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The role of objects and images in everyday life are illuminated
incisively in Material Vernaculars, which combines historical,
ethnographic, and object-based methods across a diverse range of
material and visual cultural forms. The contributors to this volume
offer revealing insights into the significance of such practices as
scrapbooking, folk art produced by the elderly, the wedding coat in
Osage ceremonial exchanges, temporary huts built during the Jewish
festival of Sukkot, and Kiowa women's traditional roles in raiding
and warfare. While emphasizing local vernacular culture, the
contributors point to the ways that culture is put to social ends
within larger social networks and within the stream of history.
While attending to the material world, these case studies explicate
the manner in which the tangible and intangible, the material and
the meaningful, are constantly entwined and co-constituted.
The role of objects and images in everyday life are illuminated
incisively in Material Vernaculars, which combines historical,
ethnographic, and object-based methods across a diverse range of
material and visual cultural forms. The contributors to this volume
offer revealing insights into the significance of such practices as
scrapbooking, folk art produced by the elderly, the wedding coat in
Osage ceremonial exchanges, temporary huts built during the Jewish
festival of Sukkot, and Kiowa women's traditional roles in raiding
and warfare. While emphasizing local vernacular culture, the
contributors point to the ways that culture is put to social ends
within larger social networks and within the stream of history.
While attending to the material world, these case studies explicate
the manner in which the tangible and intangible, the material and
the meaningful, are constantly entwined and co-constituted.
Wedding Clothes and the Osage Community: A Giving Heritage explores
how gift exchange, motivated by the values of generosity and
hospitality, serves as a critical component in the preservation and
perpetuation of Osage society. Authors, Daniel C. Swan and Jim
Cooley collaborate with members of the Osage Nation to discuss this
foundational cultural practice over two centuries and in multiple
social contexts. The book begins with an in-depth examination of
the Mizhin form of marriage, which bound two extended Osage
families together for economic, biologic, and social reasons
intended to produce value and community cohesion for the larger
society. Swan and Cooley then follow the movement of Osage bridal
regalia from the Mizhin from of marriage into the "Paying for the
Drum" ceremony of the Osage Ilonshka-a variant of the Plains Grass
Dance, which is a nativistic movement that spread throughout the
Plains and Prairie regions of the United States in the 1890s. The
Ilonshka dance and its associated organization provide a spiritual
charter for the survival of the ancient Osage physical divisions,
or "districts" as they are called today. Swan and Cooley
demonstrate how the process of re-chartering elements of material
culture and their associated meanings from one ceremony to another
serves as an example of the ways in which the Osage people have
adapted their cultural values to changing economic and political
conditions. At the core of this historical trajectory is a broad
system of Osage social relations predicated on status, reciprocity,
and cooperation. Through Osage weddings and the Ilonshka dance the
Osage people reinforce and strengthen the social relations that
provide a foundation for their respective communities.
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