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Collection: Directories and Documents > Tanis Thorne Native Californian & Nisenan Collection

The Valley Nisenan (20 pages)

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266 University of California Publications in Am. Arch. and Ethn. — [Vol\24 3 929] Kroeber: The Valley Nigenan = 267 de by the Patwin. Into the Akit enter a. number of dances and of pirit impersonators, most of the latter being unreported from the Patwin and Maidu, while the most sacred impersonations of these groups, such as the Moki, Sili, and Yohyoh, are unknown to the Nisenan. In innumerable specific features, and the emphasis placed on hem, the Nisenan variably agree or disagree with the two other peoples. : : : From the hill Nisenan'there is a sharp differentiation, since according to Powers* and Gifford’* these do not possess a secret society, and hence, strictly, no Kuksu eult. Gifford has s that most of the “lil etree 1870-72, by a movement which was repercussion of the first or Californian host Dance. Some of their other dances are remembered as brought in somewhat earlier from the north, presumably from the hill Maidu; and the remainder, or oldest and locally native stratum, while bearing some resemblances to features of the Maidu Kuksu cult, such as performance in the dance house, use of the foot drum, occurrence of skunk and creeper dances, are not organized into a system. In other words, the hill Nisenan took over some Kuksu cult elements; and quite likely the Kuksu tribes now and then borrowed from them elements which they worked into their own system. It is only in this sense that it is possible to agree with Gifford’s interpretation that the “oldest stratum’’24 of hill Nisenan dances belongs to the “‘God-impersonating ‘Gult.’? These people evidently had neither true, disguised impersonations of spirits, nor a society, nor any system of relating dances’ into a scheme; they did have certain performances and paraphernalia that elsewhere formed part of such an organized cult. Resemblances are conspicuously few to adjacent Patwin and Miw fewer to Patwin than to more distant Wintun-Wintu. © This me that the Patwin and Miwok have specialized. The Maidu-Nis retained a widely spread and presumably old typ: system. From the point of view of the valley Maidu and Nisenan, th means that they have mainly retained the set of kinship terms. ‘ by their hill kinsmen instead of modifying these along the lines of Patwin whom they specifically resemble in most of their culture. other words, generic linguistic affiliation more than generic cultur affiliation has determined their kinship system. War.—Ya't designated a brave man or war leader ; k’6i, war. Mokosumni were often eager to fight against Kadema, Yiik’ili, ar other Nisenan villages; but they were cowardly and quit as soo } they lost a man. Slings and spears were specific war weapons, former used by those that had no bows. The sling was said not to have been used for hunting water fowl. It was made of a piece a skin with a string at each end; stones could be hurled across the riy with it. : Dead people’s eyes, presumably from foes, called k’6’yim ca'we were used to bewitch the enemy. Medicine men tied them up with feathers and put them into a hole. This made the foe ‘‘like drunk weak, foolish, or crazy. The hill Nisenan did the same. The formant seemed to know nothing of scalps nor of a victory dance oy heads. KUKSU CULT The Kuksu cult or religious organization of the valley Nisenan of the type known from the Maidu and Patwin, but strikingly diff ent in many details. There seem to be two societies with separate initiations: a general society taking in only males but all or most of. these, and a Kuksu society consisting of a limited number of men and. women. This is also the scheme of the Patwin, except that these. possess a third society, the Wai-saltu or North-spirits, which seems not to be represented among the Nisenan.?1_ The Nisenan general societ ; conducts most of the dances, but the most. important of these among. the Patwin and Maidu, the Hesi, does not occur, its place being taken” by the Akit, which ranks next to the Hesi among the Maidu but is not, From the Pomo and Yuki, the valley Nisenan, Maidu, and Patwin differed in that their organization which made the ‘elaborate dances is the less esoteric part of their system, whereas their Kuksu and Wai“saltu societies, which on the whole correspond most closely to the Pomo-Yuki ghost or spirit society, are more esoteric, limited in membership, but open to women. Loeb’s interpretation that the ghost and resurrection initiation is the oldest portion of the cult, the showy dances being a subsequent addition,** may therefore hold for the Pomo, or for the world at large if religious initiations everywhere are 22 p. 326. 23 p, 257. ‘24 §till more does the ‘‘second stratum’? from the north resemble Kuksu elements: witness the kamin, lole, luhuyi, yomuse dances. 25 Pomo Folkways, this series, 19:338, 354, 371, 384, 1926. 21 The situation for the Maidu is not clear, Dixon’s data having been collected) before anyone suspected that there might be more than one society. His reference to Kuksu as head and initiator (p. 323) may indicate that there was a separate Kuksu society. 4 >