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From Seattle to New Jersey, crossing through the South and Midwest, the drum of the powwow calls dancers of many stripes. By day they may be construction workers, computer operators, students, or blackjack dealers, but on weekends, the ageless rhythms brings them together to celebrate a culture both ancient and modern.
Traveling to over thirty cities every year, the photographer Ben Marra sets up a makeshift studio at each powwow and invites participants to be photographed in full costume. Their pictures and accompanying commentary tell a story of a new generation of Native Americans, determined and honor-bound to keep the dancing tradition alive.
Hardcover; 176 pages with 155 full color illustrations.
The Smithsonian's National Museum of the American Indian includes approximately 800,000 objects representing over 10,000 years of history from more than 1,000 indigenous cultures throughout the Western Hemisphere.
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