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The Jicarilla Apache - by Veronica E Velarde Tiller (Paperback)
About this item
Highlights
- Between 1976 and 1993 Nancy Warren visited the Jicarilla Apache reservation in northern New Mexico numerous times.
- Author(s): Veronica E Velarde Tiller
- 105 Pages
- Photography, Photoessays & Documentaries
Description
About the Book
This well-rounded portrait of the Jicarilla people and lands reveals a culture and lifestyle seldom studied in the past.Book Synopsis
Between 1976 and 1993 Nancy Warren visited the Jicarilla Apache reservation in northern New Mexico numerous times. She was permitted to photograph their daily activities and various celebrations. Warren's ninety halftone photographs capture the Jicarilla lifestyles and customs, revealing an understanding of their culture and beliefs. While most sacred ceremonies could not be photographed, the important tribal foot race is well documented.
Veronica Tiller provides an essay about the reservation, its history, and its resources to familiarize potential visitors with the area.
"The reservation offers the outdoor enthusiast and tourist some of the most spectacular vacation, sightseeing, sports, hunting, and fishing opportunities in the southwestern United States. For the sportsman, hunting on the reservation is considered some of the best in the United Sates, drawing hunters and sightseers worldwide. Five major big game (elk and deer) migration corridors cross the reservation. Game includes elk, black bear, mountain lion, turkey, and Canadian geese. In addition, seven of the tribe's fifteen mountain lakes are stocked with rainbow, brown, and cutthroat trout. Fishing is permitted at Dulce, Enbom, Hayden, Horse, La Jara, Mundo, and Stone Lakes, and the Navajo River. The tribe welcomes all visitors, but it requires that they abide by guidelines and restrictions intended to protect and preserve natural resources."--from Veronica Tiller's essay
Review Quotes
.,."stunning black and white photographs..."The Jicarilla Apache: A Portrait" promises to be the next influential landmark in historical photography..."