Ghost dance



         


The Ghost Dance, also known as the Ghost Dance of 1890, was a millennialistic religious movement among Native Americans that began in the 1880s in the southwestern United States, as many Indian tribes had been forcibly relocated and integrated there. It ended with a bloody confrontation with the United States Army at Wounded Knee, South Dakota.

This movement began with a revelation that a Paiute known as Wovoka (also known as Jack Wilson) had during a solar eclipse. Central to the Ghost Dance religion was the Ghost Dance itself, dancing in a circular pattern, which induced religious ecstasy and the use of hallucinogenic peyote cactus. The ghost dance was an attempt to bring about renewal of native society and the decline in the influence of the white man. Believers in the Ghost Dance ritual were convinced that performing the Ghost Dance would eventually reunite them with their ancestors coming by railway from the spirit world. Meanwhile, the world would return to a primordial state of natural beauty, opening up to swallow up all other people, while the performers of the Ghost Dance floated in safety above with their ancestors and friends.

Though originally nonviolent in nature, the movement ultimately attracted militant elements who favored armed conflict as a means to fight the whites. Ultimately, the Ghost Dance inspired hysteria among white settlers and resulted in the wholesale massacre of Native Americans at Wounded Knee.


Native American/First Nation music
Music of the United States Music of Canada
Pan-tribal genres
Chicken scratch Peyote song
Native American flute Ghost Dance
Powwow Blackfoot Apache
Kiowa Sioux
Inuit Cree
Seminole Tohono O'odham
Omaha Navajo
Hopi Pueblo
Algonquin Ute
Cherokee Tlingit
Salish Athabaskan
Aleut Yupik
Iroquois Zuni


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Samples

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See also

Cargo cult

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