Lisa D. Barnett is Assistant Professor of American Religious History at Phillips Theological Seminary in Tulsa, Oklahoma.
Description
"Lisa D. Barnett demystifies the practice of Peyotism without disparaging its adherents. The use and spread of peyote among Native American peoples responded to a difficult political situation in the early twentieth century. Barnett shows how Peyotism and the Native American Church fit into this vast and complicated contact zone between settler colonialism and Indigenous ways of life."-Russell Cobb, author of Ghosts of Crook County: An Oil Fortune, a Phantom Child, and the Fight for Indigenous Land "A nuanced history of the Native American Church, Peyote Politics powerfully analyzes the ways Indigenous communities have fought for religious freedom, at times employing the very tools of the settler colonial state as a means of resistance."-Suzanne Crawford O'Brien, author of Religion and Culture in Native America "In writing about peyote and the Native American Church, Lisa Barnett addresses the multiple political views of Native people, missionaries, and bureaucrats. Peyote Politics is a welcome contribution to understanding the pivotal years when many Native people forged a new religion that gave them hope in the face of twentieth-century modernity."-Donald L. Fixico (Muscogee, Seminole, Shawnee, and Sac and Fox enrolled), author of The State of Sequoyah: Indigenous Sovereignty and the Quest for an Indian State