Weaving Women's Lives

About The Book

Louise Lamphere met Eva Price in 1965 in Sheep Springs New Mexico on the eastern side of the Navajo Reservation while Lamphere was doing fieldwork for her dissertation in social anthropology at Harvard University. Over the next forty years Lamphere developed a strong friendship with Price that expanded to include Eva's daughter Caroline Cadman and granddaughter Valerie Darwin. to her children and grandchildren Lamphere saw an opportunity to pursue her own interest in writing a book on Navajo women that would encompass their transformative experiences through the twentieth century. Lamphere collaborated with Price Cadman and Darwin to create a narrative that highlights the voices of three generations of Navajo women placing them in the context of larger American society rather than presenting the Navajo as an isolated indigenous culture. Emphasizing the vibrancy and strength of Navajo culture Weaving Women's Lives illustrates the process of incorporating new practices and ideas while retaining distinctive Navajo beliefs values and orientations. As individual threads are woven to create a unique pattern so have Navajo women pulled together elements of Navajo and Anglo culture to create a new blueprint for their lives.
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