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        The Nature and Pace of Change in American Indian Cultures 

        Stewart, R. Michael; Carr, Kurt W.; Raber, Paul A. (2015)
        Three thousand to four thousand years ago, the Native Americans of the mid-Atlantic region experienced a groundswell of cultural innovation. This remarkable era, known as the Transitional period, saw the advent of broad-bladed ...
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        Friends and Enemies in Penn's Woods 

        Pencak, William A.; Richter, Daniel K. (2004)
        Two powerfully contradictory images dominate historical memory when we think of Native Americans and colonists in early Pennsylvania. To one side is William Penn’s legendary treaty with the Lenape at Shackamaxon in 1682, ...
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        Ethnographies and Exchanges 

        Roeber, A. G. (2008)
        Early Europeans settling in America would never have survived without the help of Native American groups. Though histories of early America acknowledge this today, that has not always been the case, and even today much ...
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        Ownership, Authority, and Self-Determination 

        Hendrix, Burke A. (2008)
        Much controversy has existed over the claims of Native Americans and other indigenous peoples that they have a right—based on original occupancy of land, historical transfers of sovereignty, and principles of self-determination—to ...
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        Indians in Minnesota 

        Ebbott, Elizabeth; Davis Graves, Kathy (2006)
        In Minnesota, the legacy of the American Indian people is reflected in many ways. Twenty-seven of the state's counties have names of Indian origin. The cities of Wabasha, Red Wing, and Shakopee are named for important ...
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        American Puritanism and the Defense of Mourning 

        Breitwieser, Mitchell R. (1990)
        Mary White Rowlandwon, a New England Congregationalist minister's wife, was held captive by the Algonquin Indians during King Philip's War in 1676. Several years after she was ransomed and living among the British again ...
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        Native American Communities in Wisconsin, 1600-1960 

        Bieder, Robert E. (1995)
        The first comprehensive history of Native American tribes in Wisconsin, this thorough and thoroughly readable account follows Wisconsin's Indian communities—Ojibwa, Potawatomie, Menominee, Winnebago, Oneida, Stockbridge-Munsee, ...
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        Buried Indians 

        Hovell McMillin, Laurie (2006)
        In Buried Indians, Laurie Hovell McMillin presents the struggle of her hometown, Trempealeau, Wisconsin, to determine whether platform mounds atop Trempealeau Mountain constitute authentic Indian mounds. This dispute, as ...
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        The Heart as a Drum 

        Riley Fast, Robin (2000)
        The Heart as a Drum celebrates poetry by a range of contemporary Native American writers, illuminating the poets' shared commitments and distinctive approaches to political resistance and cultural survival. The poetry ...
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        Indian Mounds of Wisconsin 

        Birmingham, Robert A.; Rosebrough, Amy L. (2017)
        More mounds were built by ancient Native Americans in Wisconsin than in any other region of North America—between 15,000 and 20,000, at least 4,000 of which remain today. Most impressive are the effigy mounds, huge earthworks ...
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        In Defense of Sovereignty 

        Webster, Rebecca M.; Bittorf, James R.; Gollnick, William; Hoxie, Frederick E.; Locklear, Arlinda F.; Oberly, James W.; Monette, Richard (2023)
        In Defense of Sovereignty tells the story of the Oneida Nation's struggles for self-determination. Since the removal of the Oneida people from New York in the 1820s to what would become Wisconsin, the Nation has been engaged ...
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        Earthdivers 

        Vizenor, Gerald (1981)
        These narratives compare earthdivers in myths who brought dirt up from the watery earth to form land, with present-day earthdivers, mixed bloods, who dive into urban areas connecting dreams to the earth
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        Buried Roots and Indestructible Seeds 

        Lindquist, Mark A.; Zanger, Martin (1995)
        This anthology highlights central values and traditions in Native American societies, exploring the ongoing struggles and survival power of Native American people today. The essays and stories by well-known writers provide ...
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        Indian Names in Michigan 

