About This Book
An ethnographic portrait of the Hopi people living atop mesas in northeastern Arizona, describing their environment, settlement patterns, and agricultural dependence, especially on corn, and examining social organization, domestic life, crafts and labor, festivals, games, and rites of birth, marriage, and death. The narrative explains religious beliefs and ceremonial cycles, records myths and oral traditions, provides brief biographies of community members, and surveys archaeological remains and ancient inhabitants, combining field observation with cultural description to show how landscape, subsistence, and ritual shape daily life.
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