Arthur Johnson Memorial Library

Dozier, Edward P.

The Pueblo Indians of North America Edward P. Dozier - New York Holt, Reinhart & Winston, Inc. 1970 - 224 p - Case studies in cultural anthropology .

Economy --
Changes in Pueblo life --
Anglo-Americans --
The United States Indian Bureau --
Relations with non-Pueblo neighbors --
Relations with other Indians --
Pueblo government --
Education --
Health --
Community life --
Prehistory --
History 1539-1700 --
History 1700-1800 --
--
History 1800-1900 --
History 1900-1968 --
Classification, distribution and general characteristics --
Population and settlement pattern --
Environment, economy, technology --
Pueblo neighbors --
The irrigation hypothesis --
Pueblo socio-cultural imperatives and Pueblo pattern of organization --
Becoming a Pueblo --
Language --
Ceremonies --
Government organization --
Ceremonial ism --
World view and concepts --
Symbolism --
Pueblo universes.

An authoritative treatment of the social, cultural, and ethnohistorical data on both the Eastern and Western Pueblos! The information contained in this case study is the result of the author's lifetime spent among the Pueblos. "I have lived in or visited every village small and large from the Hopi towns of lower and upper Moencopi in Arizona to the double apartment buildings of Taos Pueblo in northern New Mexico," writes the author in his preface. He writes not of a single people and their culture but of a group of related peoples and their adaptation through time to their changing physical, socioeconomic, and political environments. A rare, inside view of native life and culture by an anthropologist who is himself a Pueblo Indian.

0030787459

9780030787454





970.3 Doz 48