        Vogel, Virgil J. (1986)
        Indian Names in Michigan traces the origin of hundreds of place-names given to counties, towns, lakes, rivers, and topographical features of the Great Lakes State. These melodic names that enrich our appreciation for the ...
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        The Wars of the Iroquois 

        Hunt, George T. (1940)
        George T. Hunt's classic 1940 study of the Iroquois during the middle and late seventeenth century presents warfare as a result of depletion of natural resources in the Iroquois homeland and tribal efforts to assume the ...
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        Studying Native America 

        Thornton, Russell (1999)
        "The White Man does not understand the Indian for the reason that he does not understand America. He is too far removed from its formative process. The roots of the tree of his life have not yet grasped rock and soil." The ...
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        On the Eve of Conquest 

        Peyser, Joseph L. (1998)
        In 1754, Charles de Raymond, chevalier of the Royal and Military Order of Saint Louis and a captain in the Troupes de la Marine wrote a bold, candid, and revealing expose; on the French colonial posts and settlements of ...
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        Spirits of Earth 

        Birmingham, Robert A. (2009)
        Between A.D. 700 and 1100 Native Americans built more effigy mounds in Wisconsin than anywhere else in North America, with an estimated 1,300 mounds—including the world's largest known bird effigy—at the center of ...
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        Ohiyesa 

        Wilson, Raymond (1999)
        Charles Eastman, or "Ohiyesa" in Santee, came of age during a period of increasing tension and violence between Native and "new" Americans. Raised to become a hunter-warrior, he was nevertheless persuaded by his Christianized ...
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        Songprints 

        Vander, Judith (1995)
        Songprints explores the musical lives of Native American women as they navigate a century of cultural change and constancy among the Shoshone of Wyoming's Wind River Reservation. Judith Vander captures the distinct ...
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        Reginald and Gladys Laubin, American Indian Dancers 

        West Jones, Starr (2000)
        Friends and cultural historians of many Indian families among the Sioux, Crow, and Shoshone-Bannock, Reginald and Gladys Laubin devoted their lives to preserving a vanishing culture by presenting authentic Indian dances, ...
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        American Indian Life Skills Development Curriculum 

        LaFromboise, Teresa D. (1996)
        Created in collaboration with students and community members from the Zuni Pueblo and the Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma, this curriculum addresses key issues in Native American Indian adolescents' lives and teaches such life ...
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        Indian Culture and European Trade Goods 

        Irving Quimby, George (1966)
        In an absorbing account of the archaeology and culture of Indian tribes in the Great Lakes region from 1600 to 1820, George Quimby recounts the results of decades of careful study of archaeological sites in this 1966 classic.
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        Beyond the Covenant Chain 

        Richter, Daniel K.; Merrell, James H. (2003)
        For centuries the Western view of the Iroquois was clouded by the myth that they were the supermen of the frontier—""the Romans of this Western World,"" as De Witt Clinton called them in 1811. Only in recent years have ...
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        This Benevolent Experiment 

        Woolford, Andrew (2015)
        This Benevolent Experiment is a nuanced comparative history of Indigenous boarding schools in the United States and Canada. Because of differing historical, political, and structural influences, the two countries have ...
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        The Daring Trader 

        Crawford, Kim (2012)
        A fur trader in the Michigan Territory and confidant of both the U.S. government and local Indian tribes, Jacob Smith could have stepped out of a James Fenimore Cooper novel. Controversial, mysterious, and bold during his ...
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        Death Stalks the Yakama 

        Trafzer, Clifford E. (1997)
        Clifford Trafzer's disturbing new work, Death Stalks the Yakama, examines life, death, and the shockingly high mortality rates that have persisted among the fourteen tribes and bands living on the Yakama Reservation in the ...
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        Ambiguous Justice 

        Ann Gunther, Vanessa (2006)
        In 1769, Spain took action to solidify control over its northern New World territories by establishing a series of missions and presidios in what is now modern California. To populate these remote establishments, the Spanish ...
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        After Wounded Knee 

