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Sacred Encounters: Father de Smet and the Indians of the Rocky Mountain West
Contributor(s): Peterson, Jacqueline (Author), Peers, Laura (Contribution by)
ISBN: 0806125764     ISBN-13: 9780806125763
Publisher: University of Oklahoma Press
OUR PRICE:   $18.95  
Product Type: Paperback - Other Formats
Published: November 1993
Qty:
Annotation: In 1841 Jesuit Pierre Jean De Smet arrived among the Coeur d'Alene Salish Indians in what is today northern Idaho and western Montana. With 200 color and 20 b&w illustrations, this catalog of the international Sacred Encounters exhibition displays the similarities and differences between European Christianity and Native American beliefs.
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- History | United States - State & Local - General
- History | Native American
Dewey: 978.004
LCCN: 94136487
Physical Information: 0.64" H x 9.81" W x 11.06" (2.12 lbs) 194 pages
Themes:
- Cultural Region - Pacific Northwest
- Ethnic Orientation - Native American
- Geographic Orientation - Idaho
- Geographic Orientation - Montana
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:

For nearly 350 years after Columbus's landing, the remote Northern Rocky mountain homeland of the Flathead and Coeur d'Alene tribes remained a safe haven, virtually unmapped and unexplored by whites. But heralded by Indian prophecies and a request for missionaries, in 1841, the Belgian-born Jesuit Pierre-Jean De Smet arrived among the Flathead, or Salish, in western Montana. His dream of founding an empire of Christian Indians sparked instead a confrontation and dialogue between two sacred worlds: an invasion of the heart.

In full color, with two hundred illustrations, Sacred Encounters captures on the page the emotional tension, drama, and multiple voices of the exhibition of the same title. With the collaboration of more than one hundred Native American, Jesuit, curatorial, and academic consultants, Sacred Encounters bridges the fine arts, history, and ethnography to evoke the ongoing dialogue between Christianity and traditional Indian belief that produced new ways of life and new ways of believing for native and newcomer alike.

Among the illustrations are photographs of newly discovered drawings and watercolors by Jesuit artist Nicolas Point; maps by De Smet and Indian mapmakers; rare battle drawings by the Salish warrior Five Crows; and mid nineteenth-century Plateau and Plains Indian artifacts associated with the travels of De Smet, the Audubon expedition, fur trader Robert Campbell, and Canadian artist Paul Kane.


Contributor Bio(s): Peterson, Jacqueline: -

Jacqueline Peterson is director and curator of Sacred Encounters, a multimedia traveling exhibition that opened at the Museum of the Rockies, Bozeman, Montana, in April 1993. She is an Associate Professor of History and Native American Studies at Washington State University, Pullman and Vancouver, and the author, with Jennifer S. H. Brown, of The New Peoples: Being and Becoming Metis in North America, and of articles about the Metis, the fur trade, and Indian women and religion. Knighted by the king of Belgium for her work on Father De Smet, she currently resides in Portland, Oregon.