Tales of the Earth
$25.00
Title | Range | Discount |
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Trade Discount | 5 + | 25% |
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Description
A revealing analysis of key themes in Native American origin myths—and their stark contrast with the exceptionalist values of the United States.
Tales of the Earth is a comprehensive yet concise overview of Native American mythologies. After outlining theories of the origins of Native North Americans, David Leeming considers the creation myths of many tribes, emphasizing four commonly occurring figures: the Great Spirit, the trickster, the goddess, and the hero. Leeming suggests that in addition to these figures, Native American mythologies have in common a deep reverence for the earth and for community responsibility as opposed to individualism—tenets that stand in stark contrast to the concepts of exceptionalism and Manifest Destiny that characterize the United States, a nation that was built on ancient tribal land.
Several initial questions arise naturally in connection with the indigenous population of pre-Columbian America. Who were these people? Where did they come from? When did they first arrive in the Western hemisphere? What was the effect on them of the Europeans who arrived after 1490? Towards the end of the twentieth century an archeological consensus placed humans – often referred to as ‘Paleo-Indians’ – in the Western hemisphere beginning perhaps as early as 16,500 years ago. It was generally assumed that these people came to America from Central Asia by way of Beringia, a wide land bridge (in some places as wide as 1,600 kilometers (1,000 mi.)) between Siberia and Alaska. The land was exposed some 25,000 years ago before being covered by the rising Bering Sea some 10,500 years later and then by a shallow frozen sea for another 10,000 years.
In almost all Native American creation myths the sacredness of the land itself is emphasized. Four-character types stand out in the myths. The first is a supreme creator deity sometimes translated as ‘the Great Spirit’. The Great Spirit is often represented on earth by a culture hero, a being who teaches the people how to live, how to create, how to feed themselves and how to arrange their societies. This figure is sometimes a trickster, an amoral but highly creative shapeshifter who can undermine creation by introducing such elements as pain, conflict and death. The third, and arguably the most important, figure is the goddess, who takes many forms but who is always directly associated with the sacredness of earth itself. The fourth character is the hero, the one closest to the human psyche in its quest to overcome the monsters that plague us.
Additional information
Dimensions | 1 × 6 × 8 in |
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