Article
Hózhǫ́ is the state in which all living things are ordered, in balance, and walking in beauty. The opposite of hózhǫ́ is hóchxǫ́ǫ́, which refers to disorder and chaos in one’s life. In Hillerman's work, chaos and imbalance manifest as as physical or mental illness, an infection obtained from contact with modern values of the mainstream U.S. culture.
"Stable rock, Ash Springs, Lincoln, Nevada, September 2009" by Thure Johnson.
Manuscripts
A08 The Ghostway (05-03) p. 40
A08 The Ghostway (05-03) p. 68
A08 The Ghostway (05-03) p. 196
A08 The Ghostway (05-03) p. 197
A08 The Ghostway (05-03) p. 204
A08 The Ghostway (05-03) p.216
A08 The Ghostway (05-03) p. 236
A08 The Ghostway (05-03) p. 240
A08 The Ghostway (05-03) p. 250
A08 The Ghostway (05-03) p. 251
A08 The Ghostway (05-03) p. 253
References
Allen, Paula Gunn and Carolyn Dunn Anderson, editors
2001 Hozho: Walking in Beauty: Native American Stories of Inspiration, Humor, and Life.
Chicago: Contemporary Books.
Davies, Wade
2001 Healing Ways: Navajo Health Care in the Twentieht Century. Albuquerque: University
of New Mexico Press.
Ladd, John
1957 A Systematic Reconstruction of Navaho Ethics. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.
Lamphere, Louise
1969 Symbolic Elements in Navajo Ritual. Southwetern Journal of Anthropology (25):279-
305.
Reichard, Gladys Amanda
1950 Navaho Religion: A Study Of Symbolism. New York: Bollinger Foundation.
Witherspoon, Gary
1977 Language and Art in the Navajo Universe. AnnArbor: University of Michigan Press.