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         William Douglas Powers Returning to the Sacred:An Eliadean Interpretation of Specks Account of the Cherokee Booger 
          Dance
  In 1935 and 1936, eminent anthropologist, ethnologist, and linguist Dr. 
        Frank Gouldsmith Speck observed performances of the Booger Dance of the 
        Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians on their reservation in the Great Smoky 
        Mountains of western North Carolina. Undoubtedly influenced by theories 
        of cultural evolutionism as a student of the empiricist Franz Boas, Speck 
        asserted that the Booger Dance contained no religious symbolism and only 
        obscured religious motives. The religious ritualistic aspects merely contributed 
        to the dance's aesthetic and dramatic elements and did not influence the 
        actions of the performers or spectators.(1) Speck believed that the dance 
        functioned as a
  
         record of the anxieties of a people, their reactions 
          against the symbol of the invader, and their insecurity in their dealings 
          with the white man. In general, [Cherokee] dances reveal an equilibrium 
          between the Cherokee and their environment, both animate and inanimate. 
          In the Booger Dance the equilibrium is precarious.(2)   According 
        to Speck's Cherokee informant Will West Long, however, the Booger Dance, 
        indeed all dances, emanated "from one source [the monster Stone Coat], 
        [and they were] bequeathed to the Cherokee as spiritualistic aids in their 
        struggle for life against an adverse animal kingdom, the agency of disease, 
        and a menacing world of mankind".(3) Yet Speck disavowed an authenticity 
        and autonomy of religion, and he reduced the Booger Dance, a religious 
        ritual, to merely a manifestation of psychology or sociology. Such reductionism 
        is problematic; it skirts the possibility that religion might function 
        as a cause rather than an effect. [page 71] 
        In 1949, Romanian-born twentieth-century historian of religions Mircea 
        Eliade wrote in his monograph Patterns of Comparative Religions 
        that:
  
         a religious phenomenon will only be recognized as 
          such if it is grasped at its own level, that is to say, if it is studied 
          as something religious. To try to grasp the essence of such a phenomenon 
          by means of physiology, psychology, sociology, economics, linguistics, 
          art or any other study is false; it misses the one unique and irreducible 
          element in itthe element of the sacred.(4) By scouring Speck's data for patterns defining the sacred 
        and profane, myth and symbols, and time and history (patterns which Eliade 
        believed existed in all religious traditions), I hope to illuminate the 
        Booger Dance's religious role. Viewed through the lens of Eliade's theory 
        (which he unraveled throughout his writings rather than stated in an elegant, 
        neat theorem), the Booger Dance stands as a religious phenomenon, and 
        a true understanding of the ritual emanates.  The Booger Dance contains four distinct components, or "acts." 
        In the first act, according to Speck, after about thirty minutes of social 
        dancing, four to ten or more masked men stamp into the performance area, 
        a room in a private residence, in a state of general mayhem.(5) They wear 
        simple costumes of ragged European-style garb, sheets, and bed quilts, 
        draped over their bodies and shoulders, and sometimes over the head.(6) 
        Some of the Boogers fall to the floor in feigned convulsive seizures; 
        others mockingly strike and push at the spectators in hopes of clumsily 
        manhandling the women and girls.(7) The Boogers chase the screaming and 
        giggling females throughout the room, obscenely gesturing by thrusting 
        their buttocks to display gourd phalluses.(8) Speck notes that these phalluses 
        sometimes contain water, which when released obviously imply ejaculation.(9) 
        After completing this first sequence, all the while underscored with music, 
        the Boogers compose themselves and take seats on a board or bench near 
        the wall.(10)
  [page 
        72] The brief second act begins when the host ("the Driver," 
        since he drives the action of the evening) heralds the strangers' arrival. 
        In whispered Cherokee, the Driver asks the Boogers' leader his group's 
        identity; the leader tells the Driver that they are from a "distant 
        land and going 'north' or 'south'".(11) The Driver loudly broadcasts 
        the leader's response and then asks what the Boogers want, to which they 
        unanimously reply, "Girls!" More fumbling girl-chasing follows 
        and the women respond with more squealing and giggling.(12) The Boogers 
        then impulsively demand a fight, but in their broken Cherokee they announce 
        they want to dance, unwittingly punning the words "dance" and 
        "fight," which differ in the Cherokee language only in the placement 
        of accent.(13)
  Undoubtedly 
        the most striking components of the Boogers' costumes are their masks. 
        These masks, although simplistic and crude, terrorize and yet delight 
        the spectators. Crafted from large gourds or carved from buckeye wood, 
        the masks represent faces of foreigners, such as Africans, Germans, French, 
        Chinese, or other Indian tribesmen.(14) The Cherokee also make masks of 
        hollowed-out hornet or wasp nests to personify mean or evil whites, or 
        whites consumed by a disfiguring illness such as smallpox.(15) Dyed with 
        vegetable pigments and decorated with bits of fur to suggest eyebrows, 
        beards, and mustaches, the masks also have decidedly sexual connotations. 
