The central problem of this essay is why John Collier and his adherants differed so greatly with Protestant missionaries on their notions of Indian welface in the 1920\u27s. Both the Collier group and the missionaries were deeply committed to seeing the quality of Indian life improved, but two irreconcilable ideologies made full cooperation between the two groups impossible. Issues like the Indian dance controversy, peyote use by Indians, the Indian policy of the Federal government, and the assimilation of Indian culture illustrate the lines of this ideological conflict
Upon taking the reins of power in the South Asian Sub-continent, the East India Company officials, b...
The purpose of this thesis is to examine the psycho-cultural dynamics of the interaction between the...
Native Americans have had an incredibly complicated relationship with Christianity. On the one hand,...
In 1933 President Franklin Roosevelt appointed John Collier to the post of United States Indian Comm...
With the approaching end of colonialism and the increasing awareness of “other” non-European civiliz...
This independent study attempts to examine the motives behind several movements for policy changes i...
Any discussion of India from the point of view of the West must deal with the problem posed by the c...
Nineteenth-century Indian policy in the United States stood at the crossroads of conflicting America...
Relations between Mexico and the United States have often been tense and yet they have always been i...
This article examines Jabez T. Sunderland’s mission to the Brahmo Samajes of India in 1895-96 as an ...
This paper traces the British imperialistic policy in Bengal, India, and the growth of the Swadeshi ...
The article draws on recent investigations on the legacy of Adam Smith to explore the uses of sympat...
About one quarter of this book is devoted to John Collier\u27s interest in various kinds of social e...
This essay examines the construction of a compassionate social sphere in native missionary biographi...
This thesis explores the partition of British India into India and Pakistan. While focusing on the p...
Upon taking the reins of power in the South Asian Sub-continent, the East India Company officials, b...
The purpose of this thesis is to examine the psycho-cultural dynamics of the interaction between the...
Native Americans have had an incredibly complicated relationship with Christianity. On the one hand,...
In 1933 President Franklin Roosevelt appointed John Collier to the post of United States Indian Comm...
With the approaching end of colonialism and the increasing awareness of “other” non-European civiliz...
This independent study attempts to examine the motives behind several movements for policy changes i...
Any discussion of India from the point of view of the West must deal with the problem posed by the c...
Nineteenth-century Indian policy in the United States stood at the crossroads of conflicting America...
Relations between Mexico and the United States have often been tense and yet they have always been i...
This article examines Jabez T. Sunderland’s mission to the Brahmo Samajes of India in 1895-96 as an ...
This paper traces the British imperialistic policy in Bengal, India, and the growth of the Swadeshi ...
The article draws on recent investigations on the legacy of Adam Smith to explore the uses of sympat...
About one quarter of this book is devoted to John Collier\u27s interest in various kinds of social e...
This essay examines the construction of a compassionate social sphere in native missionary biographi...
This thesis explores the partition of British India into India and Pakistan. While focusing on the p...
Upon taking the reins of power in the South Asian Sub-continent, the East India Company officials, b...
The purpose of this thesis is to examine the psycho-cultural dynamics of the interaction between the...
Native Americans have had an incredibly complicated relationship with Christianity. On the one hand,...