When the Earth Was New: Memory, Materiality, and Numic Ritual
When the Earth Was New: Memory, Materiality, and Numic Ritual
by Alex K. Ruuska
University of Utah Press, 2025 Cloth: 978-1-64769-234-6 | Paper: 978-1-64769-236-0 | eISBN: 978-1-64769-235-3 Library of Congress Classification E99.N97R88 2025
ABOUT THIS BOOK | AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY | REVIEWS | TOC | REQUEST ACCESSIBLE FILE
ABOUT THIS BOOK
Explores the value of oral traditions and challenges entrenched beliefs about ethnogenesis in the Great Basin
In When the Earth Was New, Alex K. Ruuska explores riveting multigenerational memories of Numic-speaking communities that extend back, potentially, to the late Pleistocene. These diverse oral traditions describe geological, climatic, and ecological events that occurred over thousands of years and were passed down across many generations. Through the examination of place-based memories and the architecture of Numic knowledge, Ruuska demonstrates convergences of oral traditions, ethnography, ethnohistory, archaeology, and geology.
When the Earth Was New critically compares and considers multiple forms of knowledge that contribute to overlapping as well as disparate understandings of both recent and distant pasts in the regions of California, the Great Basin, and the Colorado Plateau. It works at balancing key themes in these regions’ histories within a more holistic framework, exploring ancient and modern strands of knowledge with the assistance of twenty-four Tribes and Consolidated Organizations.
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY
Alex K. Ruuska specializes in ethnoarchaeology, oral traditions, sociocultural anthropology, collective healing, and tribal engagement and consultation with Indigenous populations throughout North America. She is the Founder and Director of R. Haus Institute, LLC, an educational and healing institute committed to simple living and sustainable futures.
REVIEWS
“This book is a treasure that bridges the gap between Indigenous and conventional academic discourse, particularly critical in a time of increasing Native American participation in matters of historic and cultural preservation.”—David Hurst Thomas, American Museum of Natural History
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Cover Page
Title Page
Copyright Page
Contents
Figures
Preface
Acknowledgments
Statement on Use of Sensitive Materials
1. Babies and Bathwater
2. We Have Always Been Here
3. Grandma Said
4. No Ritual? No Way!
Beginnings: Ice and Water
5. Raven Cracks the Ice
6. Old Woman of the Sea and the Giant Fish
7. Giants and Waterbabies
8. Earth Birth
9. Vagina Dentatum and Serpent Stories
10. Wake ’Em Up, Wake ’Em Up!
11. We Are Still Here
Bibliography
Index
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