This retrospective looks-back on and provides a summation of “Killing California Indians: Genocide in the Gold Rush Era,” a symposium organized and executed by the California Center for Native Nations and the University of California, Riverside. It provides a synopsis of each of the papers presented as well as the presentations of the Native Community Panel, all of which all dealt with the nineteenth century genocide. Highlights of audience discussion as well as a description of cleansings and blessings offered by local spiritual leaders and the Native flute tributes that opened and closed the event are included, as well
Recent attention on the California Indian genocide -- specifically, Governor Newsom’s apology -- his...
Tribes in California have a long and complicated history fighting for the repatriation of their ance...
In 2004, the City of Eureka, California, returned 40 acres of land on Indian Island in Humboldt Bay,...
This retrospective looks-back on and provides a summation of “Killing California Indians: Genocide i...
This study is an effort to determine whether the phenomenon of genocide, as defined in the UN Conven...
Between 1846 and 1873, California’s Indian population plunged from perhaps 150,000 to 30,000. In his...
This essay proposes that the history of California includes the intended destruction and decimation ...
In recent years, historians and the American public have increasingly debated whether or not the cri...
Ishi represents a form of sentimental folk reductionism. But he can be a teaching tool for the Calif...
This article is a microhistory of not only the massacre of the indigenous Pomo people in Clear Lake,...
Scholars have reexamined U.S. Indian policy in order to detail American genocidal efforts in the lan...
This essay proposes that the history of California includes the intended destruction and decimation ...
Scholars currently focusing on white-Indian relations in California are involved in a polarized deba...
Between 1846 and 1873, California\u27s Indian population plunged from perhaps 150,000 to 30,000. In ...
One of the most sobering themes that underlie North American history is the demographic collapse tha...
Recent attention on the California Indian genocide -- specifically, Governor Newsom’s apology -- his...
Tribes in California have a long and complicated history fighting for the repatriation of their ance...
In 2004, the City of Eureka, California, returned 40 acres of land on Indian Island in Humboldt Bay,...
This retrospective looks-back on and provides a summation of “Killing California Indians: Genocide i...
This study is an effort to determine whether the phenomenon of genocide, as defined in the UN Conven...
Between 1846 and 1873, California’s Indian population plunged from perhaps 150,000 to 30,000. In his...
This essay proposes that the history of California includes the intended destruction and decimation ...
In recent years, historians and the American public have increasingly debated whether or not the cri...
Ishi represents a form of sentimental folk reductionism. But he can be a teaching tool for the Calif...
This article is a microhistory of not only the massacre of the indigenous Pomo people in Clear Lake,...
Scholars have reexamined U.S. Indian policy in order to detail American genocidal efforts in the lan...
This essay proposes that the history of California includes the intended destruction and decimation ...
Scholars currently focusing on white-Indian relations in California are involved in a polarized deba...
Between 1846 and 1873, California\u27s Indian population plunged from perhaps 150,000 to 30,000. In ...
One of the most sobering themes that underlie North American history is the demographic collapse tha...
Recent attention on the California Indian genocide -- specifically, Governor Newsom’s apology -- his...
Tribes in California have a long and complicated history fighting for the repatriation of their ance...
In 2004, the City of Eureka, California, returned 40 acres of land on Indian Island in Humboldt Bay,...