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Red earth, white lies : Native Americans and the myth of scientific fact  Cover Image Book Book

Red earth, white lies : Native Americans and the myth of scientific fact

Deloria, Vine. (Author).

Summary: In this latest work by the prominent historian, Deloria turns his audacious intellect and fiery indignation to an examination of modern science as it relates to Native American oral history and exposes the myth of scientific fact, defending Indian mythology as the more truthful account of the history of the earth. Deloria grew up in South Dakota, in a small border town on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation. There he was in a position to absorb the culture and traditions of Western Europeans, as well as of the native Sioux people. Much of the formal education he received about science, including how the earth and its people had formed and developed over time, came from the white, Western world; he and his fellow students accepted it as gospel, even though this information often contradicted the ancient teachings of the Native American peoples. As an adult, though, Deloria saw how some of these scientific "facts," once readily accepted as the truth, now began to run against common sense as well as the teachings of his people. For example, the question of why certain peoples had lighter or darker skins posed an especially thorny problem - one that mainstream journals and books failed to answer in a way that was satisfactory to this budding skeptic. When he began to reexamine other previously irrefutable theories - of the earth's creation, of the evolution of people, of the acceptance of the notion that the Indians themselves had been responsible for slaughtering and wiping out certain large animals from their habitat over time - he also began to reconsider the value of myth and religion in an explanation of the world's history and, in the process, to document and record traditional knowledge of Indian tribes as offered by the tribal elders.

Record details

  • ISBN: 0684807009 (alk. paper)
  • ISBN: 9780684807003 (alk. paper)
  • Physical Description: print
    286 pages ; 23 cm.
  • Publisher: New York : Scribner, c1995.

Content descriptions

Bibliography, etc. Note: Includes bibliographical references (p. 267-273) and index.
Formatted Contents Note: Behind the buckskin curtain -- Science and the oral tradition -- Evolutionary prejudice -- Low bridge-everybody cross -- Mythical Pleistocene hit men -- The corpora delicti and other matters -- Creatures their own size -- Geomythology and the Indian traditions -- Floods, lakes and earthquakes -- At the beginning.
Subject: Indians of North America Folklore
Indian philosophy North America
Oral tradition North America
Science Philosophy
Religion and science
Human evolution Religious aspects Christianity

Available copies

  • 7 of 7 copies available at Northwest Indian College.

Holds

  • 0 current holds with 7 total copies.
Show Only Available Copies
Location Call Number / Copy Notes Barcode Shelving Location Status Due Date
Lummi Library E 98 .F6 D45 1995 2242894 Stacks Reshelving -
Lummi Library E 98 .F6 D45 1995 2242909 Stacks Available -
Lummi Library E 98 .F6 D45 1995 2242911 Stacks Available -
Lummi Library E 98 .F6 D45 1995 2245123 Stacks Available -
Lummi Library E 98 .F6 D45 1995 2245124 Stacks Available -
Lummi Library PAVLIK E 98 .F6 D45 1995 287987 PAVLIK Available -
Lummi Library PNW E 98 .F6 D45 1995 2242908 PNW Available -

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