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Giving Voice to Place: Three Models for Understanding American Sacred Space
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 June 2018
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Ten miles east of Bighorn Canyon in northern Wyoming, you start to climb up out of the desert heat toward Medicine Mountain, looming in the distant haze. At this point, Highway 14A begins a torturous seven-mile ascent along a 10 percent grade, rising ever higher into sweet clover and green meadows, spruce trees and lodgepole pines. Staying in first or second gear the whole way up, your engine still overheats by the time you have reached the crest. But, if you follow the small National Forest sign off to the left near the summit and walk another mile and a half after parking the car, you come to what seems to be the top of the world: the Great Medicine Wheel, high in the Big-horn Mountains, an ancient eighty-foot diameter circle of rocks with a cairn in the center and twenty-eight spokes radiating out to the rim.
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References
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4. Mikhail Bakhtin recognizes the joining of time and place when he speaks of the “chronotopes” that serve as monuments to a community's shared life and identity. These are “points in the geography of a community where time and space intersect and fuse.” They are recognized in the defining narratives that rehearse a people's experience of “space becoming charged and responsive to the movements of time and history.” See Bakhtin, Mikhail, The Dialogic Imagination: Four Essays, ed. Holquist, M. (Austin: University of Texas Press, 1981), 7 Google Scholar.
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6. Charlene Spretnak observes that poststructuralist thinking “spawns books and articles that perceive only a one-way creative power; the projection by humans of their ‘social constructions’ onto nature. All this seems exceedingly odd—and more than a little pathological—to traditional native peoples.” They insist, by contrast, that there is a two-way process of communication between the human and more-than-human world. See Spretnak, Charlene, The Resurgence of the Real: Body, Nature, and Place in a Hypermodern World (New York: Routledge, 1999), 27–28 Google Scholar.
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25. Victor and Edith Turner observe that “the holiest pilgrimage shrines in several major religions tend to be located on the periphery of cities, towns, or other well-demarcated territorial units. Peripherality here represents liminality and communitas, as against sociocultural structure.” Victor, and Turner, Edith, Image and Pilgrimage in Christian Culture: Anthropological Perspectives (New York: Columbia University Press, 1978), 241 Google Scholar. See also Turner, Victor, Dramas, Fields, and Metaphors: Symbolic Action in Human Society (Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press, 1974)Google Scholar.
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31. Since Castro's revolution in 1959, the number of Cubans in Miami has grown to over half a million, with this shrine becoming the sixth largest Catholic pilgrimage site in the United States. See Tweed, Thomas, “Diasporic Nationalism and Urban Landscape: Cuban Immigrants at a Catholic Shrine in Miami,” in Gods of the City: Religion and the American Urban Landscape, ed. Orsi, Robert A. (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1999), 131-54Google Scholar.
32. See Griffith, James S., Beliefs and Holy Places: A Spiritual Geography ofthe Pimeria Alta (Tucson: University of Arizona Press, 1992), 105-10Google Scholar. Griffith has identified more than twenty variants of the narrative in the Arizona Folklore Archives. In one of the accounts of this “wishing shrine,” an old man is said to have been killed there. “If you want anything real bad,” the local people explain, “like if you want a new car or if you're in the third grade and want to pass into the fourth, you go there and tell the old man that if you get it you'll go and light a candle for him.” Ibid., 108.
33. While the American Indian Religious Freedom Act, passed in 1978, provided for the first time a guarantee of Native American religious rights, it lacked any ability to enforce what it had set up in principle. A Free Exercise of Religion Act, therefore, was introduced to the U.S. Congress in 1993, providing for (among other things) the protection of forty-four sacred sites on federal land that were being threatened by tourism, development, mining projects, etc. What finally was passed in Congress in 1993 was a Religious Freedom Restoration Act, aimed at restoring religious liberties threatened by the Supreme Court's ruling in the 1990 Employment Division v. Smith case. This was ruled unconstitutional by the Supreme Court in 1997. A new Religious Liberty Protection Act was introduced in Congress in 1999 to try once again to assure that only a compelling state interest can limit the free exercise of religion.
No one has written more thoughtfully on matters of litigation related to First Nations claims to sacred places than Robert S. Michaelsen of the University of California, Santa Barbara. See Michaelsen, Robert S., “American Indian Religious Freedom Litigation: Promise and Perils,” Journal of Law and Religion 3, no. 1 (1985): 47–76 CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Robert S. Michaelsen, “Sacred Land in America: What Is It? How Can It Be Protected?” Religion 16, no. 3 Quly 1986): 249-68; and Robert S. Michaelsen, “Dirt in the Court Room: Indian Land Claims and American Property Rights,” in American Sacred Spaces, ed. Chidester and Linenthal, 43-96.
34. See Kelley, Klara and Harris, Francis, Navajo Sacred Places (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1994), 143, 169-72Google Scholar.
35. If sacred places are popularly understood to be clearly differentiated from surrounding terrain, if they are expected to function in a manifest way as a “center,” if one even anticipates a permanent physical structure of some sort to be the focus of attention there (like a church or temple), then Navajo and Hopi plaintiffs obviously have no credibility when they speak of the San Francisco Peaks as intrinsically holy. To court justices operating under an essentially Eliadean conception of sacred place, these mountains appear to be a very diffuse and “ordinary” terrain, not at all marked off in any particular way as sacred, and, therefore, not necessarily requiring protection under First Amendment rights.
