book chapter

Navajo eschatology

University of New Mexico Press4 (1) • Published In 1942 • Pages: 48

By: Wyman, Leland Clifton, Hill, W. W. (Willard Williams), ósanai, Iva.

Abstract
This is a good account by three well-known ethnologists of Navajo concepts of the afterlife. Specifically it deals with the activities of 'ghosts' and the prevention of cure of sickness resulting from them, and the nature of the after-world. Throughout the account, similarities of belief with those of the Apaches are pointed out. However, the authors do not support the theory suggested in connection with the Apaches, that the Navajos' fear of the dead results from repressed resentment and dislike of relatives which actual competition in real life evokes. In their discussion of eschatology, the authors also take issue with the often-heard statement that the relationship between witches and ghosts is so close as to be classifiable together. Although they grant that behavioral patterns connected with the two occasionally merge, they believe that on the whole the pattern assemblages are distinct.
Subjects
Comparative evidence
Acculturation and culture contact
Sorcery
Magical and mental therapy
Dying
Special burial practices and funerals
Cult of the dead
General character of religion
Cosmology
Mythology
Eschatology
Sacred objects and places
Revelation and divination
Organized ceremonial
Ethnophysics
Ethnopsychology
culture
Navajo
HRAF PubDate
2004
Region
North America
Sub Region
Southwest and Basin
Document Type
book chapter
Evaluation
Creator Type
Ethnologist
Document Rating
3: Good, useful data, but not uniformly excellent
Analyst
Katchen S. Coley ; 1951
Field Date
1933-1941
Coverage Date
not specified
Coverage Place
Arizona, New Mexico, Utah, United States
Notes
by Leland C. Wyman, W. W. Hill and Iva ósanai
This document consists of excerpts
Includes bibliographical references (p. 47-48)
LCCN
42036444
LCSH
Navajo Indians