Medicine Bundle
Medicine Bundle: Indian Sacred Performance and American Literature, 1824-1932
Joshua David Bellin
Copyright Date: 2008
Published by: University of Pennsylvania Press
Pages: 272
https://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctt13x1nv4
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Medicine Bundle
Book Description:

From the 1820s to the 1930s, Christian missionaries and federal agents launched a continent-wide assault against Indian sacred dance, song, ceremony, and healing ritual in an attempt to transform Indian peoples into American citizens. In spite of this century-long religious persecution, Native peoples continued to perform their sacred traditions and resist the foreign religions imposed on them, as well as to develop new practices that partook of both. At the same time, some whites began to explore Indian performance with interest, and even to promote Indian sacred traditions as a source of power for their own society. The varieties of Indian performance played a formative role in American culture and identity during a critical phase in the nation's development.

InMedicine Bundle, Joshua David Bellin examines the complex issues surrounding Indian sacred performance in its manifold and intimate relationships with texts and images by both Indians and whites. From the paintings of George Catlin, the traveling showman who exploited Indian ceremonies for the entertainment of white audiences, to the autobiography of Black Elk, the Lakota holy man whose long life included stints as a dancer in Buffalo Bill's Wild West show, a supplicant in the Ghost Dance movement, and a catechist in the Catholic Church, Bellin reframes American literature, culture, and identity as products of encounter with diverse performance traditions. Like the traditional medicine bundle of sacred objects bound together for ritual purposes, Indian performance and the performance of Indianness by whites and Indians alike are joined in a powerful intercultural knot.

eISBN: 978-0-8122-9234-3
Subjects: Language & Literature
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  1. Front Matter
    Front Matter (pp. [i]-[vi])
  2. Table of Contents
    Table of Contents (pp. [vii]-[viii])
  3. Introduction
    Introduction (pp. 1-20)

    Some years ago, at the opening of the Pittsburgh American Indian Center, I met a man named Edward Hale, a Mandan/Hidatsa medicine man and promoter of Indian causes. Both aspects of Hale’s dual role were on display at the inaugural ceremony. Called on not only to provide the mostly Anglo audience with a living example of Indian people’s resurgence but also to supervise and interpret the enactment of Native dances, songs, and rituals, Hale, dressed in what I took to be a traditional costume of feathers and fringed leather, beating a drum and chanting in a soft voice that seemed...

  4. Chapter 1 George Catlin, Te-ho-pe-nee Wash-ee
    Chapter 1 George Catlin, Te-ho-pe-nee Wash-ee (pp. 21-77)

    A funny thing happened to George Catlin, antebellum exhibitor, interpreter, and impersonator of the American Indian. As a privileged observer of the O-Kee-Pa (okipa), the annual initiation/earth renewal ceremony of the Mandan Indians, Catlin seized on this rare opportunity to view an Indian sacred performance from the inside, to “put the whole of what we saw” on paper and canvas for an inquiring Euro-American audience.¹ Yet at a critical juncture in the ceremony, just at the point at which the personage Catlin takes to represent “the Evil Spirit” (1:167) is sent packing by (presumably) the forces of good, Catlin offers...

  5. Chapter 2 Being and Becoming “Indian”
    Chapter 2 Being and Becoming “Indian” (pp. 78-132)

    It speaks volumes about the ubiquity of Indian performance in the nineteenth century that John Ross, lobbying Washington in a last-ditch effort to stay or at least soften the 1835 New Echota removal treaty, should pen the above lines. Indeed, 10 April was little more than a month away from what Ross’s biographer terms the “ominous deadline of May 23, 1838 ,” on which date the New Echota treaty would go into effect; as Ross himself had written several months earlier to his friend and sympathizer John Howard Payne, with whom he would later attend Catlin’s talk, “the dark cloud...

  6. Chapter 3 The Acts of the Prophets
    Chapter 3 The Acts of the Prophets (pp. 133-192)

    Long before the Wild West exhibitions that transformed him into an international celebrity, William F. Cody (“Buffalo Bill”) had dwelt among the Indian dead. As a boy of eleven or twelve in Kansas, he recalled, his “proudest minute” was when he “downed his first Injun!”; as a buffalo hunter, he killed, according to his own count, 4,280 buffalo in a twelvemonth stint with the Kansas Pacific Railroad; as a U.S. army scout, he went after not the Indians’ game but the Indians’ scalps, reporting after one successful trip, in an echo of General Philip Henry Sheridan’s famous line, that he...

  7. Conclusion
    Conclusion (pp. 193-196)

    In his final book,The World We Used to Live In: Remembering the Powers of the Medicine Men(2006), published after his death in 2005 , the Sioux activist-critic Vine Deloria Jr. returned to the struggle over Indian medicine that had shaped American life and literature from the beginning. “Nothing seems to stem the tide of abuse and misuse of Indian ceremonies,” Deloria wrote. “The consumer society is indeed consuming everything in its path.” Deloria’s last act caps a chorus of Native American protest against the burgeoning array of Euro-American peddlers, preachers, and poets capitalizing on an ever more lucrative...

  8. Notes
    Notes (pp. 197-222)
  9. Bibliography
    Bibliography (pp. 223-250)
  10. Index
    Index (pp. 251-262)
  11. Acknowledgments
    Acknowledgments (pp. 263-265)
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