In his first book, Playing Indian (1998), Philip Deloria examined the ways that non-Indians used American Indian images to create their own identity. In his latest book, Deloria looks at the American Indians who challenged the assumptions that often informed those representations. During the first few decades of the twentieth century, American Indians appeared in places where non-Indians did not expect to find them-on football fields, in beauty parlors, in Cadillacs. As Indians entered these unexpected places, they challenged notions of modernity, tradition, and the conventional role many people had created for them. Ultimately, though, they failed to change America\u27s racial beliefs and ideology
Until very recently, Indian history existed in the doldrums of guilt and ethnocentric misunderstandi...
Rather than having the exclusive U.S.-tribal relationship respected, Indian nations are wrongly forc...
Review of: Wild West Shows and the Images of American Indians, 1883-1933. Moses, L. G
In his first book, Playing Indian (1998), Philip Deloria examined the ways that non-Indians used Ame...
Without Indians-or, rather, their imaginings of them-white Americans would hardly know how to define...
Two attorneys, both professors of political science, have written this book on American Indians and ...
Here is a fine collection of eights essays on American Indian topics by friends and former students ...
If ever a text should be required for a foundational American Indian Studies course, The State of th...
The relationship between federal policy and Indian needs has been a tortured one, at best, and to il...
Alan Trachtenberg's work, Shades of Hiawatha: Staging Indians, Making Americans, 1880-1930, examines...
North American anthropology can be divided into two ages: BD and AD-Before and After Deloria. In 196...
Lucy Maddox explores issues of race and progressive reform in the early twentieth century by examini...
Hollywood inherited conflicting myths of Native Americans: barbaric savages or Noble Savage. Influ...
In a region as well mapped and paved as Kansas Indian studies, anyone promising better roads to impr...
Donald Fixico\u27s study of urban Indians may seem at first to be a review of a well-known and well-...
Until very recently, Indian history existed in the doldrums of guilt and ethnocentric misunderstandi...
Rather than having the exclusive U.S.-tribal relationship respected, Indian nations are wrongly forc...
Review of: Wild West Shows and the Images of American Indians, 1883-1933. Moses, L. G
In his first book, Playing Indian (1998), Philip Deloria examined the ways that non-Indians used Ame...
Without Indians-or, rather, their imaginings of them-white Americans would hardly know how to define...
Two attorneys, both professors of political science, have written this book on American Indians and ...
Here is a fine collection of eights essays on American Indian topics by friends and former students ...
If ever a text should be required for a foundational American Indian Studies course, The State of th...
The relationship between federal policy and Indian needs has been a tortured one, at best, and to il...
Alan Trachtenberg's work, Shades of Hiawatha: Staging Indians, Making Americans, 1880-1930, examines...
North American anthropology can be divided into two ages: BD and AD-Before and After Deloria. In 196...
Lucy Maddox explores issues of race and progressive reform in the early twentieth century by examini...
Hollywood inherited conflicting myths of Native Americans: barbaric savages or Noble Savage. Influ...
In a region as well mapped and paved as Kansas Indian studies, anyone promising better roads to impr...
Donald Fixico\u27s study of urban Indians may seem at first to be a review of a well-known and well-...
Until very recently, Indian history existed in the doldrums of guilt and ethnocentric misunderstandi...
Rather than having the exclusive U.S.-tribal relationship respected, Indian nations are wrongly forc...
Review of: Wild West Shows and the Images of American Indians, 1883-1933. Moses, L. G