List of Illustrations
Preface
Acknowledgments
Introduction: The Case of Ellen Gray
Part One: Locations
1. Theoretical Orientation: Embodied Subjectivity and the Self in Motion
Part Two: Illness, Healing, and Missionization in Historical Context
2. “The Fact Is They Cannot Live”: Euroamerican Responses to Epidemic Disease
3. “Civilization Is Poison to the Indian”: Missionization, Authenticity, and the Myth of the Vanishing Indian
Part Three: Restoring the Spirit, Renewing Tradition
4. “A Good Christian Is a Good Medicine Man”: Changing Religious Landscapes from 1804 to 2005
5. Both Traditional and Contemporary: The South Puget Intertribal Women’s Wellness Program
6. Coming Full Circle: Defining Health and Wellness on the Shoalwater Bay Indian Reservation
Part Four: Person, Body, Place
7. “Rich in Relations”: Self, Kin, and Community
8. The Healthy Self: Embedded in Place
9. “A Power Makes You Sick”: Illness and Healing in Coast Salish and Chinook Traditions
Conclusion: The Case of Ellen Gray, Reconsidered
Notes
Bibliography
Index