Arthur Johnson Memorial Library

Kachinas in the Pueblo world edited by Polly Schaafsma. - Salt Lake City University of Utah Press, c2000. - ix, 200 p. ill. (some col.) 25 cm.

Originally published: Albuquerque : University of New Mexico Press, c1994.

Introduction The Hopi Indians, with special reference to their cosmology or world-view / The Zuni ceremonial system : the Kiva / The meaning of katsina : toward a cultural definition of "person" in Hopi religion / The katsina cult : a western Pueblo perspective / Kachina depictions on prehistoric Pueblo pottery / The prehistoric kachina cult and its origins as suggested by southwestern rock art / Polly Schaafsma -- Fred Eggan -- Edmund J. Ladd -- Louis A. Hieb -- E. Charles Adams -- Kelley Ann Hays -- Polly Schaafsma. Anthropomorphic figures in the pottery mound murals / The evolution and dissemination of mimbres iconography / The interconnection between western Puebloan and Mesoamerican ideology/cosmology / Pueblo ceremonialism from the perspective of Spanish documents / The changing kachina / Kachina images in American art : the way of the doll / Stories of kachinas and the dance of life and death / Patricia Vivian -- Marc Thompson -- M. Jane Young -- Curtis F. Schaafsma -- Barton Wright -- J.J. Brody -- Dennis Tedlock.

"The Kachina, or rain deity, stands at the center of the Pueblo Indian religious experience. In the Pueblo belief, the kachina is responsible for the tribe's very survival, for without his intervention the crops will not grow, the cisterns will not be filled, the rivers will not flow." "In Kachinas in the Pueblo World, fourteen noted scholars, among them Fred Eggan, J.J. Brody, and Dennis Tedlock, examine the role of the kachina in the cultures of the Rio Grande, Zuni, and Hopi pueblos. They trace the figure of the kachina to a Mesoamerican original, look at the fortunes of the rain deities after the Spanish and subsequent Anglo conquests of the Pueblo homeland, discuss the transition of the kachina doll from religious object to art, and consider the role of the kachina in allowing elements of Puebloan belief to endure in the modern world." "This stimulating collection of essays and the accompanying illustrations will be of interest to a wide range of readers, from professional anthropologists and cultural historians to kachina-doll collectors and general readers with an interest in the Native Americans of the Southwest."--Jacket

0874806674 (pbk. : alk. paper)

00030259


Kachinas.
Pueblo Indians--Religion.
Pueblo mythology.

299.784 Kac 8