Patrisia Gonzales is an assistant professor in the Department of Mexican American Studies and is an affiliated faculty member in American Indian Studies Programs and the Native American Research and Training Center at the University of Arizona. She is the author of The Mud People: Chronicles, Testimonios & Remembrances.
"Put this book at the top of your list of essential reading about
indigenous cultures and healing practices of the Americas.
Beautifully written and researched, Professor Gonzales' book is
enriched by her accounts of personal experience with red medicine
and the resurgence of indigenous women in the role of healers."
--Leslie Marmon Silko"It is often difficult to write academically
about a subject that is so ethereal, but Patrisia Gonzales manages
to blend the scholarly and personal sides of her topic
effortlessly." --AlterNative
"Through Indigenous knowledge and teachings, which are rooted in
Spiderwoman Knowledge, Gonzales presents a personal/communal and
scholarly account that challenges Western ways of knowing and
de-Indianization. As a study that privileges Indigenous knowledge,
Gonzales's writing reflects that of ceremony. Thus, the book is
itself poetically written and reflects the cyclic order of
life."--American Indian Quarterly
"Gonzales does an outstanding job negotiating the current
literature in several related fields. Her breadth and depth of
research is absolutely impressive. This book is a wonderful and
rich tapestry of history woven with narratives and storytelling."
--Elisa Facio, author of Understanding Older Chicanas: Sociological
and Public Policy Perspectives
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