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Recovering the Sacred

The Power of Naming and Claiming

Winona LaDuke

Pages: 300
ISBN: 0-89608-712-3
Format: paper
Release Date: 2005-07-15
This book is also available in cloth

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Description of Recovering the Sacred.

Minnesota Book Awards General Nonfiction Winner

When she invites us to “recover the sacred,” prominent indigenous rights activist Winona LaDuke is demanding far more than the rescue of ancient bones and beaded headbands from museums. For LaDuke, only the power to define and access what is sacred will enable Native American communities to define their own destiny.

Basing her explorations on a wealth of Native American research and hundreds of interviews conducted with indigenous scholars and activists, LaDuke examines the connections between sacred sites, sacred objects, and the sacred bodies of her people—past, present, and future—focusing closely on the conditions under which traditional beliefs can be best practiced.

Well aware of the significant gaps between mainstream and indigenous thinking, LaDuke probes the paradoxes that abound for the Native people of the Americas. How, for instance, can the indigenous imperative to honor the Great Salt Mother be carried out when mining threatens not only access to Nevada’s Great Salt Lake, but the health of the lake water itself? While Congress has belatedly moved to “protect” most Native American religious expression, the US government continues to blatantly forward its own interests above the places and natural resources integral to these same “protected” ceremonies.

As LaDuke shows, federal law has achieved neither protection of sacred sites nor repatriation of Native remains—and certainly these laws do not prohibit the more insidious aspects of cultural theft, from the parading of costumed “Indian” mascots to the naming of professional athletic teams. Calling generously on her lyrical sensibility and sharp wit, LaDuke uses these essays not only to indict persisting injustice, but to map paths toward dignity and liberation.

Other topics that are related to Cultural Studies are:

  • Cultural Studies
  • Ecology and Green Politics
  • Native American and Indigenous Studies
  • Table of Contents

    What is Sacred?
    Part 1: Sacred Lands and Sacred Places
    God, Squirrels, and the Universe: The Mt. Graham International Observatory and the University of Arizona

    The Apache and the Wars
    Raising Arizona
    In Search of the Authentic Apaches

    Salt, Water, Blood, and Coal

    Mining in the Southwest
    “I am as much of the clouds as they are of me.”
    Asabakeshiinh, the Spider
    The Mormons, the Lawyers, and the Coal
    Sucking the Mother Dry
    The Salt Mother Still Rests

    Klamath Land and Life

    The Stronghold
    Unhealed Wounds of Federal Policy
    Termination: The Trees and the Land
    Edison Chiloquin and Tribal Restoration
    A River Runs through It
    Valuable Stuff

    Part 2: Ancestors, Images, and Our Lives
    Imperial Anthropology: The Ethics of Collecting

    “I am a man”
    Ishi’s Descendants
    The Ethics of Collecting
    Our Relatives are Poisoned
    Spoils of War

    Quilled Cradleboard Covers, Cultural Patrimony, and Wounded Knee

    Cankpe Opi: Wounded Knee
    Cante Ognaka: The Heart of Everything That Is
    The Road to Wounded Knee
    The Killing Fields
    The Aftermath and the Medals of Hono...

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