Social and Economic History Of the Southwest
Please answer the following essay questions based on Keith B. Basso's Wisdom Sits in Places.
Discuss how the Apache of Cibecue invest the landscape with meaning.
The Apache not only invest the land with meaning but they treat the land and the various aspects of it, that is the water, the rocks, the trees, as though they are separate living entities which must be recognized and paid attention to. Not only this, but the place names are important because there is the connection with the history of the Apache. Basso was having trouble getting the pronunciation of a place right and finally he was just going to give up and try and get it from the recordings that were made. This bothered his chief guide. Basso had said it didn't matter, he would learn it later but the guide said it did matter and then it was explained in no uncertain terms that the names were made the way they were for definite reasons and that when the place name was said, today's Apache was speaking the same words as their ancestors had. The old man said he wasn't showing respect. For an anthropologist, this was quite a rude shock.
Once past this misunderstanding, the old guide tells Basso the story of how places like "Water Lies With Mud In An Open Container" came to be so named and he picks up a handful of wet mud to prove his story.
It is also explained that place names became the way different clans identified themselves. As Charles told it, the clans began to name themselves by, " ... where their women first planted corn." This planting of corn by the women is also used to explain why clan lines are traced through the women.
Discuss how through language they commune with their ancestors:
The Apaches commune with their ancestors through place- names because their history is captured by these places. They are the means by which they remember the stories of their people and how their people came to this part of America and at the same time they are remembering the social and moral values that their ancestors held dear.
Discuss how they teach morals to their young.
Part way through the project to gather and map place names, the chief guide introduces his 12-year-old nephew and announces that he will be coming along on the rest of the trips. As Charles, the guide, relates the stories that explain their origins and supply their cultural backing, it quickly becomes obvious that each story here has something to do with people not behaving as they should and the trouble that caused. Basso writes:
For me, riveted and moved, the country takes on a different cast, a density of meaning -- and with it a formidable strength -- it did not have before. Here, there, and over there, I see, are places which proclaim by their presence and their names both the imminence of chaos and the preventive wisdom of moral norms. "Don't make mistakes," these places seem to say. "Think sensibly and do what is right. (Basso 28)
Something that is not spoken but seems obvious, is that the young man was along for at least a refresher course in the morality tales of his people.
What does it mean to "shoot arrows' at someone?
Eventually, I ask Nick if he is ready to resume our work together. 'Yes,' he says, 'but no more on names.' What then? 'Stories,' is his reply. 'All these places have stories. We shoot each other with them, like arrows." (Basso 48)
The explanation of stories is that they are used to point out wrong behavior. The historical tales tend to be much shorter than sagas or myths because their purpose is to remind, "social delinquents," as to the proper way to approach life, and such points are best made with "arrows" that move swiftly.
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The circumstances that led to his shipwreck:
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