World War II left thousands of lives over much of the world fundamentally changed. Thus, it is not too surprising to find that Native Americans were also profoundly touched by the war and its aftermath. Alison R. Bernstein develops and proves this theme in her well written book that fills the void between the several studies of the Indian New Deal and recent works considering the termination movement of the 1950s
In contrast to the negative views of termination, the federal government and Anglo-American viewpoin...
In Native American history, no event is more pregnant with symbolism than the confrontation which oc...
'War at the Margins' offers a broad comparative view of the impact of World War II on Indigenous soc...
World War II left thousands of lives over much of the world fundamentally changed. Thus, it is not t...
Although the publisher claims on its jacket cover that Kenneth William Townsend\u27s World War II an...
Anthropologist Susan Applegate Krouse employs the records of Joseph Kossuth Dixon to shed light on t...
This volume painstakingly researches a historical event that few know about, especially outside the ...
Review of: American Indians in World War I: At Home and at War. Britten, Thomas A
Roberta Ulrich\u27s blistering, 2S0-page tour of dozens of different Indian groups undergoing termin...
Offering solid scholarship and impressive, fresh documentation, Parman contributes a tantalizing, so...
The historiography on Native Americans in the twentieth century remains uneven and sketchy. Few hist...
Review of: Indians and the American West in the Twentieth Century. Parman, Donald L
One feature of United States public memory is the way in which it tends to neglect the Native Americ...
The Indian New Deal of the 1930s changed official policy from assimilationist attitudes to accultura...
Review of: An Unspeakable Sadness: The Dispossession of the Nebraska Indians. Wishart, David J
In contrast to the negative views of termination, the federal government and Anglo-American viewpoin...
In Native American history, no event is more pregnant with symbolism than the confrontation which oc...
'War at the Margins' offers a broad comparative view of the impact of World War II on Indigenous soc...
World War II left thousands of lives over much of the world fundamentally changed. Thus, it is not t...
Although the publisher claims on its jacket cover that Kenneth William Townsend\u27s World War II an...
Anthropologist Susan Applegate Krouse employs the records of Joseph Kossuth Dixon to shed light on t...
This volume painstakingly researches a historical event that few know about, especially outside the ...
Review of: American Indians in World War I: At Home and at War. Britten, Thomas A
Roberta Ulrich\u27s blistering, 2S0-page tour of dozens of different Indian groups undergoing termin...
Offering solid scholarship and impressive, fresh documentation, Parman contributes a tantalizing, so...
The historiography on Native Americans in the twentieth century remains uneven and sketchy. Few hist...
Review of: Indians and the American West in the Twentieth Century. Parman, Donald L
One feature of United States public memory is the way in which it tends to neglect the Native Americ...
The Indian New Deal of the 1930s changed official policy from assimilationist attitudes to accultura...
Review of: An Unspeakable Sadness: The Dispossession of the Nebraska Indians. Wishart, David J
In contrast to the negative views of termination, the federal government and Anglo-American viewpoin...
In Native American history, no event is more pregnant with symbolism than the confrontation which oc...
'War at the Margins' offers a broad comparative view of the impact of World War II on Indigenous soc...