Become a Readings Member to make your shopping experience even easier. Sign in or sign up for free!

Become a Readings Member. Sign in or sign up for free!

Hello Readings Member! Go to the member centre to view your orders, change your details, or view your lists, or sign out.

Hello Readings Member! Go to the member centre or sign out.

Masahkamikohkwewa (Grandmother Earth): A Synchretistic Meskwaki Cosmology Volume 2
Paperback

Masahkamikohkwewa (Grandmother Earth): A Synchretistic Meskwaki Cosmology Volume 2

$98.99
Sign in or become a Readings Member to add this title to your wishlist.

This book is an edition and translation of a manuscript written over a century ago in Meskwaki by Alfred Kiyana. The author combines elements of traditional Meskwaki culture and oral literature with elements of conventional Christian belief, reconciling them in a complex explanatory cosmology that accounts for many aspects of how the world of humans is the way it is. The main characters are Wisahkeha, the culture hero (‘our maternal nephew’), and Masahkamikohkwewa (‘our grandmother’), who is eventually transformed by him into the Earth. Other major roles are played by God, who is Wisahkeha’s good friend, and the Devil. And a number of other manitous (spirits), including angels, also appear prominently. The friendship between Wisahkeha and God is strained by God’s foolish behavior, which the Devil causes and which, among other things, accounts for the origin of venereal disease. The Devil’s punishment and torture of women who had had multiple sexual partners in their previous lives is ended by Masahkamikohkwewa, and she arranges for the most abused of these women to be reborn in order to instruct girls about sex on the basis of her own experiences. After Wisahkeha frees God from this enchantment, the two friends assign the Devil to be in charge of malefactors in the afterworld. The story takes place in the sky worlds of the manitous, whose daily lives and activities anticipate and effectively determine how humans will live on the eventual earth. There are also journeys to the world beneath the world ocean that is far below the sky. Among other things, Wisahkeha and Masahkamikohkwewa prefigure, and hence establish for humans, the practices of courtship and sex. She initiates the growing of corn and other garden crops. When Wisahkeha’s plans take shape, he organizes councils of the manitous to plan things for the eventual People-to-Be. Among other things, they propose that people should have different languages and wars. After Wisahkeha makes the Earth out of Masahkamikohkwewa, they create its various features as well as the Sun, the Morning Star, and the Thunderers. Wisahkeha and Masahkamikohkwewa make and instruct the first human couple, and Wisahkeha instructs the manitous on their duties. There is a brief mention of God making a place for his people, with Wisahkeha’s help. Wisahkeha establishes the use of clan feasts with sacred packs and songs, and he warns that people should never stop having them. The manuscript, with just under 1,200 pages, is the longest of those written by native speakers in the Meskwaki alphabetic syllabary that are in the National Anthropological Archives of the Smithsonian Institution. Meskwaki, earlier called Fox, is the heritage language of the Meskwaki Nation (the Sac and Fox Tribe of the Mississippi in Iowa), whose settlement lands are in Tama, Iowa.

Read More
In Shop
Out of stock
Shipping & Delivery

$9.00 standard shipping within Australia
FREE standard shipping within Australia for orders over $100.00
Express & International shipping calculated at checkout

MORE INFO
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Mundart Press
Date
18 August 2022
Pages
450
ISBN
9798986545011

This book is an edition and translation of a manuscript written over a century ago in Meskwaki by Alfred Kiyana. The author combines elements of traditional Meskwaki culture and oral literature with elements of conventional Christian belief, reconciling them in a complex explanatory cosmology that accounts for many aspects of how the world of humans is the way it is. The main characters are Wisahkeha, the culture hero (‘our maternal nephew’), and Masahkamikohkwewa (‘our grandmother’), who is eventually transformed by him into the Earth. Other major roles are played by God, who is Wisahkeha’s good friend, and the Devil. And a number of other manitous (spirits), including angels, also appear prominently. The friendship between Wisahkeha and God is strained by God’s foolish behavior, which the Devil causes and which, among other things, accounts for the origin of venereal disease. The Devil’s punishment and torture of women who had had multiple sexual partners in their previous lives is ended by Masahkamikohkwewa, and she arranges for the most abused of these women to be reborn in order to instruct girls about sex on the basis of her own experiences. After Wisahkeha frees God from this enchantment, the two friends assign the Devil to be in charge of malefactors in the afterworld. The story takes place in the sky worlds of the manitous, whose daily lives and activities anticipate and effectively determine how humans will live on the eventual earth. There are also journeys to the world beneath the world ocean that is far below the sky. Among other things, Wisahkeha and Masahkamikohkwewa prefigure, and hence establish for humans, the practices of courtship and sex. She initiates the growing of corn and other garden crops. When Wisahkeha’s plans take shape, he organizes councils of the manitous to plan things for the eventual People-to-Be. Among other things, they propose that people should have different languages and wars. After Wisahkeha makes the Earth out of Masahkamikohkwewa, they create its various features as well as the Sun, the Morning Star, and the Thunderers. Wisahkeha and Masahkamikohkwewa make and instruct the first human couple, and Wisahkeha instructs the manitous on their duties. There is a brief mention of God making a place for his people, with Wisahkeha’s help. Wisahkeha establishes the use of clan feasts with sacred packs and songs, and he warns that people should never stop having them. The manuscript, with just under 1,200 pages, is the longest of those written by native speakers in the Meskwaki alphabetic syllabary that are in the National Anthropological Archives of the Smithsonian Institution. Meskwaki, earlier called Fox, is the heritage language of the Meskwaki Nation (the Sac and Fox Tribe of the Mississippi in Iowa), whose settlement lands are in Tama, Iowa.

Read More
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Mundart Press
Date
18 August 2022
Pages
450
ISBN
9798986545011