Anthropologist Rodney Frey culminates a decade of work with the
Schitsu'umsh (the Coeur d'Alene Indians of Idaho) in this portrait of
the unique bonds between a people and the landscape of their traditional
homeland. The result of an intensive collaboration between investigator
and Native people, the book includes many traditional stories that
invite the reader's participation in the world of the Schitsu'umsh.
The Schitsu'umsh landscape of lake and mountains is described with a
richness that emphasizes its essential material and spiritual qualities.
The historical trauma of the Schitsu'umsh, stemming from their
nineteenth-century contacts with Euro-American culture, is given
dramatic weight. Nonetheless, examples of adaptation and continuity in
traditional cultural expression, rather than destruction and
discontinuity, are the most conspicuous features of this vivid
ethnographic portrait.
Drawing on pivotal oral traditions, Frey mirrors the Schitsu'umsh world
view in his organization and presentation of ethnographic material. He
uses first-person accounts by his Native consultants to convey crucial
cultural perspectives and practices. Because of its unusual methodology,
Landscape Traveled by Coyote and Crane is likely to become a model for
future work with Native American peoples, within the Plateau region and
beyond.