        For example, a mask might feature a large pendulous gourd for a penis-like 
        nose, surrounded by a base of opossum fur to represent pubic hair.(16) 
        These caricatures of genitalia represent a Cherokee belief in outsiders' 
        obsession with sex.(17)
  Speck 
        concludes that the Boogers symbolize invaders into Cherokee territory, 
        arguing that they are enervated metaphors for white intruders. Clearly 
        the Boogers are invaders; they [page 73] 
        "crash" the party uninvited and in the second action they reveal 
        that they are not Cherokee and not from the locale. Undoubtedly, too, 
        they also represent whites (as well as blacks, Asians, and other American 
        Indians). However, in Eliadean terms the Boogers are not merely "mythical 
        animals and frivolous demimen"(18) that are symbolic threats to Cherokee 
        culture. Whereas for Speck the Boogers are ridiculous caricatures of the 
        oppressor created by the Cherokee to psychologically deal with their suffering 
        (by mocking and ridiculing the invader), for Eliade, the Boogers' depiction 
        as ridiculous is not a psychological sublimation. The Boogers' lack of 
        decorum, overt sexuality, and monstrousness suggests Chaos; they are therefore 
        not merely political or cultural threats, but hazardous to the order of 
        the Cherokee cosmology: the Upper World, the realm of benevolent spirits 
        and gods; the Middle World, the realm of humankind and animals; and the 
        Lower World, the realm of snakes, witches, monsters, and the Boogers.
  The highly sexual nature of the Boogers and their insatiable appetite 
        for Cherokee women suggests that the dance might have evolved from ancient 
        orgiastic rites related to agricultural fertility. Yet, the Booger Dance 
        occurs only in the winter, after the first frost, a fallow period in the 
        agricultural calendar. Eliade, however, believes that these, the darkest 
        days of the solar year, can be identified with the pre-Creation chaos 
        because of sexual excesses that commonly mark the season and also the 
        abolition of all norms. Such excesses also reveal an overturning of values 
        as well as a general license, an orgiastic modality of society, essentially 
        a reversion of all forms to a unified state of formlessness.(19) Eliade 
        suggests that, as vegetation in the winter season lies dormant beneath 
        the ground, this "dissolution of Form" is mirrored in the dissolution 
        of "social forms" in the orgiastic chaos. The human plane mirrors 
        the vegetable plane, as there is a return to primordial unity of chaos, 
        in which limits, contours, and distances are imperceptible.(20)
  The 
        sexual acts of the orgy, however, have been replaced with a bawdy revel 
        shared by the Boogers and the Cherokee participants. This disregard for 
        decorum is seen also in more commonly known orgiastic rites such as Carnival 
        and Mardi Gras. The function of such [page 74] 
        gaieties, according to Eliade, corresponds to that of the orgy, which 
        is to return to the pre-creation chaos that holds the potentiality for 
        regeneration and renewal. In orgiastic rites, man returns to the chaos 
        before creation in order to be reborn, reinvigorated, not unlike emergence 
        from water in Christian baptism or in the Cherokee rite of "going 
        to water." The orgy, like the act of ablution, destroys creation 
        while at the same time regenerates it and restores order. Eliade notes 
        that in the pattern of everyday life broken up periodically by orgies 
        (Saturnalia, carnivals, etc.), life is revealed to be a continuum of activity 
        and sleep, of birth and death. The cosmos is made up of cycles, born out 
        of chaos and returning to it through the dissolution of the cosmos. Eliade 
        further maintains that all monstrous forms are degradations of this basic 
        idea of the cyclical rhythm of the universe, and its thirst for regeneration 
        and renewal.(21)
  Importantly, 
        as suggested earlier, a universal symbol of pre-creation chaos is water, 
        and in many cosmogonies or creation stories, the separation of the Lower 
        World (water) from the Middle World (earth) is the act that most defines 
        creation. In the Cherokee cosmogony, the bringing up of mud by Water Beetle 
        to create land, thereby separating it from the watery void, attests to 
        this division of Chaos and Order. Many of the creatures of the chaotic 
        Lower World are naturally water beings. For example, a local symbol for 
        the Cherokee is the Uktena, a monstrous conglomeration of bird, deer, 
        and serpent that swims in the rivers and streams of the Cherokee homelands 
        and corresponds to the universal symbol of water for Chaos. As well, the 
        paths to the Lower World are rivers and streams whose springs lie hidden 
        in the Great Smoky Mountains. It follows that the Boogers, while not technically 
        water beings, are relegated to the Lower World by process of elimination: 
        their sinister nature precludes them from being inhabitants of the Upper 
        World, just as their hyper-sexuality and irreverence excludes them from 
        citizenship in the Middle World. The Boogers are out of place in the Middle 
        World, and their infiltration into a realm not their own jeopardizes order 
        and must be combated. The banishment of the Boogers, the separation of 
        the Lower and Middle Worlds, and the simultaneous allegorical and truthful 
        reenactment of the cosmogony occur later in the ritual.