36. Eade and Sallnow, Contesting the Sacred, 15. Chidester and Linenthal speak of any given “sacred” space as an “empty signifier,” something “open to unlimited claims and counter-claims on its significance.” Chidester and Linenethal, American Sacred Spaces, 18.
37. No more, that is, than a written text can be interpreted convincingly in any random manner. Portier, William L., “A Church Polarized: Fault Lines in the History of American Catholicism,” U.S. Catholic Historian 14, no. 4 (Fall 1996): 141-45Google Scholar, criticizes cultural analyses that reduce devotional practices in American life to mere cultural patterns alone.
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40. Ingold, “Culture and the Perception of the Environment,” 39; Abram, Spell of the Sensuous, 67; Gibson, James J., The Ecological Approach to Visual Perception (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1979), 127-43Google Scholar. These affordances “exist as inherent potentials of the objects themselves, quite independently of their being put to use or realized by a subject.” Ingold, “Culture and the Perception of the Environment,” 42.
41. Ingold, “Culture and the Perception of the Environment,” 42.
42. See Adrian Iwachiw, “Places of Power: Sacred Sites, Gaia's Pilgrims, and the Politics of Landscape: An Interpretative Study of the Geographics of New Age and Contemporary Earth Spirituality, with Reference to Glastonbury, England, and Sedona, Arizona” (Ph.D. diss., York University, Toronto, 1997).
43. David Abram says “the perceiving body does not calculate logical probabilities; it gregariously participates in the activity of the world, lending its imagination to things in order to see them more fully” Abram, Spell of the Sensuous, 58.
44. Merleau-Ponty, Maurice, Phenomenology of Perception (London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1962), 214 Google Scholar.
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46. Abram says, “My hand is able to touch things only because my hand is itself a touchable thing, and thus is entirely a part of the tactile world that it explores.” To touch the name of my friend cut into the black granite wall was, in this respect, “to experience [my] own tactility, to feel [myself] touched by the [wall].” It is to recognize fully that my “surroundings are experienced as sensate, attentive, and watchful.” Abram, Spell of the Sensuous, 68-69. The wall was the powerful medium of contact with my friend as our mutual interaction of person and place was joined in a single moment.
47. Casey, Edward S., Getting Back into Place: Toward a Renewed Understanding ofthe Place-World (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1993), 204-22Google Scholar.
48. Jack Turner shares an engaging story of his own journey into the Maze in The Abstract Wild (Tucson: University of Arizona Press, 1997), 3-18. See also Momaday, N. Scott, “The Native Voice in American Literature,” in The Man Made of Words: Essays, Stories, Passages (New York: St. Martin's, 1997), 14 Google Scholar.
49. See Burton-Christie, Douglas, “Interlude: the Literature of Nature and the Quest for the Sacred,” in The Sacred Place, ed. Olsen, W. Scott and Cairns, Scott (Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press, 1996), 165-77Google Scholar; Burton-Christie, Douglas, “Mapping the Sacred Landscape: Spirituality and the Contemporary Literature of Nature,” Horizons 21, no. 1 (Spring 1994): 22–47 CrossRefGoogle Scholar; and Burton-Christie, Douglas, “A Feeling for the Natural World: Spirituality and the Appeal to the Heart in Contemporary Nature Writing,” Continuum 2, nos. 2-3 (Spring 1993): 154-80Google Scholar. Much of my appreciation for the phenomenological approach argued in this paper is tied to a backpacking trip into the Maze with Doug Burton-Christie in the spring of 1998. This journey to one of the first and hardest to reach of all American sacred places was profoundly formative of my thinking.
50. The Apache claim that places have their own way of “stalking” them with the power of their stories. “The land makes people live right,” they claim. See Basso, Keith, Wisdom Sits in Places: Landscape and Language among the Western Apache (Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 1996), 37–70 Google Scholar.
51. Walter Brueggemann's book by this title, subtitled Daring Speech for Proclamation, (Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1990), reflects on the importance of the poet's artistry to biblical hermeneutics in the same way I want to suggest its significance for the understanding of place.
52. See Geertz, Clifford, Local Knowledge: Further Essays in Interpretive Anthropology (New York: Basic Books, 1983), 19–35 Google Scholar.
53. Hoskins, W. G., The Making of the English Landscape (Harmondsworth, England: Penguin Books, 1970), 1 Google Scholar.
54. Abram, Spell of the Sensuous, 80-82. Abram argues that our language is “continually nourished by these other voices—by the roar of waterfalls and the thrumming of crickets. It is not by chance that, when hiking in the mountains, the English terms we spontaneously use to describe the surging waters of the nearby river are words like ‘rush,’ ‘splash,’ ‘gush,’ ‘wash.’”
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56. See Sexson, Lynda, Ordinarily Sacred (New York: Crossroad, 1982)Google Scholar, and Norris, Kathleen, The Quotidian Mysteries: Laundry, Liturgy, and “Women's Work” (New York: Paulist Press, 1998)Google Scholar.
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