We Have a Religion: The 1920s Pueblo Indian Dance Controversy and American Religious Freedom
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Numar articol:187869588
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Preț:228,00 Lei
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Anuntul a expirat la:22.12.2020, 15:42
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Specificatii
For Native Americans, religious freedom has been an elusive goal.
From nineteenth-century bans on indigenous ceremonial practices to
twenty-first-century legal battles over sacred lands, peyote use,
and hunting practices, the U.S. government has often acted as if
Indian traditions were somehow not truly religious and therefore
not eligible for the constitutional protections of the First
Amendment. In this book, Tisa Wenger shows that cultural notions
about what constitutes religion are crucial to public debates over
religious freedom.In the 1920s, Pueblo Indian leaders in New Mexico
and a sympathetic coalition of non-Indian reformers successfully
challenged government and missionary attempts to suppress Indian
dances by convincing a skeptical public that these ceremonies
counted as religion. This struggle for religious freedom forced the
Pueblos to employ Euro-American notions of religion, a conceptual
shift with complex consequences within Pueblo life. Long after the
dance controversy, Wenger demonstrates, dominant concepts of
religion and religious freedom have continued to marginalize
indigenous traditions within the United States.
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