Research Catalog

Explorers in Eden : Pueblo Indians and the promised land

Title
Explorers in Eden : Pueblo Indians and the promised land / Jerold S. Auerbach.
Author
Auerbach, Jerold S.
Publication
Albuquerque : University of New Mexico Press, 2006.

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StatusFormatAccessCall NumberItem Location
TextRequest in advance E99.P9 A84 2006Off-site

Details

Description
205 pages : illustrations; 24 cm
Summary
"Beginning in the late nineteenth century, the Pueblos of the Southwest frequently inspired Anglo-American visitors to express their sense of wonder and enchantment in biblical references. Frank Hamilton Cushing's first account of Zuni pueblo described a setting that looked like "The Pools of Palestine." Drawn to the Southwest, Mabel Dodge imagined "a garden of Eden, inhabited by an unfallen tribe of men and women." There she was attracted to Tony Luhan, a Taos Indian who looked "like a Biblical figure."" "When historian Jerold Auerbach first saw Edward S. Curtis's early twentieth-century photograph Taos Water Girls, he realized that "here, indeed, was the biblical Rebecca, relocated to New Mexico from ancient Haran, where Abraham's faithful servant had journeyed to find a suitable wife for Isaac. Rebecca with her water pitcher is as familiar a biblical icon as Noah and his ark or Moses with the stone tablets. Curtis had recast her as the archetypal Pueblo maiden."" "Explorers in Eden uncovers an intriguing array of diaries, letters, memoirs, photographs, paintings, postcards, advertisements, anthropological field studies, and scholarly monographs. They reveal how Anglo-Americans disenchanted with modern urban industrial society developed a deep and rich fascination with Pueblo culture through their biblical associations."--BOOK JACKET.
Subjects
Bibliography (note)
  • Includes bibliographical references (p. 175-195) and index.
Contents
Introduction : American holy land -- Pt. 1. A man's world -- Ch. 1. Cushing in Zuni -- Ch. 2. Visitors and visions -- Ch. 3. Representing the Southwest -- Pt. 2. A woman's place -- Ch. 4. Salon in Taos -- Ch. 5. Papa Franz's family -- Ch. 6. Feminist utopia.
ISBN
082633945X (cloth : alk. paper)
LCCN
  • 2005035687
  • 9780826339454
OCLC
  • OCM62533886
  • SCSB-5250804
Owning Institutions
Columbia University Libraries