The Navaho Creation Myth: From the World Below to the Making of the Stars

Volume 1 of The North American Indian covers the Navaho (Diné) and several neighboring peoples of the Southwest. This section presents the Navaho creation cycle, one of the most detailed and structurally complex bodies of oral tradition Curtis recorded. The passage below covers a long sequence of events: the separation of men and women in the underworld, the theft of the Water Monsters’ children by Coyote (which triggers a catastrophic flood), the escape through reeds into the present world, and the creation of land, rivers, mountains, sky, sun, moon, and stars. Several named figures appear throughout. First Man (Ástse Hástïn) and First Woman (Ástse Ĕstsán) are the primordial pair from whom much of the creative work proceeds. Coyote is a figure familiar across many Southwestern traditions: capable, clever, and deeply disruptive. Locust plays a heroic role in securing the new world from the Monsters who inhabit it. The passage ends with the birth of White-Shell Woman (Yólkai Ěstsán) and the beginning of the ceremony marking her maturity.

This passage opens the mythology section of Volume 1, which follows directly after a historical sketch of Navaho relations with Spanish, Mexican, and American governments, including the Long Walk and the Bosque Redondo period. The creation cycle continues for several more pages beyond this excerpt, covering the flood, Locust’s defeat of the Monsters in the upper world, the construction of mountains and sky, Coyote scattering the unnamed stars, and the birth and maturity ceremony of White-Shell Woman. Readers interested in the cosmological framework that underlies Navaho ceremonial life will find the full sequence in the pages immediately following this passage. The remainder of Volume 1 goes on to cover the Apache and several other southwestern peoples, each with their own mythological and historical material presented in Curtis’s characteristic combination of narrative ethnography and firsthand observation.

Navaho Medicine Man. Photogravure plate from Volume One.
Navaho Medicine Man. Photogravure plate from Volume One.

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