The author wrote this book in the early 1930s. It describes the dances of the Indians of the SW (Pueblos, Zuni, Navajo, Hopi, Apache).
There’s a lot of detail here and it’s easy to get lost unless one is really into the subject matter. Kudos to Fergusson for recording this detail.
Her introduction highlights what many of the dances have in common, so there’s cultural variation of underlying forms and, possibly, a peek into the lives of Indians before they came into contact with the West. Fergusson says that the dances are prayers: “An Indian dance is not a dance in the sense in which we use that term. It is a ceremonial, a symbolic representation, a prayer. It is, in fact, what all dances were in the early days of the race before the dance as a social and dramatic expression grew apart from the ceremonial which gradually developed into the church service.” On this point, she adds that the dance “is the genuine religious expression of a primitive people which has survived without serious interruption for thousands of years. It belongs to the period of human culture before the religious ritual and the dramas had become separate things. The Indian dance is a prayer, performed with the greatest reverence, and it is also a dramatic representation, as finished and as beautiful as a modern ballet.”
The prayers were about the uppermost concerns in the daily lives of the Indians. “No act of daily life,” she writes, “is too ordinary to be dignified by ritual, no magnificence of God or nature too awe-inspiring to be explained by myth and influenced by prayer. There are prayers for birth and death…and thanksgiving, prayers connected with the planting and harvesting of crops, the hunt, the journey, grinding the corn, the storm, the sun, and the rain - especially the rain….Both in the river valleys and on the desert uplands, prolonged drought has always been their greatest danger. If it does not rain, the people perish. So in one way or another nearly every prayer is a prayer for rain, for renewal and for growth.” And then, she adds, “Prayers for rain often include appeal for all life, animal and human as well as plants, and on this is based the occasional complaint that Indian dances are obscene….To an Indian, human generation is no more obscene than is the fertilization and development of a plant.”
Fergusson also comments that “nobody knows all about Indian dances, not even Indians,” but “The Indian layman, like the Christian layman, knows merely that certain things must be done in a certain way because they have always been done so. ‘Unless we do it this way, our prayer will not be answered. This is the way of the ancients.’” Accordingly, “Everything is done under the direction of the cacique or medicine-man, whose duty it is to see that nothing goes wrong, as the slightest slip may ruin the effect of the entire ceremony.” “The dance,” she adds, “is an affair of the whole community, for everyone is obliged to take part some time during the year, either as a singer or as dancer, and always those who are not dancing or singing are understanding and interested spectators.”
Commenting on the dance rituals themselves, there is “meaning in every item of costume and decoration, in every step and movement….“Every dance is full of tricky changes of tempo and rhythm, of the graceful turnings of long rows of dancers like wheat ruffling in the wind, of that deceptive appearance of ease which is based on years of training for each dancer and days of intensive practice for each performance.” “The intricacies of tempo and rhythm,” she continues, “are based on the music, which commands as much respect in high circles as does the dancing….Lacking harmony, the Indian achieves his effects entirely by rhythm, often combining several rhythms in one song and always using short intervals and very baffling pauses.” Of the pueblo Indian dances, Fergusson notes that “the chant is presumably the prayer, though often those who sing it do not understand it all. Apparently the words used are archaic; sometimes the Indians say they are not words at all, merely sounds. The effect is vigorous, almost angular, unmelodious, unharmonized, but marvelously rhythmic and varied in its rhythm.”
All in all, interesting.