Being asked to review a book from a Native American perspective raises a basic question about the peer review process for academic journals. What constitutes historical objectivity in the review? Will a review identified as representing a particular perspective be received in the same way as a review by a historian who writes about American history? Given that very few Indian voices are recorded in the journals that Meriwether Lewis and William Clark kept during their epic western explorations, and that Ambrose can record only snatches of their thoughts, we cannot recover fully the many different ways that people of western tribes viewed the exploring party. The reviewer is forced to take a presentist stance to evaluate whether an author wh...
As a white scholar of American Indian autobiographies, I approached this collection of essays edited...
Alvin Josephy\u27s statement that this book is the culmination of thirty years of association with...
Through the lens of historical interpretation, Robert Dale Parker presents a controversial, deconstr...
Being asked to review a book from a Native American perspective raises a basic question about the pe...
In writing a review for Great Plains Quarterly one is asked to emphasize the book\u27s Great Plains ...
From time to time, a serious book excites the imaginations of a vaster public than the audience of s...
Review of: Lewis and Clark and the Indian Country: The Native American Perspective, edited by Fred...
If ever a text should be required for a foundational American Indian Studies course, The State of th...
The American Indian Oral History Manual offers a clear, succinct, and practical approach to guide an...
Review of: Wild West Shows and the Images of American Indians, 1883-1933. Moses, L. G
A summer ago I canoed down the Missouri River, along the wild pristine White Cliffs of Montana, with...
LEWIS AND CLARK: GONE; AMERICAN INDIANS: STILL HERE The Meriwether Lewis and William Clark expeditio...
Hollywood inherited conflicting myths of Native Americans: barbaric savages or Noble Savage. Influ...
REVIEW ESSAY: Naamiwan’s Drum: the Story of a Contested Repatriation of Anishinabe Artefacts (Mauree...
Lee Irwin, whose earlier writing has focused on Plains Indian visionary traditions, has gathered fou...
As a white scholar of American Indian autobiographies, I approached this collection of essays edited...
Alvin Josephy\u27s statement that this book is the culmination of thirty years of association with...
Through the lens of historical interpretation, Robert Dale Parker presents a controversial, deconstr...
Being asked to review a book from a Native American perspective raises a basic question about the pe...
In writing a review for Great Plains Quarterly one is asked to emphasize the book\u27s Great Plains ...
From time to time, a serious book excites the imaginations of a vaster public than the audience of s...
Review of: Lewis and Clark and the Indian Country: The Native American Perspective, edited by Fred...
If ever a text should be required for a foundational American Indian Studies course, The State of th...
The American Indian Oral History Manual offers a clear, succinct, and practical approach to guide an...
Review of: Wild West Shows and the Images of American Indians, 1883-1933. Moses, L. G
A summer ago I canoed down the Missouri River, along the wild pristine White Cliffs of Montana, with...
LEWIS AND CLARK: GONE; AMERICAN INDIANS: STILL HERE The Meriwether Lewis and William Clark expeditio...
Hollywood inherited conflicting myths of Native Americans: barbaric savages or Noble Savage. Influ...
REVIEW ESSAY: Naamiwan’s Drum: the Story of a Contested Repatriation of Anishinabe Artefacts (Mauree...
Lee Irwin, whose earlier writing has focused on Plains Indian visionary traditions, has gathered fou...
As a white scholar of American Indian autobiographies, I approached this collection of essays edited...
Alvin Josephy\u27s statement that this book is the culmination of thirty years of association with...
Through the lens of historical interpretation, Robert Dale Parker presents a controversial, deconstr...