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Images of the Buffalo Culture


Article # : 15111 

Section : CULTURE
Issue Date : 4 / 1989  3,349 Words
Author : Ronald McCoy
Ronald McCoy is a professor of history at Emporia State Univeristy in Emporia, Kansas. He has wrtten for The World & I about such topics as Navajo sand painting, Hopi culture, Plains Indian warrior art, and most recently on the sacred clowns of the Puebloan Southwest.

       Little more than a century ago, tens of thousands of Indians occupied North America's Great Plains, a sprawling geographic province stretching from southern Canada to the Mexican border, spanning the vast prairies between the Missouri and Mississippi rivers in the east and the Rocky Mountains in the west.
       
        These Plains Indians lived in a land of contrasts and extremes, a place of towering peaks and plummeting canyons, of droughts and flash floods, of blistering heat and numbing frost, where life was a miracle and death loomed just over one's shoulder.
       
        Most lived in the roving hunting bands that formed such tribes as the Sioux, Shoshone, Kiowa, and Crow. Dispersing in spring and summer, coming together again in winter encampments, they followed paths laid out by perhaps as many as a hundred million buffalo. Fanned out across the prairie were seemingly endless herds of the shaggy haired, crescent-horned beasts, which provided the hunters with nearly all the necessities of existence: raw materials for the food, clothing, weapons, tools, and tipis that made the Indians' way of life possible.
       
        As Plains Indians looked at the world, they perceived the wonders of nature's color and form, and the magnificence of the plumage, horns, and furs decorating other creatures. In comparison, the people felt naked and tried to fit in by drawing man-made beauty from natural materials.
       
        At its heart, Plains Indian art was utilitarian. Elegant quillwork, flamboyant feathered bonnets, finely carved wooden pipe stems, and painted designs decorating tipis and hide robes, all created from the materials nature offered--hides; porcupine and bird quills; wood, horn, and bone; colors from plants and Mother Earth--spoke of a compelling need to create and be surrounded by beauty. Small wonder a Sioux dressed in his finery proudly sang: "Whoever consider themselves beautiful, after seeing me has no heart."
       
        These were a people who cherished memories. "A people without history," the Sioux maintained, "is like wind on the buffalo grass." And their history was composed of many vibrant fragments. Whispers of lovers on the outskirts of tipi villages. Visions of bravery and mystic rituals. Thundering hooves of horses and buffalo. Warriors, clashing in combat, caked in dust, fighting for life, filling the air with exultant cries of victory and anguished sounds of lives torn
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