Book

Dancing with a ghost: exploring Indian reality

Octopus Books : Distributed by ButterworthsMarkham, Ont. • Published In 1992 • Pages:

By: Ross, Rupert.

Abstract
This is one of the best accounts of hunter-gatherer mentality, and an anthropologist did not write it! Rupert Ross is a Crown Attorney who practices criminal law in northwestern Ontario. Before going to law school, Ross spent eleven summers working as a fishing guide north of Kenora, where he associated with Native people. This book grew out of a series of articles Ross published about his confusion over the way Natives behaved in the court system. Their silence when they should be giving testimony, or their unsolicited self-incriminating confessions, when they should be silent, baffled Ross. With help from Native informants, he began to understand their ethical system, in which individuals were not penalized or stigmatized for bad behavior. Instead, they were counseled by elders and subjected to ritual healing in order to bring them back into the family. Ross convincingly relates these practices to other aspects of hunter-gathering life: the threat of starvation, ethics of noninterference, mandatory egalitarianism, experiential knowledge, the extended family, and belief in supernatural spirits.
Subjects
Drives and emotions
Acculturation and culture contact
Ethics
Trial procedure
Magical and mental therapy
Ethnopsychology
culture
Ojibwa
HRAF PubDate
2000
Region
North America
Sub Region
Arctic and Subarctic
Document Type
Book
Evaluation
Creator Type
Judicial Personnel
Document Rating
4: Excellent Secondary Data
5: Excellent Primary Data
Analyst
Ian Skoggard ;1998
Field Date
1968-1991
Coverage Date
1968-1991
Coverage Place
Contemporary Region, Kenora region, Ontario, Canada
Notes
Rupert Ross
Includes indexes
LCCN
92194570
LCSH
Ojibwa Indians