The Lipan Apaches is the first comprehensive study of a people who were important, integral actors in the history of the Southern Plains, most especially the history of Texas. Rather than casting the Lipans as the victims of Spanish or later American conquest, this meticulously researched work brings to life Lipan history, one steeped in a tradition of adaptation and cultural reinvention that of necessity was constantly responding to new and often painful shifting social realities. Britten poses these questions: Who were the Lipan Apaches and under what circumstances did a tribal identity emerge ? To what extent did they have control over their destiny
The Lost Land is a fine example of ethnic cultural history. Chavez contends that various attitudes o...
This report on the northern provinces of New Spain was written in 1799 by Jose Maria Cortes, a lieut...
Prior to this work did we have a well-balanced portrayal of the Tejano (Mexican American) who reside...
The Lipan Apaches is the first comprehensive study of a people who were important, integral actors i...
Texas has traditionally been viewed as an expansive landscape occupied by a relatively small and wid...
De León\u27s pioneering effort is a most welcome volume to Chicano Studies. The historian\u27s findi...
This study documents the origins and migrations of the Cuelgahen Nde Lipan Apache of Texas and the ...
Persons of Spanish-Indian or Mexican descent who were incorporated into the United States in the nin...
This tremendously enjoyable, thought-provoking book should be read by anyone interested in the histo...
Tejano Legacy depicts Mexican Americans in Texas-the subjects of the inquiry-as historical actors en...
This study argues that the history of the sixteenth and seventeenth century Southern Plains-New Mexi...
This first comprehensive history of the Jicarilla Apaches proves an indispensible [indispensable] to...
In the Atlantic region in the seventeenth century, there were several Indian groups, including the M...
The perception of order in seeming chaos in The Wichita Indians arises from the historical disciplin...
This fascinating book foregrounds the oral history of Chevato (Billy Chiwat), a Lipan Apache who in ...
The Lost Land is a fine example of ethnic cultural history. Chavez contends that various attitudes o...
This report on the northern provinces of New Spain was written in 1799 by Jose Maria Cortes, a lieut...
Prior to this work did we have a well-balanced portrayal of the Tejano (Mexican American) who reside...
The Lipan Apaches is the first comprehensive study of a people who were important, integral actors i...
Texas has traditionally been viewed as an expansive landscape occupied by a relatively small and wid...
De León\u27s pioneering effort is a most welcome volume to Chicano Studies. The historian\u27s findi...
This study documents the origins and migrations of the Cuelgahen Nde Lipan Apache of Texas and the ...
Persons of Spanish-Indian or Mexican descent who were incorporated into the United States in the nin...
This tremendously enjoyable, thought-provoking book should be read by anyone interested in the histo...
Tejano Legacy depicts Mexican Americans in Texas-the subjects of the inquiry-as historical actors en...
This study argues that the history of the sixteenth and seventeenth century Southern Plains-New Mexi...
This first comprehensive history of the Jicarilla Apaches proves an indispensible [indispensable] to...
In the Atlantic region in the seventeenth century, there were several Indian groups, including the M...
The perception of order in seeming chaos in The Wichita Indians arises from the historical disciplin...
This fascinating book foregrounds the oral history of Chevato (Billy Chiwat), a Lipan Apache who in ...
The Lost Land is a fine example of ethnic cultural history. Chavez contends that various attitudes o...
This report on the northern provinces of New Spain was written in 1799 by Jose Maria Cortes, a lieut...
Prior to this work did we have a well-balanced portrayal of the Tejano (Mexican American) who reside...