Little Bit of Wisdom, A: Conversations with a Nez Perce Elder

Overview

A Little Bit Of Wisdowm is the first individual Nez Perce narrative publised in more than half a century and the first ever told exclusively in English. Although scores of volumes have been written about the Nez Perce people, almost all of them concentrate on the only war between the United Staes and the Nez Perce people, and especially upon young Joseph and the famous 1877 flight and surrender. By contrast, this book tells the personal story of Isluunts ( Horace Axtell), a contemporary Nez Perce elder and ...

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New (4930) Hardcover w/DJ, Confluence Press, 1st edition 1997; Perfect condition!

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Overview

A Little Bit Of Wisdowm is the first individual Nez Perce narrative publised in more than half a century and the first ever told exclusively in English. Although scores of volumes have been written about the Nez Perce people, almost all of them concentrate on the only war between the United Staes and the Nez Perce people, and especially upon young Joseph and the famous 1877 flight and surrender. By contrast, this book tells the personal story of Isluunts ( Horace Axtell), a contemporary Nez Perce elder and spiritual leader, who grew up in northern Idaho on a windy prairie speaking The Prairie dialect of his people. His great-grandfather fought and died in the battle at Bear Paw Mountains, but the story Horace tells inside the pages of this book is about growing up Christian while maintaining a strong tribal identity, about going to war and then to prison, and then coming home to rediscover the Long House and Sweat Lodge and the sacred practice of the Seven Drum Religion. It is a story he tells in his own plain-spoken style about what it means to speak two languages and to live simultaneously but harmoniously in two very different worlds. In these worlds Christianity and the native Nez Perce religion exist side-by-side in a careful relationship. But it is also a story about family and extended familyrelationships, about respect, tradition, patience, kindness, healing, and grace ( as well as their oppistes). Here then is one man's story of contemporary Nez Perce culture told with good will and plenty of gentle humor about some of life's most inewxplicable mysteries.

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Editorial Reviews

KLIATT
The voice of Axtell, a Nez Perce Indian born in 1924, shines through as he reflects back at the time in his life when he has reaffirmed his Indian roots. Using a tape recorder, Aragon interviewed Axtell and allows him to speak in first person. He briefly reviews Indian history and speaks of the long-term government policy that tried aggressively to squelch all things Indian, including language and religion. Despite the fact that missionaries pressured Indians to get rid of the old ways, he harbors no anger against the Presbyterian Church, which was a part of so much of his life. Axtell relates many things about his life experience and Indian culture: messages passed on by tribal elders, powwows, time spent in prison, problems that have accompanied the use of alcohol, naming ceremonies, family relationships, hunting, funerals, folk medicine, language, relations with animals, even such matters as cutting hair. He is permeated with a desire to share traditions and practices—foods, crafts, and information about how the Indians survived troubled times and injustice. He notes the need to listen carefully and absorb the wisdom of the elders. He felt that if, in writing this book, he did not mention even the commonplace, old knowledge would soon be lost. He reiterates core values: respect, kindness, thoughtful behavior, care of family, love of making things, attraction to sports. Especially intriguing is an extended section about his being drafted into the army, where he served as a motor pool dispatcher during WW II. Indians saw military service as a perpetuation of their warrior traditions, and this was, in many ways, the defining event of his life. Everything connected withinduction and basic training was new and exciting to him. He came in contact with Indians from other parts of the country and attended his first hockey game. Inducted late in the war, he saw Hiroshima and Nagasaki soon after they were bombed. He speaks at length about the difficulty of rebuilding his life when he got out of the service, but he did create a stable marriage and became a spiritual leader. Aragon's voice does not intrude; there is no context or interpretation outside of a preface and epilogue. She says of Axtell, "He seemed as if he lived in two worlds, one within another." A valuable addition to the growing shelf of Native Americans' personal stories. KLIATT Codes: SA—Recommended for senior high school students, advanced students, and adults. 1997, University of Oklahoma Press, 218p, illus, 22cm, 00-039292, $11.95. Ages 16 to adult. Reviewer: Edna M. Boardman; Former Lib. Media Spec., Magic City Campus, Minot, ND January 2001 (Vol. 35 No. 1)
Library Journal
Seventy-two-year-old Axtell is a full-blood Nez Perc Indian. His chance meeting at a powwow with documentary filmmaker Aragon resulted in this book of reminiscences, thoughts, and teachings. Roughly chronological, this collection of conversations meanders through Axtell's childhood in Idaho to his enlistment in the army during World War II and his brush with the law and imprisonment in 1949. An early release and attempts to turn his life around back home culminated in his marching in Clinton's 1993 inaugural parade. Born a Christian in a family that also followed Nez Perc spiritual traditions, Axtell slowly became a practitioner and eventual leader of the traditional Nez Perc Long House religion only in his forties. Aragon functions mostly as a transcriber here, allowing Axtell to tell in his own way about his life and beliefs. Highly readable, this work stands alongside Joseph Iron Eyes Dudley's Choteau Creek: A Sioux Reminiscence (Univ. of Nebraska, 1992) and Joseph Medicine Crow's From the Heart of the Crow Country (Crown, 1992) as 20th-century oral histories from voices rarely given the chance to speak.Lisa A. Mitten, Univ. of Pittsburgh
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Product Details

  • ISBN-13: 9781881090236
  • Publisher: Confluence Press, Incorporated
  • Publication date: 1/1/2010
  • Pages: 217
  • Product dimensions: 5.49 (w) x 8.82 (h) x 0.93 (d)

Table of Contents

TABLE OF CONTENTS:


Preface(p ix)
1. It's Good to Have an Indian Name (p 2)
2. Strong Spiritual Feelings (p 10)
3. Grandmother Told Me This (p 38)
4. Borrowed Language (p 50)
5. These Old Powers (p 54)
6. All My Uncles (p 62)
7. The Old Man (p 68)
8. They Wanted To Kill Us (p 84)
9. Warriors and War (p 96)
10. Inside the Walls (p 150)
11. Getting Back to My Plan (p 164)
12. It's My Turn (p 180)
13. Coming Back to the Indian Ways (p 184)
14. Don't Call Me Chief (p 196)
15. Washington, D.C. (p 200)
16. When You Talk From Your Heart(p 204)
Epilogue (p 213)
Glossary (p 215)

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