  At the beginning of the third act, and before the Boogers dance, the Booger 
        leader whispers his mask name to the Driver, who loudly "translates" 
        it. The Booger name follows one of two themes: names of foreigners, such 
        as German, Frenchman, Black or Chinese; or descriptive and obscene names 
        of private parts of the body, such as Black Buttocks, Sooty Anus, [page 
        75] Rusty Anus, Big Phallus, and Her [Vagina] Has Long Hairs.(22) 
        Speck writes that the Boogers then each dance a personal clown dance of 
        "awkward and grotesque steps" resembling "a clumsy white 
        man trying to imitate Indian dancing".(23) Speck again infuses his 
        description of the dance with his assumptions regarding the symbol of 
        the Booger to the Cherokee psyche. By suggesting that the Booger's movements 
        are perceived by the Cherokee as the dancing of a "clumsy white man," 
        he reduces the function of the ritual to one of psychology, supporting 
        his assertion that the Booger is a metaphor substituted by the Cherokee 
        for an authentic peril. Again, in terms of Eliade's theory, however, the 
        Booger is a very real threat and not a diluted caricature for the Cherokee 
        to digest more easily. The Booger is, for the Cherokee, a local symbol, 
        corresponding to the universal symbol or archetype water, and it represents 
        Chaos, Chaos capable of annihilating order but also of restoring order.
  The 
        Booger's name is taken for the first word of the song and each time the 
        name is chanted, the audience erupts in applause and shouting.(24) After 
        the clown-dances, the Driver invites the Booger leader and his troupe 
        to dance the Eagle or Bear Dance, dances of peace and honor.(25) The leader 
        whispers his decision (the Eagle Dance, the usual choice) to the Driver 
        and an intermission of five-to-ten minutes follows to prepare for the 
        subsequent dance.(26) The Boogers remain seated on their bench or rush 
        outside for a break.(27)
  After 
        the intermission, and before the peace dance, the singers chant a song 
        demanding tobacco for their services. The Driver then fills and lights 
        a pipe, taking a puff for himself. He offers the pipe to the drummer and 
        the singers, who each take a puff. Once all of the musicians have partaken 
        in the smoking ritual, the Driver puts the pipe away.
  The Driver then places a deerskin on the floor before the Eagle Killer, 
        whom Speck calls the dramatic star of the evening, indicating the importance 
        of the Eagle Dance and of the eagle [page 76] 
        itself.(28) The Eagle Killer, as his name denotes, killed the eagle to 
        obtain the feathers essential for the Eagle Dance. The Driver presents 
        the Eagle Killer with symbolic gifts in honor of his deed. These gifts 
        traditionally included a deerskin (for moccasins), tobacco (to calm the 
        nerves), a knife, lead and powder (for livelihood), and buttons and pins 
        (for the Eagle Killer's female relations).(29) According to Speck, however, 
        by 1936 five cents had supplanted the traditional gifts.(30)
  Speck's 
        description of the intermission, the tobacco ritual, and the acknowledgment 
        of the Eagle Killer warrants further scrutiny. Speck makes no effort to 
        determine the purpose of these components other than on a superficial 
        level, thereby ignoring their cosmological function. In Eliadean terms, 
        however, these activities serve to facilitate the climax of the Booger 
        Dance, the dispersal of the Boogers and, therefore, the recreation of 
        the cosmos out of the chaotic space and action the Boogers symbolized. 
        These activities make sacred the space and the participants of the ritual. 
        Surveying the sacred and the profane (very much a reenactment of the cosmogony, 
        too, but not the focus of this investigation) is accomplished by, as shall 
        be revealed, "ascending to heaven."
  Ritualized use of tobacco of course prevails among American Indian tribes, 
        and tobacco is given and received as an appropriate and respectful gift 
        between humans and between humans and spirits. For example, among the 
        Anishnaabeg, tobacco is offered loose or in the form of cigarettes to 
        Elders within the tribe and is also offered in supplication or as a gift 
        of thanks to a number of manitouk, including Kitche Manitou [the Supreme 
        Spirit] and the Thunderbirds. Anishnaabeg often burn tobacco during a 
        thunderstorm to request that the thunderbirds pass benignly over their 
        homes and to thank them for rain as well as for hunting and killing malevolent 
        Underwater manitouk.(31)
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