For This Land: Writings on Religion in America

For This Land: Writings on Religion in America

For This Land: Writings on Religion in America

For This Land: Writings on Religion in America

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Overview

First Published in 1999. For This Land, edited and with an introduction by James Treat, brings together over thirty years of the work of Vine Deloria, Jr., regarded as one of the most important living Native American figures. For three decades, Deloria has offered substantive and persistent contributions to understanding the complexity of religion in America. In uis writings he recognizes the spiritual desperation and religious breakdown in the contemporary situation, and provides the groundwork to get people to examine what they actually believe and how they must put those beliefs into practice. The essays in this collection express Deloria's concern for the religious dimensions and implications of human existence. His writings are engaged within a theoretical system of physical, not ideological, space, and ultimately give voice to this intellectual passion by calling into question our controversial religious institutions, commitments, worldviews, freedoms and experiences. For This Land offers a distinctive approach to comprehending human existence from one of the leading critics of mainstream American thought.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781135263393
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Publication date: 10/31/2013
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 320
File size: 737 KB

About the Author

Vine Deloria, Jr., a member of the Standing Rock SiouxTribe of North Dakota and former director of the NationalCongress of American Indians, is Professor of History atthe University of Colorado. He is the author of numerousbooks, including Red Earth, White Lies (1995), God isRed (1973), and Custer Died for your Sins (1969).JamesTreatteaches in the Honors College at the University ofOklahoma. He edited Native and Christian: IndigenousVoices on Religious Identity in the United States andCanada, also published by Routledge.

Table of Contents

James Treat -- Introduction: An American Critique of Religion I. WHITE CHURCH, RED POWER 1. Missionaries and the Religious Vacuum (1969) 2. The Theological Dimension of the Indian Protest Movement (1973) 3. Religion and Revolution Among American Indians (1974) 4. Non-Violence in American Society (1974) 5. The Churches and Cultural Change (1974) 6. GCSP: The Demons at Work (1979) II. LIBERATING THEOLOGY 7. A Violated Covenant (1971) 8. An Open Letter to the Heads of the Christian Churches in America (1972) 9. It Is a Good Day to Die (1972) 10. Escaping From Bankruptcy: The Future of the Theological Task (1976) 11. On Liberation (1977) 12. Vision and Community (1990) III. WORLDVIEWS IN COLLISION 13. Religion and the Modern American Indian (1974) 14. Native American Spirituality (1977) 15. Civilization and Isolation (1978) 16. Christianity and Indigenous Religion: Friends or Enemies? (1987) IV. HABITS OF THE STATE 17. Completing the Theological Circle: Civil Religion in America (1976) 18. American Indians and the Moral Community (1988) 19. A Simple Question of Humanity: The Moral Dimensions of the Reburial Issue (1989) 20. Sacred Lands and Religious Freedom (1991) 21. Worshipping the Golden Calf: Freedom of Religion in Scalia's America (1991) 22. Secularism, Civil Religion, and the Religious Freedom of American Indians (1992) V. OLD WAYS IN A NEW WORLD 23. Introduction to Black Elk Speaks (1979) 24. The Coming of the People(1979) 25. Out of Chaos (1985) 26. Reflection and Revelation: Knowing Land, Places and Ourselves (1991) 27. Is Religion Possible? An Evaluation of Present Efforts to Revive Traditional Tribal Religions (1992) 28. Introduction to Vision Quest (1994) Vine Deloria, Jr. --Afterword: Contemporary Confusion and the Prospective Religious Life Appendix 1: The Missionary in a Cultural Trap (1965) Appendix 2: From the Archives: December 2, 1504 Bibliography
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