For Paula Gunn Allen, a Laguna Indian writer, the traditional Laguna stories that appear in Leslie Marmon Silko's novel Ceremony (1977) constitute evidence of improper publication of secret clan material. Silko herself has stated that the source of these stories is Laguna oral tradition, a tradition she experienced directly growing up on the Laguna Pueblo reservation in New Mexico. Yet though Silko may have recalled the gist of any number of such stories prior to writing Ceremony, it is also the case that all but two of the traditional stories in the novel are known to have been taken. sometimes verbatun, from preexisting ethnographic print texts rather than immediately from remembered oral performance. Even if we agree with Gunn Allen that the original performers and transcribers of these stories might have been guilty of violating clan secrets, the fact that such texts exist in print outside Ceremony, and existed well before Silko was born, puts a very different face on the charge of giving away cultural property. Rather than revealing clan secrets. Silko is repatriating Laguna "artifacts," rescuing them from their status as lifeless ethnographic museum pieces and returning them to circulation as part of an ongoing, living story.
The author notes that the Laguna stories Silko uses in Ceremony are taken 'sometimes verbatim' from ethnographic print texts most likely in order to
support the notion that Silko relied more on existing documents than on memories of oral performance for these stories.
The author emphasizes that many of the Laguna stories in Silko's *Ceremony* were taken from ethnographic texts rather than being recalled from oral tradition. This indicates a reliance on written documentation, which challenges any assumptions about the authenticity or originality of the stories as they relate to Silko's personal memory.
This option implies a need for differentiation between sources, but the passage does not focus on distinguishing which stories came from which source, rather it emphasizes the reliance on existing texts overall.
While this choice suggests a potential interest, the passage does not explore Silko’s preferences for specific texts, but rather discusses her broader practice of utilizing existing ethnographic materials in her storytelling.
This choice addresses the issue of clan material use but does not represent the primary concern of the author. The passage focuses more on the implications of Silko's source material rather than categorizing her use of clan secrets as proper or improper.
This option suggests a comparison of accuracy between print and oral traditions, which is not supported by the passage. The author does not claim that print texts are inherently more accurate; instead, they highlight the act of repatriation of these stories from print to living tradition.
The passage illustrates that Silko’s use of Laguna stories from ethnographic texts serves to highlight her reliance on documented sources rather than purely on her memory of oral traditions. This reliance suggests a different context for understanding her work, framing it as a repatriation of cultural narratives rather than a violation of secrets. The focus remains on how these stories, drawn from print, contribute to a living narrative rather than simply being handed down through oral storytelling alone.
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