book chapter

The Navajo and Pueblo silversmiths

University of Oklahoma PressNorman • Published In 1944 • Pages: xvii, 220

By: Adair, John.

Abstract
As Clyde Kluckhohn points out in his introduction, this book will be of interest to both the specialist scholar and the 'layman of broad interests.' The author spent two years studying Navajo and Pueblo silver work, both in the museums and private collections and on the reservations. He was an anthropologist whose attention was given not only to the history and technology of the art, but also to the economic role played by the industry in the life of the tribe and the personal role played by the art in the life of the smith himself. In the course of the latter, Adair covers the means by which a smith learns his craft, the people to whom he sells his work, and the aesthetic standards of the ethnic group. For the purposes of the Navajo file, the material relating purely to the Pueblo silver-work craft has been omitted, except in cases where references or comparisons are made to that of the Navajo.
Subjects
Comparative evidence
History
Acculturation and culture contact
Recreational and non-therapeutic drugs
Ornament
Jewelry manufacture
Smiths and their crafts
Special tools
Incorporeal property
Borrowing and lending
Price and value
Exchange transactions
Retail marketing
Division of labor by gender
Animal transport
Decorative art
Accumulation of wealth
Magical and mental therapy
Purification and atonement
Revelation and divination
Independence training
culture
Navajo
HRAF PubDate
2004
Region
North America
Sub Region
Southwest and Basin
Document Type
book chapter
Evaluation
Creator Type
Ethnologist
Document Rating
5: Excellent Primary Data
Analyst
Katchen S. Coley ; 1951
Field Date
1938
Coverage Date
ca. 1850-1940
Coverage Place
Navajo Reservation, Arizona, New Mexico, United States
Notes
[by] John Adair
Glossary of Navajo terms connected with the silver-work craft is indexed for subject 104. The 'Tom' referred to in the text is Tom Burnsides, data on whom is indexed for subject 115
This document consists of excerpts
Includes bibliographical references (p. 213-216)
LCCN
44007567
LCSH
Navajo Indians