        Green, Jerry (1996)
        The Wounded Knee Massacre of December 29, 1890, known to U.S. military historians as the last battle in "the Indian Wars," was in reality another tragic event in a larger pattern of conquest, destruction, killing, and ...
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        After the Bloodbath 

        Diamond, James D. (2019)
        As violence in the United States seems to become increasingly more commonplace, the question of how communities reset after unprecedented violence also grows in significance. After the Bloodbath examines this quandary, ...
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        Indians and the American West in the Twentieth Century 

        Parman, Donald L. (1994)
        As the twentieth century began, Native Americans were reeling from a century of war, forced resettlement, and loss of indigenous control. In a narrative that is compellingly evenhanded and insightful, Donald L. Parman ...
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        The Dispossession of the American Indian, 1887-1934 

        McDonnell, Janet A. (1991)
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        Tales of the North American Indians 

        Thompsin, Stith (1966)
        A classic collection of Indian myths and legends; mythological, hero and trickster tales; tales of magic and enchantment; many more.
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        Two Crows Denies It 

        Barnes, R. H. (1984)
        In Two Crows Denies It, R. H. Barnes undertakes an ambitious historical analysis of anthropological scholarship about Omaha kinship systems. His groundbreaking work offers a critique of this established scholarship, including ...
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        Wooden Leg 

        Marquis, Thomas B. (1962)
        Told with vigor and insight, this is the memorable story of Wooden Leg (1858–1940), one of sixteen hundred warriors of the Northern Cheyennes who fought with the Lakotas against Custer at the Battle of the Little Bighorn. ...
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        Standing in the Light 

        Young Bear, Severt; Theisz, R.D. (1994)
        For most of his adult life Severt Young Bear stood in the light—in the center ring at powwows and other gatherings of Lakota people. As founder and, for many years, lead singer of the Porcupine Singers, a traditional singing ...
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        Hopi Coyote Tales 

        Malotki, Ekkehart; Lomatuway'ma, Michael (1984)
        This volume brings together twenty-one traditional tales recently retold by Hopi narrators. Complete with English translations and original Hopi transcriptions on facing pages and a bilingual glossary. Hopi Coyote Tales ...
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        Navajo Coyote Tales 

        Haile, Berard O. F. M.; Luckert, Karl W. (1984)
        Coyote is easily the most popular character in the stories of Indian tribes from Canada to Mexico. This volume contains seventeen coyote tales collected and translated by Father Berard Haile, O.F.M., more than half a century ...
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        American Indian Women, Telling Their Lives 

        Bataille, Gretchen M.; Mullen Sands, Kathleen (1984)
        Indian women's autobiographies have been slighted because of the assumption that women had a secondary and insignificant role in Indian society. Gretchen M. Bataille and Kathleen Mullen Sands cogently demonstrate in this ...
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        Sixth Grandfather 

        DeMaille, Raymond J. (1984)
        In Black Elk Speaks and When the Tree Flowered, John C. Neihardt recorded the teachings of the Oglala holy man Black Elk, who had, in a vision, seen himself as the "sixth grandfather," the spiritual representative of the ...
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        Arapahoe Politics, 1851-1978 

        Fowler, Loretta (1982)
        The Northern Arapahoes of the Wind River Reservation contradict many of the generalizations made about political change among native plains people. Loretta Fowler explores how, in response to the realities of domination ...
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        Why I Can't Read Wallace Stegner, and Other Essays 

        Cook-Lynn, Elizabeth (1996)
        This provocative collection of essays reveals the passionate voice of a Native American feminist intellectual. Elizabeth Cook-Lynn, a poet and literary scholar, grapples with issues she encountered as a Native American in ...
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        American Indians in the Lower Mississippi Valley 

        Usner, Daniel H. (1998)
        During the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, the Native peoples inhabiting the Lower Mississippi Valley confronted increasing domination by colonial powers, disastrous reductions in population, and the threat of being ...
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        Lakota Society 

