What might result from hearing a particular song, wearing used clothing, or witnessing an accident? Ethnographic accounts of the Navajo refer repeatedly to the influences of events on health and well-being, yet until now no attempt has been made to clarify the Navajo system of rules governing association and effect. This book focuses on the complex interweaving of the cosmological, social, and bodily realms that Navajo people navigate in an effort alternately to control, contain, or harness the power manifested in various effects. Following the Navajo life-course from conception to puberty, Maureen Trudelle Schwarz explores the complex rules defining who or what can affect what or whom in specific circumstances as a means of determining what these effects tell us about the cultural construction of the human body and personhood for the Navajo. Schwarz shows how oral history informs Navajo conceptions of the body and personhood, showing how these conceptions are central to an ongoing Navajo identity. She treats the vivid narratives of emergence life-origins as compressed metaphorical accounts, rather than as myth, and is thus able to derive from what individual Navajos say about the past their understandings of personhood in a worldview that is actually a viable philosophical system. Working with Navajo religious practitioners, elders, and professional scholars. Schwarz has gained from her informants an unusually firm grasp of the Navajo highlighted by the foregrounding of Navajo voices through excerpts of interviews. These passages enliven the book and present Schwarz and her Navajo consultants as real, multifaceted human beings within the ethnographic context.
The Logic and Meaning of Anger Among Pintupi Aborigines . ” Man , n.s. 23 ( 1988 ) : 589–610 . Needham , Rodney , ed . Right and Left : Essays on Dual Symbolic Classifications . Chicago : The University of Chicago Press , 1973 .
... this version of what is commonly referred to as the “restoration episode” has much to tell us about contemporary Navajo notions of health and illness (Spencer 1957:100–102).2 First and foremost, as Katherine Spencer pointed out half ...
In his thought-provoking book Be Always Converting, Be Always Converted: An American Poetics, Rob Wilson invokes the experience of “counter-conversion” as a reversal and turn away from Americanist codes of nation-state boundaries, ...
The author provides methods for the study of American Indian ethnographic texts and disputes some previous assumptions about the sources of the stories in Son of Old Man Hat.
Comprehensive in its scope and provocative in its argument, this book examines beliefs and rituals concerning blood in a range of regional and religious contexts throughout human history.
Kelley and Francis , Navajo Sacred Places . 27. Joseph Campbell , Historical Atlas of World Mythology , Vol . 1 ; The Way of the Animal Powers , part 2 ; Mythologies of the Great Hunt ( New York : Harper and Row , 2000 ) ; and Cajete ...
... molded in the image of Changing Woman.”20 For a woman to be modeled after Changing Woman was truly the ideal, which was reinforced throughout Navajo culture when a young girl reached womanhood through her first menses and had a kinaalda ...
... Molded in the Image of Changing Woman , xix . 78. O'Nell , Disciplined Hearts , 46–47 . 79. O'Nell , Disciplined ... Molded in the Image of Changing Woman , Cs- ordas , Ritual Healing in Navajo Society ; and McNeley , Holy Wind in Navajo ...
... School for Advanced Research Press, 2007. Coleman, Michael C. American Indian Children at School, 1850–1930. Jackson: University Press of Mississippi, 1993. ———. American Indians, the Irish, and Government Schooling: A Comparative Study ...
... Molded in the Image of Changing Woman : Navajo Views on the Human Body and Personhood . Tucson : University of Arizona Press . Scott , Peggy F 1998 Personal Opinions Opposing Life History Work with Navajo Elders , expressed while ...