Skip to main content
University of California Press

About the Book

This colorful, richly textured account of spiritual training and practice within an American Indian social network emphasizes narrative over analysis. Thomas Buckley's foregrounding of Yurok narratives creates one major level of dialogue in an innovative ethnography that features dialogue as its central theoretical trope. Buckley places himself in conversation with contemporary Yurok friends and elders, with written texts, and with twentieth-century anthropology as well. He describes Yurok Indian spirituality as "a significant field in which individual and society meet in dialogue—cooperating, resisting, negotiating, changing each other in manifold ways. 'Culture,' here, is not a thing but a process, an emergence through time."

About the Author

Thomas Buckley is an independent scholar and writer living in Maine. He previously taught anthropology and American Indian studies at the University of Massachusetts, Boston, and coedited Blood Magic: The Anthropology of Menstruation (California, 1988).

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
Introduction

PART ONE: CONTEXTS
1. The Yurok Reservation
2. Double Helix
3. Native Authors

PART TWO: TESTIMONY
4. Seeing with Their Own Eyes
5. Doctors
6. The GO-Road

PART THREE: UNDERSTANDINGS
7. The One Who Flies All around the World
8. The World
9. Melancholy
10. The Shaker Church
11. Jump Dance

Notes
References
Acknowledgments of Permissions
Index

Reviews

"The most in-depth, complex, and analytically sophisticated portrayal of Yurok spirituality ever written by an anthropologist [and] the most important ethnographic work about the Yurok in general since Kroeber's work in the early twentieth century."—Les W. Field, author of The Grimace of Macho Ratón

"Its description of Yurok religious practice in recent times is both sympathetic and insightful, providing an interweaving series of narratives and interpretations. The author makes an eloquent case for cultural continuity."—Michael Harkin, author of The Heiltsuks

Awards

  • Victor Turner Prize 2003, Society for Humanistic Anthropology