        Walker, James R. (1992)
        As agency physician on the Pine Ridge Reservation from 1896 to 1914, Dr. James R. Walker recorded a wealth of information on the traditional lifeways of the Oglala Sioux. Lakota Society presents the primary accounts of ...
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        Team Spirits 

        Fruehling Springwood, Charles; King, C. Richard (2001)
        A growing controversy in recent years has arisen around the use and abuse of Native American team mascots. The Cleveland Indians, Atlanta Braves, Washington Redskins, Kansas City Chiefs, Florida State Seminoles, and so ...
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        Indian Games and Dances with Native Songs 

        Fletcher, Alice C. (1994)
        One day Alice C. Fletcher realized that "unlike my Indian friends, I was an alien, a stranger in my native land." But while living with the Indians and pursuing her ethnological studies she felt that "the plants, the trees, ...
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        Invisible Genealogies 

        Darnell, Regna (2001)
        Invisible Genealogies is a landmark reinterpretation of the history of anthropology in North America. During the past two decades, theorizing by many American anthropologists has called for an "experimental moment" grounded ...
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        Indian Treaty-Making Policy in the United States and Canada, 1867-1877 

        Germain, Jill St. (2000)
        Indian Treaty-Making Policy in the United States and Canada, 1867–1877 is a comparison of United States and Canadian Indian policies with emphasis on the reasons these governments embarked on treaty-making ventures in the ...
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        Washakie 

        Hebard, Grace R. (1995)
        Washakie was chief of the eastern band of the Shoshone Indians for almost sixty years, until his death in 1900. A strong leader of his own people, he saw the wisdom of befriending the whites. Grace Raymond Hebard offers ...
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        Turn to the Native 

        Krupat, Arnold (1996)
        The Turn to the Native is a timely account of Native American literature and the critical writings that have grown up around it. Arnold Krupat considers racial and cultural "essentialism," the ambiguous position of non-Native ...
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        Great Father 

        Paul Prucha, Francis (1986)
        The Great Father was widely praised when it appeared in two volumes in 1984 and was awarded the Ray Allen Billington Prize by the Organization of American Historians. This abridged one-volume edition follows the structure ...
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        The Moravian Mission Diaries of David Zeisberger 

        Wellenreuther, Hermann; Wessel, Carola (2005)
        David Zeisberger (1721–1808) was the head of a group of Moravian missionaries that settled in the Upper Ohio Valley in 1772 to minister to the Delaware Nation. For the next ten years, Zeisberger lived among the Delaware, ...
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        Native Women's History in Eastern North America before 1900 

        Kugel, Rebecca; Eldersverd Murphy, Lucy (2007)
        This landmark anthology is an essential guide to the histories of Native women's lives in earlier centuries. Sixteen classic essays, plus new commentary—many by the original authors, describe a broad range of research ...
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        Encyclopedia of the Great Plains Indians 

        Wishart, David J. (2007)
        A comprehensive encyclopedia of Indians of the Great Plains, past and present.
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        Inside Dazzling Mountains 

        Kozak, David L. (2013)
        This collection of new translations of Native oral literatures features songs, stories, chants, and orations from the four major language groups of the Southwest: Yuman, Nadíne (Apachean), Uto-Aztecan, and Kiowa-Tanoan. ...
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        Indian Slavery in Colonial America 

        Gallay, Alan (2010)
        The essays in this collection use the complicated dynamics of Indian slavery as a lens through which to explore both Indian and European societies and their interactions, as well as relations between and among Native groups.
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        Native Americans and the Environment 

        Harkin, Michael E.; Rich Lewis, David (2007)
        Native Americans and the Environment brings together an interdisciplinary group of prominent scholars whose works continue the conversations that Shepard Krech started. The essays examine topics as divergent as Pleistocene ...
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        1870 Ghost Dance 

        Du Bois, Cora (2007)
        Cora Du Bois' historical study, The 1870 Ghost Dance, has remained an essential contribution to the ethnographic record of Native Californian cultures for seven decades yet is only now readily available for the first time. ...
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        Native American Representations 

        Bataille, Gretchen M. (2001)
        From Columbus's journal jottings about "Indios" to the image of Sacagawea on the dollar coin, from the marauding Indians portrayed in the traditional western to the appearance of Native Americans in Dances with Wolves, ...
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        Toward a Native American Critical Theory 

        Pulitano, Elvira (2003)
        Toward a Native American Critical Theory articulates the foundations and boundaries of a distinctive Native American critical theory in this postcolonial era. In the first book-length study devoted to this subject, Elvira ...
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        Journey into Northern Pennsylvania and the State of New York. 

