To visiting geologists Black Rock, New Mexico, is a basaltic
escarpment and an ideal natural laboratory. To hospital workers,
Black Rock is a picturesque place to earn a living. To the Zuni,
the mesas, arroyos, and the rock itself are a stage on which the
passion of their elders is relived. William A. Dodge explores how a
shared sense of place evolves over time and through multiple
cultures that claim the landscape.
Through stories told over many generations, this landscape has
given the Zuni an understanding of how they came to be in this
world. More recently, paleogeographers have studied the rocks and
landforms to better understand the world as it once was.
Archaeologists have conducted research on ancestral Zuni sites in
the vicinity of Black Rock to explore the cultural history of the
region. In addition, the Anglo-American employees of the Bureau of
Indian Affairs came to Black Rock to advance the federal Indian
policy of assimilation and brought with them their own sense of
place.
Black Rock has been an educational complex, an agency town, and
an Anglo community. Today it is a health care center, commercial
zone, and multi-ethnic subdivision. By describing the dramatic
changes that took place at Black Rock during the twentieth century,
Dodge deftly weaves a story of how the cultural landscape of this
community reflected changes in government policy and how the Zunis
themselves, through the policy of Indian self-determination,
eventually gave new meanings to this ancient landscape.
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