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Viewing the Ancestors - Perceptions of the Anaasazi, Mokwic, and Hisatsinom (Paperback)
Loot Price: R895
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Viewing the Ancestors - Perceptions of the Anaasazi, Mokwic, and Hisatsinom (Paperback)
Series: New Directions in Native American Studies Series
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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The Anaasazi people left behind marvelous structures, the ruins of
which are preserved at Mesa Verde, Chaco Canyon, and Canyon de
Chelly. But what do we know about these people, and how do they
relate to Native nations living in the Southwest today?
Archaeologists have long studied the American Southwest, but as
historian Robert McPherson shows in Viewing the Ancestors, their
findings may not tell the whole story. McPherson maintains that
combining archaeology with knowledge derived from the oral
traditions of the Navajo, Ute, Paiute, and Hopi peoples yields a
more complete history. McPherson's approach to oral tradition
reveals evidence that, contrary to the archaeological consensus
that these groups did not coexist, the Navajos interacted with
their Anaasazi neighbors. In addition to examining archaeological
literature, McPherson has studied traditional teachings and
interviewed Native people to obtain accounts of their history and
of the relations between the Anaasazi and Athapaskan ancestors of
today's Hopi, Pueblo, and Navajo peoples. Oral history, McPherson
points out, tells why things happened. For example, archaeological
findings indicate that the Hopi are descended from the Anaasazi,
but Hopi oral tradition better explains why the ancient Puebloans
may have left the Four Corners region: the drought that may have
driven the Anaasazi away was a symptom of what had gone wrong
within the society - a point that few archaeologists could derive
from what is found in the ground. An important text for non-Native
scholars as well as Native people committed to retaining
traditional knowledge, Viewing the Ancestors exemplifies
collaboration between the sciences and oral traditions rather than
a contest between the two.
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