R. Scott Sheffield\u27s study of the images used by bureaucrats and journalists provides an in-depth examination of Anglo-Canadians\u27 perceptions of First Nations people and how these perceptions affected Indian policies
In the past twenty years or so the Western American Indians and their conflicts with the white man h...
In writing a review for Great Plains Quarterly one is asked to emphasize the book\u27s Great Plains ...
In the second chapter of God Is Red: A Native View of Religion(1973), Vine Deloria Jr. notes the dom...
R. Scott Sheffield\u27s study of the images used by bureaucrats and journalists provides an in-depth...
James Dempsey estimates that some four hundred Indians from Western Canada served during the Great W...
The notion that the federal government\u27s relationship with Native American nations has been chron...
In this intensely provocative book, University of Regina professors Anderson and Robertson contend t...
If ever a text should be required for a foundational American Indian Studies course, The State of th...
Nearly all of the many books dedicated to Native activism focus on the Red Power movement that flour...
Despite the degree of American government domination, American Indian activists have managed to crea...
Until very recently, Indian history existed in the doldrums of guilt and ethnocentric misunderstandi...
R. David Edmunds and his colleagues have essayed a needed task, offering readers the premise that Am...
In the latter half of the nineteenth century a deadly clash of cultures swept across the Great Plain...
Alvin Josephy\u27s statement that this book is the culmination of thirty years of association with...
It will not come as news to people familiar with Native American history the role the print medium h...
In the past twenty years or so the Western American Indians and their conflicts with the white man h...
In writing a review for Great Plains Quarterly one is asked to emphasize the book\u27s Great Plains ...
In the second chapter of God Is Red: A Native View of Religion(1973), Vine Deloria Jr. notes the dom...
R. Scott Sheffield\u27s study of the images used by bureaucrats and journalists provides an in-depth...
James Dempsey estimates that some four hundred Indians from Western Canada served during the Great W...
The notion that the federal government\u27s relationship with Native American nations has been chron...
In this intensely provocative book, University of Regina professors Anderson and Robertson contend t...
If ever a text should be required for a foundational American Indian Studies course, The State of th...
Nearly all of the many books dedicated to Native activism focus on the Red Power movement that flour...
Despite the degree of American government domination, American Indian activists have managed to crea...
Until very recently, Indian history existed in the doldrums of guilt and ethnocentric misunderstandi...
R. David Edmunds and his colleagues have essayed a needed task, offering readers the premise that Am...
In the latter half of the nineteenth century a deadly clash of cultures swept across the Great Plain...
Alvin Josephy\u27s statement that this book is the culmination of thirty years of association with...
It will not come as news to people familiar with Native American history the role the print medium h...
In the past twenty years or so the Western American Indians and their conflicts with the white man h...
In writing a review for Great Plains Quarterly one is asked to emphasize the book\u27s Great Plains ...
In the second chapter of God Is Red: A Native View of Religion(1973), Vine Deloria Jr. notes the dom...