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Native Peoples of the Southwest: Negotiating Land, Water, and Ethnicities
By (Author) Laurie Weinstein
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
30th August 2001
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Environmental management
Ethnic studies
333.910973
Hardback
280
For all peoples on all continents and for all times, water has been the blood of life. It is fitting then, that this book about the peoples of the Southwest be dedicated to an examination of water in a land that has historically been dry, making the need to locate water supplies essential. The Southwest became an important frontier for Spanish and then Anglo explorers and colonizers who battled with native occupants for strategic locations. Each one of these groups who made the Southwest their home were ethnically quite different. They represented diverse histories, cultures, nationalities, classes, religions and world views. Beginning with discussion of innovative prehistoric land and water use, the book describes the ways in which early farmers learned how to harness the precious drops of water for their fields. The story then continues with views from the Pueblos and beyond as the living sacredness of earth's resource is described by native peoples. This emic view, however, is often in conflict with the various legal definitions of resources carved by federal, state and local officials and developers. The book goes on to examine the background of contemporary land conflicts and water litigation between numerous contestants: Indian, Hispanic, and Anglo. The book ends with articles that attest to the clever ways in which ethnicity is configured and boldly proclaimed in order to reclaim privilege.
"Generously illustrated with maps, graphics, and photographs, this is a handsome volume....[r]ecommended as a source of useful information concerning the fight for resources in the region. In review of the present drought, similar confrontations will be with us for much of the foreseeable future."-The Journal of Arizona History
Generously illustrated with maps, graphics, and photographs, this is a handsome volume....[r]ecommended as a source of useful information concerning the fight for resources in the region. In review of the present drought, similar confrontations will be with us for much of the foreseeable future.-The Journal of Arizona History
Laurie Weinstein is Associate Professor of Anthropology, Western Connecticut State University.