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Navajo sacred places / Klara Bonsack Kelley and Harris Francis.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublication details: Bloomington : Indiana University Press, ©1994.Description: 1 online resource (vi, 260 pages) : illustrations, mapsContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 0585108528
  • 9780585108520
  • 9786612079498
  • 6612079495
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Additional physical formats: Print version:: Navajo sacred places.DDC classification:
  • 979.1/3004972 20
LOC classification:
  • E99.N3 K3355 1994eb
Online resources:
Contents:
Cover -- Contents -- List of Figures -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- Part One: Places Important to Navajo People -- 1. Background -- 2. The Project to Consult Navajo Communities -- 3. Interpretation of Results -- Part Two: Places Important to Navajo People -- 4. Other Studies: What They Did and How They Did It -- 5. Stories and Types of Places in the Other Studies -- 6. Preserving the Culture by Preserving the Land: The "Landscape" and "Piecemeal" Approaches -- 7. The Hidden Reservoir -- Part Three: Navajo Customary Landscapes and Development Landscapes -- 8. What Navajos Say about Cultural Preservation -- 9. Navajo Endangered Landscapes -- 10. Endangered Landscapes Outside Navajo Jurisdiction -- Part Four: Hidden and Manifest Landscapes in Stories -- 11. Analytical Framework -- 12. Hidden and Manifest Landscapes in Two Stories -- 13. A Story about "Where Whiteshell Woman Stopped for Lunch" -- 14. The Land, the People, and Culture Change -- Appendixes -- Notes -- References -- Index -- Illustrations follow page 112.
Summary: The Navajo see even the most minute parts of their homelands and surrounding territory as infused with sacred significance. Places of special power are the most alive, and stories usually go with them. Navajos visit these places to connect with their power. The places anchor the ways of Navajo life as well as the stories about the origins and the correct pursuit of those ways. Navajos have responded to curiosity about these places and landscapes by trying to keep the locations and stories behind them secret - to save the sites from destruction and to keep their power from being sapped. In the face of unbridled land development, however, protecting the landscapes may mean telling the stories, and it is in that spirit that Kelley and Francis discuss the Navajo's sacred landscapes and the stories that go with them. Navajos tell many kinds of stories, both old and new, about these landscapes, and Kelley and Francis have included some of these stories in this book. The authors believe that in time more examples may be revealed with the blessing of the Navajos who care for them, but the day when Navajos willingly give many such stories to others will come only when the Navajo people themselves have gained control over the use of their land.
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Includes bibliographical references (pages 239-252) and index.

Cover -- Contents -- List of Figures -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- Part One: Places Important to Navajo People -- 1. Background -- 2. The Project to Consult Navajo Communities -- 3. Interpretation of Results -- Part Two: Places Important to Navajo People -- 4. Other Studies: What They Did and How They Did It -- 5. Stories and Types of Places in the Other Studies -- 6. Preserving the Culture by Preserving the Land: The "Landscape" and "Piecemeal" Approaches -- 7. The Hidden Reservoir -- Part Three: Navajo Customary Landscapes and Development Landscapes -- 8. What Navajos Say about Cultural Preservation -- 9. Navajo Endangered Landscapes -- 10. Endangered Landscapes Outside Navajo Jurisdiction -- Part Four: Hidden and Manifest Landscapes in Stories -- 11. Analytical Framework -- 12. Hidden and Manifest Landscapes in Two Stories -- 13. A Story about "Where Whiteshell Woman Stopped for Lunch" -- 14. The Land, the People, and Culture Change -- Appendixes -- Notes -- References -- Index -- Illustrations follow page 112.

The Navajo see even the most minute parts of their homelands and surrounding territory as infused with sacred significance. Places of special power are the most alive, and stories usually go with them. Navajos visit these places to connect with their power. The places anchor the ways of Navajo life as well as the stories about the origins and the correct pursuit of those ways. Navajos have responded to curiosity about these places and landscapes by trying to keep the locations and stories behind them secret - to save the sites from destruction and to keep their power from being sapped. In the face of unbridled land development, however, protecting the landscapes may mean telling the stories, and it is in that spirit that Kelley and Francis discuss the Navajo's sacred landscapes and the stories that go with them. Navajos tell many kinds of stories, both old and new, about these landscapes, and Kelley and Francis have included some of these stories in this book. The authors believe that in time more examples may be revealed with the blessing of the Navajos who care for them, but the day when Navajos willingly give many such stories to others will come only when the Navajo people themselves have gained control over the use of their land.

Print version record.

English.

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