        Jean de Crèvecoeur, Michel-Guillaume St. (1964)
        This is the first complete English translation of Journey into Northern Pennsylvania and the State of New York by Michel-Guillaume St. Jean de Crèvecoeur. It presents the rich reflections and tales of an 18th-century ...
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        New Perspectives on Native North America 

        Kan, Sergei; Strong, Pauline (2006)
        In this volume some of the leading scholars working in Native North America explore contemporary perspectives on Native culture, history, and representation. The essays employ a variety of theoretical and methodological ...
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        Faith in Paper 

        Cleland, Charles E. (2011)
        Faith in Paper is about the reinstitution of Indian treaty rights in the Upper Great Lakes region during the last quarter of the 20th century. The book focuses on the treaties and legal cases that together have awakened a ...
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        The Hopi Indians of Old Oraibi 

        Titiev, Mischa (1972)
        From August of 1933 to March 1933, Mischa Titiev lived among the Hopi Indians of Old Oraibi, an ancient pueblo of the Hopi Indian Reservation in northeastern Arizona. A trained anthropologist, Dr. Titiev was adopted into ...
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        American Pentimento 

        Seed, Pat (2001)
        American Pentimento traces the history of colonization and exploitation in the Americas coming to demonstrate how contemporary native struggles are decisively limited by embedded cultural assumptions this history has ...
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        Indians at Hampton Institute, 1877-1923 

        Lindsey, Donal F. (1994)
        Founded near Jamestown, Virginia, in 1868, Hampton Institute educated almost 1400 members of sixty-five Indian tribes. Donal F. Lindsey examines the complex and changing interactions among Indigenous people, Blacks, and ...
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        Great Lakes Indian Accommodation and Resistance during the Early Reservation Years, 1850-1900 

        Edmund Jefferson Danziger, Jr. (2009)
        During the four decades following the War of 1812, Great Lakes Indians were forced to surrender most of their ancestral homelands and begin refashioning their lives on reservations. The challenges Indians faced during this ...
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        Myths of the Rune Stone 

        Krueger, David M. (2015)
        In 1898, a Swedish immigrant farmer claimed to have discovered a large rock with writing carved into its surface in a field near Kensington, Minnesota. The writing told a North American origin story, predating Christopher ...
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        Red on Red 

        Womack, Craig S. (1999)
        A Creek National Literature attempts to find a critical vantage point grounded in Native culture from which to understand Native literatures. He argues that the application of postmodern literary criticism to Native ...
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        Wastelanding 

        Voyles, Traci Brynne (2015)
        Traci Brynne Voyles argues that the presence of uranium mining on Diné (Navajo) land constitutes a clear case of environmental racism. Looking at discursive constructions of landscapes, she explores how environmental racism ...
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        The Third Space of Sovereignty 

        Bruyneel, Kevin (2007)
        The Third Space of Sovereignty offers fresh insights on such topics as the crucial importance of the formal end of treaty-making in 1871, indigenous responses to the prospect of U.S. citizenship in the 1920s, native politics ...
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        The Networked Wilderness 

        Cohen, Matt (2009)
        Reconceptualizing aural and inscribed communication as a spectrum, The Networked Wilderness bridges the gap between the history of the book and Native American systems of communication. Cohen reveals that books, paths, ...
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        The Backcountry and the City 

        White, Ed (2005)
        Ed White explores the backcountry-city divide as well as the dynamics of indigenous peoples, bringing together two distinct bodies of scholarship: one stressing the political culture of the Revolutionary era, the other ...
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        Limits Of Multiculturalism 

