People of the Peyote : Huichol Indian History, Religion, and Survival / edited by Stacy B. Schaefer and Peter T. Furst
Bibliographic record and links to related information available from the Library of Congress catalog
Preface
Chapter 1
Introduction
Stacy B. Schaefer and Peter T. Furst
Chapter 2
Myth as History, History as Myth: A New Look at Some Old Problems in Huichol
Origins
Peter T. Furst
Chapter 3
Introduction
Huichol Ethnohistory: The View from Zacatecas
Allen R. Franz
Chapter 4
Introduction
Konrad Theodor Preuss (1869-1938) on the Huichols
Translated from German by Peter T. Furst
Chapter 5
Introduction
The Crossing of the Souls: Peyote, Perception, and Meaning among the Huichol
Indians
Stacy B. Schaefer
Chapter 6
Introduction
"How One Goes Being Huichol. . ."
Ram˘n Medina Silva
Chapter 7
Introduction
The Shaman Who Defeated Etsa Sickness (Smallpox): Traditional Huichol Medicine in
the Twentieth Century
Armando Casillas Romo, M.D., in collaboration with Carlos Chavez
Chapter 8
Introduction
Psychotropic Kiri in Huichol Culture
Masaya Yasumoto
Translated from Japanese by Kunie Miyahara
Chapter 9
Introduction
Wolf Power and Interspecies Communication in Huichol Shamanism
Susana Eger Valadez
Chapter 10
Introduction
The Deer That Is Peyote and the Deer That Is Maize: The Hunt in the Huichol "Trinity"
Denis Lemaistre
Chapter 11
Introduction
The Cosmos Contained: The Temple Where Sun and Moon Meet
Stacy B. Schaefer
Introduction to Chapters 12, 13, 14
Chapter 12
Mqui Cuevixa: "Time to Call the Dead"
Marina Anguiano Fern ndez
Chapter 13
A Huichol Soul Travels to the Land of the Dead
Ram˘n Medina Silva
Chapter 14
The Uruk me, A Crystallization of the Soul: Death and Memory
Michel Perrin
Translated from French by Karin Simoneau
Chapter 15
Introduction
Memories of TatewarĄ
Guillermo Espinosa Velasco
Chapter 16
Introduction
The Girl Who Ground Herself: Huichol Attitudes toward Maize
Anthony A. Shelton
Chapter 17
Introduction
Huichol Religion and the Mexican State: Reflections on Ethnocide and Cultural
Survival
Salom˘n Nahmad Sitt˘n
Translated from Spanish by Bonnie Glass-Coffin
Conclusion: Peyote Pilgrims and Don Juan Seekers: Huichol Indians in a Multicultural
World
Peter T. Furst and Stacy B. Schaefer
Glossary
Bibliography
Index