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Dream Catchers - How Mainstream America Discovered Native Spirituality (Paperback)
Loot Price: R492
Discovery Miles 4 920
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Dream Catchers - How Mainstream America Discovered Native Spirituality (Paperback)
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Loot Price R492
Discovery Miles 4 920
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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In books such as Mystics and Messiahs, Hidden Gospels, and The Next
Christendom, Philip Jenkins has established himself as a leading
commentator on religion and society. Now, in Dream Catchers,
Jenkins offers a brilliant account of the changing mainstream
attitudes towards Native American spirituality, once seen as
degraded spectacle, now hailed as New Age salvation. While early
Americans had nothing but contempt for Indian religions, deploring
them as loathsome devil worship and snake dancing, white Americans
today respect and admire Native spirituality. In this book, Jenkins
charts this remarkable change, highlighting the complex history of
white American attitudes towards Native religions from colonial
times to the present. Jenkins ranges widely, considering everything
from the 19th-century American obsession with "Hebrew Indians" and
Lost Tribes, to the early 20th-century cult of the Maya as bearers
of the wisdom of ancient Atlantis, to films like Pocahontas and
Dances With Wolves. He looks at the popularity of the Carlos
Castaneda books, the writings of Lynn Andrews, and the influential
works of Frank Waters, and he explores the New Age paraphernalia
found in places like Sedona, Arizona, including dream-catchers,
crystals, medicine bags, and Native-themed Tarot cards. Jenkins
examines the controversial New Age appropriation of Native sacred
places; notes that many "white Indians" see mainstream society as
religiously empty; and asks why a government founded on religious
freedom tried to eradicate native religions in the last century-and
what this says about how we define religion. An engrossing account
of our changing attitudes towards Native spirituality, Dream
Catchers offers a fascinating introduction to one of the more
interesting aspects of contemporary American religion.
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