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"This is one of the more fascinating travel works I have read on
Mexico, and I have read many. It provides an important addition to
the scanty literature on the Tarahumara and enriches the material
available on this important group. I would also think this book
would be fascinating to the general reader." --Joseph W.
Whitecotton, Professor Emeritus of Anthropology, University of
Oklahoma In 1930, anthropologists Robert Zingg and Wendell Bennett
spent nine months among the Tarahumara of Chihuahua, Mexico, one of
the least acculturated indigenous societies in North America. Their
fieldwork resulted in The Tarahumara: An Indian Tribe of Northern
Mexico (1935), a classic ethnography still familiar to
anthropologists. In addition to this formal work, Zingg also penned
a personal, unvarnished travelogue of his sojourn among the
Tarahumara. Unpublished in his lifetime, Behind the Mexican
Mountains is now available in print for the first time. This
colorful account provides a compelling description of the
landscape, people, traditions, language, and archaeology of the
Tarahumara region. Abandoning the scientific detachment of the
observer, Zingg frankly records his reactions to the people and
their customs as he vividly evokes the daily experience of doing
fieldwork. In the introduction, Howard Campbell examines Zingg's
writing in light of current critiques of anthropology as
literature. He makes a strong case that although earlier
anthropological writing reveals unacceptable cultural biases, it
also demonstrates the ongoing importance and vitality of field
research.
The rivers of the Texas Panhandle, the Canadian, and the forks of
the Red break through the Cap Rock at the eastern edge of the
Staked Plains. It's rough, bleak country, with few trees and a
great expanse of sky. Storms that form on the Great Plains and in
the Rocky Mountains sweep through with nothing much to slow them
down. And the small dusty towns that serve this vast ranchland
cling to the waterways as they have for over a hundred years, since
their early settlement. Their names aren't well known now, but they
were once focal points in a rugged country where buffalo hunters,
trail drivers, outlaws, and ordinary folks alike passed through.
Rufe LeFors was one such "ordinary" man. With his father and older
brothers, he was among the first to settle this country, drawn to
West Texas by tales of open land and good grass. His life story,
set down near the end of his long and adventurous life, is the best
sort of insider's history, the chronicle of a life lived fully amid
the exciting events and rough landscape of the frontier's final
years. Rufe LeFors recorded his story over the course of a decade,
finishing up in 1941 in his eighty-first year. His memoirs span the
period from the War between the States to the early twentieth
century, when the Panhandle was still scarcely settled, a true
frontier. In his time LeFors was trail driver, pony express rider,
and rancher. He traveled for a year with Arrington's Texas Rangers,
and he wore the badge of deputy sheriff in the wild west town of
Old Mobeetie. He rode a fast horse after claims in the Cherokee
Strip, spent time as a horse trader, and finally settled in Lawton,
Oklahoma, where, after some twenty years as a deputy, he was
elected to the office of sheriff. LeFors knew how to tell a story.
Whether it is an account of an outlaw's capture or the rescue of a
white girl from prairie fire by a Comanche brave, he weaves into
his narrative all the color, drama, and character of the event. His
version of the death of Billy the Kid adds another perspective to
that much celebrated episode in western history. His encounters
with Temple Houston, the governor's flamboyant son, rancher Charles
Goodnight, and Ranger Captain Arrington add to our fund of
knowledge about those legendary frontier figures. LeFors wanted to
get the facts-as he remembered them-straight. With his sharp eye
for texture and detail and keen ear for language and timing, he
created a narrative that wonderfully captures the flavor of his
life and exciting times.
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