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Women's Fiction
Grandmothers of the light: A medicine woman's sourcebook

Grandmothers of the light: A medicine woman's sourcebook

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Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 1 stars
Summary: This book is a total sham!
Review: I had to read this book for a Women and Spirituality class at my college. Coincidentally, I also has to read (for a different class) "Fantasies of the Master Race" by Ward Churchill. WEll, thank God! Churchill's book exposes people like Paula Gunn Allen for the shams that they are in Native American studies! You're tipped off to it in her preface which states,"THe first section, like the others, contains myths, not necessarily as recorded or told, but as I understand them." WEll, there you have it--the stories are being made up as she goes along with scant references that are often taken out of context to suit her needs. THe stories themselves are confusing and non-cohesive. In her intros to each chapter, Allen often attempts to connect her story to completely irrelevant pieces of history. Yet another attempt to validate the crock of bull that she puts out there under the label of "Native American/Goddess Spirituality". You know what's really sad? This is the last thing that the Women's Movement needs...another reason to halt our progress. Inaccurate dribble portrayed as fact. I wanted to love this book!....

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A beautiful book!!
Review: i read this book awhile ago and can't really write a review that gives it justice. i will reread it and post another review.... no where in the book does allen talk about facts.it is a book of mythology. myths and tales are not meant to be taken as fact in the scientific sense--they are true on a spiritual level. the book does not claim to be portraying an acurate picture of native american life. it is a picture of the mythic or spiritual life of native american women. this is not a book of anthropology and never claims to be.we are lucky to have p.g. allen. the work she does is important both in remembering the past and remytholgizing the present. the author does not make up stories as she goes along. she is a storyteller and every storyteller tells a story in her own way. but these are legitimate myths, not something that allen made up.i pray that this book finds its way to readers who need to hear its healing message. i pray that more people will take the time to review this book. and i will get to rereading it so i can give it a decent review.you can't go wrong with this book if you are intersted in women's spirituality or native spirituality or if you have a spirit ...

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Great Literature
Review: People who think that Native American culture stopped changing prior to European contact will not like this book. It is part of the ongoing change that all cultures enjoy. Gunn Allen is a vital contempory voice that embodies the projection of Indian past into the Indian future.

Another reviewer criticzed her for making up these stories. That's what literature does, it makes up stories - duh.


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