        Michaelsen, Scott (1999)
        Scott Michaelsen shows cultural criticism to be at an impasse, trapped by tradition even in its attempts to get beyond tradition. With this dilemma in mind, he takes us back to anthropology's nineteenth-century roots to ...
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        The People and the Word 

        Warrior, Robert (2005)
        Focusing on autobiographical writings and critical essays, as well as communally authored and political documents, The People and the Word explores how the Native tradition of nonfiction has both encompassed and dissected ...
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        Taxidermic Signs 

        Wakeham, Pauline (2008)
        In Taxidermic Signs, Pauline Wakeham decodes the practice of taxidermy as it was performed in North America from the late nineteenth century to the present, revealing its connection to ecological and racial discourses ...
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        To Show What an Indian Can Do 

        Bloom, John (2000)
        The Carlisle Indian School and the Haskell Institute in Kansas were among the many federally operated boarding schools enacting the U.S. government's education policy toward Native Americans from the late nineteenth to the ...
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        Tribal Secrets 

        Allen Warrior, Robert (1995)
        A framework for understanding the contributions of Vine Deloria Jr. and John Joseph Mathews, two American Indian Intellectuals, as part of the struggle for tribal sovereighty, and argues that the contemporary reality of ...
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        Tears of Repentance 

        Rubin, Julius H. (2013)
        Tears of Repentance reexamines the familiar stories of intercultural encounters between Protestant missionaries and Native peoples in southern New England from the seventeenth to the early nineteenth centuries. Focusing ...
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        Encounters of the Spirit 

        Pointer, Richard W. (2007)
        Historians have long been aware that the encounter with Europeans affected all aspects of Native American life. But were Indians the only ones changed by these cross-cultural meetings? Might the newcomers' ways, including ...
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        Newspaper Warrior 

        Winnemucca Hopkins, Sarah (2015)
        The Newspaper Warrior presents new material that enhances public memory as the first volume to collect hundreds of newspaper articles, letters to the editor, advertisements, book reviews, and editorial comments by and about ...
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        On Records 

        Newman, Andrew (2012)
        Bridging the fields of indigenous, early American, memory, and media studies, On Records illuminates the problems of communication between cultures and across generations. Andrew Newman examines several controversial ...
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        Blind Man and the Loon 

        Mishler, Craig (2013)
        The story of the Blind Man and the Loon is a living Native folktale about a blind man who is betrayed by his mother or wife but whose vision is magically restored by a kind loon. Folklorist Craig Mishler goes back to 1827, ...
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        American Indian Nations from Termination to Restoration, 1953-2006 

        Ulrich, Roberta (2010)
        Roberta Ulrich provides a concise overview of all the terminations and restorations of Native American tribes from 1953 to 2006 and explores the enduring policy implications for Native peoples. This is the first book to ...
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        Redskins 

        Richard King, C. (2016)
        C. Richard King provides an in-depth examination of how the ongoing struggle over the Washington NFL franchise name raises questions about popular perceptions of American Indians, the cultural life of consumer brands, and ...
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        Call for Change 

        Fixico, Donald L. (2013)
        An impassioned call to the history discipline to change the way they write and think about Native Americans.
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        Killing Us Quietly 

        Vernon, Irene S. (2001)
        Over the past five centuries, waves of diseases have ravaged and sometimes annihilated Native American communities. The latest of these silent killers is HIV/AIDS. The first book to detail the devastating impact of the ...
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        Plateau Indians and the Quest for Spiritual Power, 1700-1850 

        Cebula, Larry (2003)
        Fusing myriad primary and secondary sources, historian Larry Cebula offers a compelling master narrative of the impact of Christianity on the Columbian Plateau peoples in the Pacific Northwest from 1700 to 1850. For the ...
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        The Land Between the Rivers 

        Lawson, Russell M. (2004)
        An adventure story from the wilds of early America, The Land between the Rivers recreates the journeys of the English botanist Thomas Nuttall, one of American history's most well-traveled scientists. During the early ...
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        The Indians of Hungry Hollow 

