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Masked Gods: Navaho and Pueblo Ceremonialism
Ohio University Press, 1950 Paper: 978-0-8040-0641-5 Library of Congress Classification E99.N3W287 1984 Dewey Decimal Classification 299.78
ABOUT THIS BOOK | AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY
ABOUT THIS BOOK
Masked Gods is a vast book, a challenging and profoundly original account of the history, legends, and ceremonialism of the Navajo and Pueblo Indians of the Southwest. Following a brief but vivid history of the two tribes through the centuries of conquest, the book turns inward to the meaning of Native American legends and ritual—Navajo songs, Pueblo dances, Zuni kachina ceremonies. Enduring still, these rituals and ceremonies express a view of life, of man’s place in the creation, which is compared with Taoism and Buddhism—and with the aggressive individualism of the Western world. See other books on: Navajo Indians | Pueblo Indians | Rites and ceremonies | Southwest, New | Waters, Frank See other titles from Ohio University Press |
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