Item type | Current library | Home library | Shelving location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Books | American University in Dubai | American University in Dubai | Main Collection | E 98 .R3 S95 1999 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 653352 |
No cover image available | No cover image available | No cover image available | No cover image available | |||||
E 98 .P86 B46 1996 We dance because we can : people of the Powwow / | E 98 .R3 A4 1953 The world's rim; great mysteries of the North American Indians. | E 98 .R3 C92 1980 Creation myths of primitive America. | E 98 .R3 S95 1999 Peyote religious art : symbols of faith and belief / | E 99 .A6 C7 1981 Life among the Apaches / | E 99 .A6 G3276 2012 Geronimo / | E 99 .C37 C35 2007 House of rain : tracking a vanished civilization across the American Southwest / |
Includes bibliographical references (p. 107-112) and index.
Controversial and misunderstood, the ritualized use of peyote by American Indians has long been attacked by non-Indian religious and secular authorities. Despite official efforts to eliminate peyotism as far back as the Spanish Inquisition and as recent as the War on Drugs, its status in Native American spiritual life has not diminished.
Peyote is the holy sacrament in the Native American Church, and the peyote religion provides spiritual comfort, social benefit, and a creative outlet for hundreds of thousands of American Indian people. Grounded in older tribal religions from the Plains regions, the Native American Church was the first native religious movement organized and disseminated on the model of western Christian denominations. While providing opportunities for maintaining and strengthening tribal identities within a common, intertribal organization, the church also fosters a vibrant folk art tradition.
Works by self-taught and informally trained artists make up the diverse traditional and folk arts associated with the peyote religion. Peyote art displays an amazing range of genres, including carving, beadwork, featherwork, metalsmithing, and painting. The ritual objects and religious setting of the peyote religion provide core elements for the rich symbolism associated with the art of the Native American Church.
Featuring previously unpublished first-person narratives by practitioners of the religion and by artists, this book is the first to give a comprehensive examination of the art of peyote religion and the church. It is enhanced with photographs of art objects from museum collections, of works by contemporary artists, and of materials from private familycollections.
Understanding these expressive forms provides fascinating insight into the challenging nature of American Indian life during the twentieth century and the intertwining of art, religion, and the community.
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