Review of: American Indian Women: Telling Their Lives. Bataille, Gretchen M. and Sands, Kathleen Mullen
The history of this book is as remarkable as the lives of the women it chronicles. While rummaging t...
Readers will no doubt react favorably to the descriptions of eight unusual people, classified genera...
Speaking at the Annual Conference on Ethnic and Minority Studies in April, Bea Medicine admonished t...
Review of: American Indian Women: Telling Their Lives. Bataille, Gretchen M. and Sands, Kathleen Mul...
American Indians are not conquered. The heart of the American Indian woman is not on the ground. In ...
In this update of her 1984 book, Women and Indians on the Frontier, 1825-1915, Glenda Riley has prov...
Review of: "Confronting Race: Women and Indians on the Frontier, 1815–1915," by Glenda Riley
Review of: Honor the Grandmothers: Dakota and Lakota Women Tell Their Stories. Penman, Sarah, ed
Lucy Maddox explores issues of race and progressive reform in the early twentieth century by examini...
In this ethnohistory of American Indian education, Margaret Szasz broadly interprets education to me...
Devon Mihesuah has written a powerful book about the impact of colonization on the indigenous people...
Without Indians-or, rather, their imaginings of them-white Americans would hardly know how to define...
Review of: "Calling This Place Home: Women on the Wisconsin Frontier, 1850–1925," by Joan M. Jensen
The mid-nineteenth century was a time of turmoil for many American Indian tribes, but two groups sta...
Sharing our Stories of Survival is a heartbreaking and compelling presentation of Native women survi...
The history of this book is as remarkable as the lives of the women it chronicles. While rummaging t...
Readers will no doubt react favorably to the descriptions of eight unusual people, classified genera...
Speaking at the Annual Conference on Ethnic and Minority Studies in April, Bea Medicine admonished t...
Review of: American Indian Women: Telling Their Lives. Bataille, Gretchen M. and Sands, Kathleen Mul...
American Indians are not conquered. The heart of the American Indian woman is not on the ground. In ...
In this update of her 1984 book, Women and Indians on the Frontier, 1825-1915, Glenda Riley has prov...
Review of: "Confronting Race: Women and Indians on the Frontier, 1815–1915," by Glenda Riley
Review of: Honor the Grandmothers: Dakota and Lakota Women Tell Their Stories. Penman, Sarah, ed
Lucy Maddox explores issues of race and progressive reform in the early twentieth century by examini...
In this ethnohistory of American Indian education, Margaret Szasz broadly interprets education to me...
Devon Mihesuah has written a powerful book about the impact of colonization on the indigenous people...
Without Indians-or, rather, their imaginings of them-white Americans would hardly know how to define...
Review of: "Calling This Place Home: Women on the Wisconsin Frontier, 1850–1925," by Joan M. Jensen
The mid-nineteenth century was a time of turmoil for many American Indian tribes, but two groups sta...
Sharing our Stories of Survival is a heartbreaking and compelling presentation of Native women survi...
The history of this book is as remarkable as the lives of the women it chronicles. While rummaging t...
Readers will no doubt react favorably to the descriptions of eight unusual people, classified genera...
Speaking at the Annual Conference on Ethnic and Minority Studies in April, Bea Medicine admonished t...