AltaMira Press
Pages: 200
Trim: 6 x 9
978-0-7591-0243-9 • Hardback • July 2002 • $131.00 • (£101.00)
978-0-7591-1663-4 • eBook • July 2002 • $43.50 • (£33.00)
Kelli Carmean is Associate Professor of Anthropology and Archaeology at Eastern Kentucky University. Her research interests are in traditional cultural properties, North American, Latin American, and Mesoamerican archaeology, and ethnographic and archaeological household studies. She has conducted fieldwork in the United States, Canada, Mexico, the Yucatan, Peru, and Israel.
Chapter 1 Preface
Chapter 2 Prologue
Chapter 3 Chapter 1: The Early Navajo
Chapter 4 Chapter 2: Return to Navajoland
Chapter 5 Chapter 3: Creation and Navajo Sacred Geography
Chapter 6 Chapter 4: The National Historic Preservation Act
Chapter 7 Chapter 5: Natural Resources, Economic Development, and Navajoland
Chapter 8 Chapter 6: Cultural Resource Management and the Navajo Nation
Chapter 9 Chapter 7: Traditional Cultural Properties: Scale, Benefits, and Broader Contexts
Chapter 10 Epilogue
Chapter 11 References
Chapter 12 Index
Spider Woman Walks This Land by Kelli Carmean is one of the best books we've read on Native American sacred geography, its meaning and preservation.
— Sacred Sites Newsletter, Vol. 13.1 (Fall 2002)
Carmean has written an excellent introduction to Navajo culture and the real-world problems facing cultural preservation of archaeological sites and traditional cultural properties. Using the Navajo Nation as an example, the author clearly illustrates the conflict between federal legislation and and Navajo worldview. Carmean includes coverage of applicable federal laws in language easily understood by undergraduates.
— K. F. Thompson, (Northland Pioneer College); Choice Reviews
Laura Gilpin's excellent photographs of mid-twentieth century juxtaposed with the author's turn-of-the-century pictures add to the appeal of the volume...the book, much more than a travelogue and not far from an ethnography of present-day Navajo life, will interest those looking for data on cultural change as seen through the eyes of a visitor new to Navajoland.
— David M. Brugge, Museum of New Mexico; Journal Of The Royal Anthropological Institute, Vol. 9 No. 4 Dec 2003
This unique and enjoyable volume provides the reader with a dynamic human dimension to a critical aspect of cultural resources management. All too often, anthropologists treat traditional cultural properties as a dry intellectual exercise, but not Kelli Carmean. She brings them alive. Her journal entries are a particularly effective way of showing how cultural resources management is applied anthropology that directly affects peoples' daily lives. The balanced perspective, as well as the tone and level of intellectual engagement, make this an excellent source book for undergraduate and graduate classes.
— Roger Anyon, Pima County Cultural Resources Program, Tucson, Arizona