Talamantez received her PhD in ethnopoetics and comparative literature from the University of California, San Diego.[4] Talamantez is a member of UCSB's Religious Studies Department. She created a PhD program with an emphasis on Native American religious traditions.
The program has awarded PhDs to at least 30 scholars.[5]
Talamantez's areas of research are healing and religion in Native America, women in religion, nature and animals in Native American traditions, and religion and ecology.[6] She has argued on behalf of the preservation of languages, and says that an understanding of the language is necessary for Native American studies scholars.[7] Talamantez conducted anthropological field studies in Mexico and the Southwestern United States.[4]
She spent years developing relationships with Apache communities, learning the language and offering up her work for corrections and approval from community members.[8]
Talamantez served as president of the Indigenous Studies Group at the American Academy of Religion. Talamantez co-edited the 2006 book Teaching Religion and Healing. She has been a contributing editor for the Journal of Feminist Studies in Religion.[9] She co-edited the first issue of Hypatia: A Journal of Feminist Philosophy to focus on American Indian women.[5]
"Vine Deloria Jr., Critic and Coyote: Transforming Universal Conceptions," a festschrift for Vine Deloria Jr., in press.
"The Presence of Isanaklesh. The Apache Female Deity and the Path of Pollen," updated and reprinted in Unspoken Worlds: Women’s Religious Lives, Wadsworth Press, Third Edition, 2000.
^ ab"Back Matter". Yearbook for Traditional Music. 18: 215. 1986. JSTOR768546.
^ abWaters, Anne; Jiang, Xinyan; Boxill, Bernie; Lucas, George; Lachs, John; Cavalier, Robert; Corrado, Michael; Nuccetelli, Susana; Outlaw, Lucius; Olson, Alan M.; Chekola, Mark; McCarthy, Thomas; Kipnis, Ken; Lewis, Stephanie R.; Weinstein, Mark; Brand, Myles; Kegley, Jacquelyn Ann K.; Granitto, James V.; Tuana, Nancy (May 2003). "Reports of APA Committees". Proceedings and Addresses of the American Philosophical Association. 76 (5): 60. JSTOR3218654.
^Olupona, Jacob K. (September 1997). "Report of the Conference "Beyond Primitivism: Indigenous Religious Traditions and Modernity," March 28-31, 1996, University of California, Davis". Numen. 44 (3): 330. doi:10.1163/1568527971655896. JSTOR3270251.