        Dunlop, Bill; Fountain-Blacklidge, Marcia (2004)
        Michael Blake's Dances with Wolves transformed denigrating Indian sterotypes and created widespread interest in Native American culture. The subsequent popularity of books on this topic underscores the power of a tale well ...
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        The Dance Partner 

        Glancy, Diane (2005)
        Diane Glancy sees books as being akin to maps, and often finds the Native American voices she writes about as she travels. Once, when driving through western Nevada, she stopped at Grant Mountain and Walker Lake, where the ...
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        Shedding Skins 

        Brings Plenty, Trevino L.; Waters, Joel; Pacheco, Steve; Warm Water, Luke (2008)
        Here's the myth: Native Americans are people of great spiritual depth, in touch with the rhythms of the earth, rhythms that they celebrate through drumming and dancing. They love the great outdoors and are completely in ...
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        Stands Alone, Faces, and Other Poems 

        Russell LeBeau, Patrick (2011)
        Stands Alone, Faces, and Other Poems, Patrick LeBeau's first collection, is a self-reflective work on identity, ancestry, and family relationships voiced in three parts. "Stands Alone," the first voice heard, is the singular ...
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        The Invasion 

        Lewis, Janet (1999)
        The Invasion, a novel originally published in 1932, marked the debut of historical novelist Janet Lewis, who went on to write numerous poems and short stories as well as the novels The Wife of Martin Guerre and The Trial ...
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        Nickel Eclipse 

        Gansworth, Eric (2011)
        Nickel Eclipse is a merging of personal and cultural history. Structured in part like the alternating colored beads on a wampum belt, patterns emerge from this exploration of contemporary life on an eastern Indian reservation ...
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        Constructing Cooperation 

        Singleton, Sara (1999)
        In a pathbreaking analysis, Sara Singleton explores the development of schemes for the management of fisheries in the northwestern United States in which native American tribes, and state, federal, and local governments ...
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        Language and Art in the Navajo Universe 

        Witherspoon, Gary (1977)
        This is a complex and theoretical study on the roles of language and art in Navajo culture, resulting from nearly a decade of research on the Navajo reservation. The structures of Navajo thought, language, speech, and ...
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        Mountain Wolf Woman, Sister of Crashing Thunder 

        Oestreich Lurie, Nancy (1961)
        From pony to airplane, from medicine dance to Christian worship, Mountain Wolf Woman, Sister of Crashing Thunder is the life story of a Winnebago woman, told in her own words to her adopted kinswoman, Nancy Lurie. This ...
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        Newspaper Indian 

        Coward, John M. (1999)
        Newspapers catalyzed public opinion in the nineteenth century, and the press's coverage and practices shaped the representation of Native Americans for white audiences. John M. Coward delves into the complex ways journalism ...
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        Crashing Thunder 

        Radin, Paul (1999)
        Paul Radin, one of America's first and most reputable professional anthropologists, lived among the Winnebago Indians for years, and for years he tried without success to interview the notorious younger son of the Blow ...
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        • This project received funding from the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement No 683680, 810640, 871069 and 964352.

        OAPEN is based in the Netherlands, with its registered office in the National Library in The Hague.

        Director: Niels Stern

        Address:
        OAPEN Foundation
        Prins Willem-Alexanderhof 5
        2595 BE The Hague
        Postal address:
        OAPEN Foundation
        P.O. Box 90407
        2509 LK The Hague

        Websites:
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        Export search results

        The export option will allow you to export the current search results of the entered query to a file. Differen formats are available for download. To export the items, click on the button corresponding with the preferred download format.

        A logged-in user can export up to 15000 items. If you're not logged in, you can export no more than 500 items.

        To select a subset of the search results, click "Selective Export" button and make a selection of the items you want to export. The amount of items that can be exported at once is similarly restricted as the full export.

        After making a selection, click one of the export format buttons. The amount of items that will be exported is indicated in the bubble next to export format.