Tales of the Cochiti Indians

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Tales of the Cochiti Indians is a 1931 work by Ruth Benedict.[1] It collects the folk tales of the Cochiti Puebloan peoples in New Mexico. The book is considered an important work in the discipline of feminist anthropology.[2] Following development of the "culture and personality" school of anthropology by her colleague Edward Sapir and influenced by Margaret Mead, Benedict sought psychological patterns in the stories she collected.[3]

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