the geological features in Monument Valley
The Totem Pole is a pillar or rock spire found in Monument Valley. It is a highly eroded remains of a butte.
The Totem Pole is a sea stack at Cape Huay in the Tasman National Park, Tasmania, Australia. It is tall, and was the site of the 1998 accident which caused climber Paul Pritchard's hemiplegia.
Usage examples of "totem pole".
She looked small and perky sitting in a big chair and she held one of Uncle Tim's small totem pole carvings in her hand.
I saw a giant Totem Pole with a well-built frame house at its base.
If I make a totem pole with the old images, they'll look at it and smile politely and say how quaint it is, how charming.
I lit a cigarette and blew the match out and flicked it at the glass eye of the totem pole.
I stuffed her belongings into my pockets and went over behind the totem pole thing.
For several moments, Pitt stared in rapt fascination at the totem pole.
Then I tried to get at the back of the camera in the totem pole, to get the plate, but couldn't find the catch right away.
And perhaps most important, you never once made any puns about Agparak's personal totem pole.
She was looking intently at the carving of a totem pole and apparently not for the first time, for her tattoos were done in much the same style.
I looked down, an damn if it ain't the head of the big ole totem pole from Alaska I had sent him.
The woman was looking at a totem pole dominated by aof an orca, head down and tail up, dorsal finhorizontally out of the pole and evidently carved from apiece of wood.
Al Waterman looked like an ancient totem pole, tall and bone-limn, his craggy face the faded tan color of weathered wood.
But awful hard work, so every day I take 4 quart pail of beer to totem pole factory so I can rest my mind once in a while.