Catherine C. Robbins\u27s highly personal tour of contemporary Indian Country begins with a moving description of 2,000 sets of human remains being returned from Harvard University to the people of the Pecos Pueblo and their kin at Jemez in 1999. The book then degenerates into a long rant of pet peeves that annoy its author. Robbins\u27s portrait of Indian casinos is not flattering (their glitziness spoils reservation vistas, she says). She doesn\u27t think Indians dignify themselves by lecturing whites about sovereignty. In Robbins\u27s view, Indians practicing their hunting and fishing rights under treaties bring an unwelcome din to the streams and woods. Put all of this together, and, according to Robbins, we have a new stereotype: the...
Rebuilding Native Nations is a powerful restatement and reconsideration of American Indian self-dete...
In his first book, Playing Indian (1998), Philip Deloria examined the ways that non-Indians used Ame...
Lee Irwin, whose earlier writing has focused on Plains Indian visionary traditions, has gathered fou...
Catherine C. Robbins\u27s highly personal tour of contemporary Indian Country begins with a moving d...
If ever a text should be required for a foundational American Indian Studies course, The State of th...
Indian gaming throughout the United States has become a forum in which much of America reveals and w...
Across American history, Native American tribes were impoverished through land and natural resource ...
In a region as well mapped and paved as Kansas Indian studies, anyone promising better roads to impr...
Without Indians-or, rather, their imaginings of them-white Americans would hardly know how to define...
Raymond William Stedman approaches the pervasive stereotyping of American Indians with the awe of th...
Rather than having the exclusive U.S.-tribal relationship respected, Indian nations are wrongly forc...
In New Indians, Old Wars, Elizabeth CookLynn delivers a sometimes scorching critique not only of the...
This is an excellent book, with a couple of provisos. Considering the relative dearth of material on...
The fertile mind of Elizabeth Cook-Lynn has produced essays, lectures, and papers on an array of iss...
Elizabeth Cook-Lynn is a Dakota who, born and raised to adulthood on the Crow Creek Indian Reservati...
Rebuilding Native Nations is a powerful restatement and reconsideration of American Indian self-dete...
In his first book, Playing Indian (1998), Philip Deloria examined the ways that non-Indians used Ame...
Lee Irwin, whose earlier writing has focused on Plains Indian visionary traditions, has gathered fou...
Catherine C. Robbins\u27s highly personal tour of contemporary Indian Country begins with a moving d...
If ever a text should be required for a foundational American Indian Studies course, The State of th...
Indian gaming throughout the United States has become a forum in which much of America reveals and w...
Across American history, Native American tribes were impoverished through land and natural resource ...
In a region as well mapped and paved as Kansas Indian studies, anyone promising better roads to impr...
Without Indians-or, rather, their imaginings of them-white Americans would hardly know how to define...
Raymond William Stedman approaches the pervasive stereotyping of American Indians with the awe of th...
Rather than having the exclusive U.S.-tribal relationship respected, Indian nations are wrongly forc...
In New Indians, Old Wars, Elizabeth CookLynn delivers a sometimes scorching critique not only of the...
This is an excellent book, with a couple of provisos. Considering the relative dearth of material on...
The fertile mind of Elizabeth Cook-Lynn has produced essays, lectures, and papers on an array of iss...
Elizabeth Cook-Lynn is a Dakota who, born and raised to adulthood on the Crow Creek Indian Reservati...
Rebuilding Native Nations is a powerful restatement and reconsideration of American Indian self-dete...
In his first book, Playing Indian (1998), Philip Deloria examined the ways that non-Indians used Ame...
Lee Irwin, whose earlier writing has focused on Plains Indian visionary traditions, has gathered fou...