The Hopi Indians

audiobook

The Hopi Indians

by Walter Hough

EN·~6 hours·13 chapters

Chapters

13 total

THE HOPI INDIANS

0:41

PREFACE

1:56

I THE COUNTRY, TOWNS, AND PEOPLES

51:49

III FOOD AND REARING

28:47

IV THE WORKERS

49:15

V AMUSEMENTS

16:21

VI BIRTH, MARRIAGE, AND DEATH

26:21

VII RELIGIOUS LIFE

1:11:56

VIII MYTHS

34:04

IX TRADITIONS AND HISTORY

25:05

Description

Traveling to the Southwest, listeners are invited into the world of the Hopi—often called the “Peaceful People”—who have carved their homes into the red cliffs of Arizona’s mesas. The author, guided by early field work with pioneering anthropologists, shares vivid observations of the six (sometimes seven) rock‑built towns, their self‑sufficient way of life, and the quiet dignity that defines the community. A tone of affection and respect runs through the narrative, offering a personal glimpse of a culture that balances ancient tradition with the edge of modern influence.

The book paints the stark yet beautiful landscape of the Hopi homeland—dry canyons, scattered buttes, and occasional bursts of desert flora that turn the terrain into a palette of greens and golds after rain. It explains how scarce water sources become treasured communal assets, shaping agriculture, ceremony, and daily routines. Listeners also learn about the Hopi’s language ties to other Shoshonean peoples and the subtle ways their customs have endured despite outside pressures.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~6 hours (365K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Brian Sogard, Rachael Schultz, Sam W. and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)

Release date

2018-07-14

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

Subjects

About the author

Walter Hough

Walter Hough

1859–1935

An early American ethnologist at the Smithsonian, he devoted much of his career to studying Native American material culture and daily life. His work combined museum scholarship, field research, and a lasting curiosity about how people made and used the things around them.

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