Until now, the only book-length treatment of the Lakota nation\u27s effort to reclaim the stolen He Sapa (Black Hills) has been Edward Lazarus\u27s Black Hills/ White Justice (1991), which is as much an apologia for his father Arthur Lazarus as it is a history of events: Arthur Lazarus was the attorney instrumental in eventually winning the Supreme Court case United States v. Sioux Nation of Indians, which awarded substantial damages for the United States\u27 theft of the Black Hills
The occupation of Wounded Knee, South Dakota, in 1973 by members of the American Indian Movement (AI...
The reciting of oral traditions, or storytelling, is the oldest form of human literary achievement. ...
Colonialism becomes the lens through which Jeffrey Ostler both analyzes and interprets the history o...
A Review of Black Hills/White Justice: The Sioux Nation Versus the United States by Edward Lazaru
For observers following the Sioux Nation\u27s legal and legislative struggles over Black Hills land ...
The story of the Black Hills, recounted in this very readable chronicle by Edward Lazarus-- son of A...
Review of: Lakota America: A New History of Indigenous Power, by Pekka Hämäläinen
This well-documented book covers twentieth- century Pine Ridge politics by linking two events at Wou...
The literature on Native American dispossession grows with every year, and there are times when the ...
In the vein of Vine Deloria Jr., the preeminent American Indian intellectual who in 1969 forced a ra...
Although South Dakota is the home territory of many Lakota, Dakota and Nakota nations, it has often ...
This is an insider\u27s account of the attempt of the Oglala and Minneconjou tribes to establish the...
Although Black Elk Speaks was first published in 1932, it was not until the 1960s that the book gain...
Indigenous groups that occupied the Black Hills for thousands of years established economic, spiritu...
In the latter half of the nineteenth century a deadly clash of cultures swept across the Great Plain...
The occupation of Wounded Knee, South Dakota, in 1973 by members of the American Indian Movement (AI...
The reciting of oral traditions, or storytelling, is the oldest form of human literary achievement. ...
Colonialism becomes the lens through which Jeffrey Ostler both analyzes and interprets the history o...
A Review of Black Hills/White Justice: The Sioux Nation Versus the United States by Edward Lazaru
For observers following the Sioux Nation\u27s legal and legislative struggles over Black Hills land ...
The story of the Black Hills, recounted in this very readable chronicle by Edward Lazarus-- son of A...
Review of: Lakota America: A New History of Indigenous Power, by Pekka Hämäläinen
This well-documented book covers twentieth- century Pine Ridge politics by linking two events at Wou...
The literature on Native American dispossession grows with every year, and there are times when the ...
In the vein of Vine Deloria Jr., the preeminent American Indian intellectual who in 1969 forced a ra...
Although South Dakota is the home territory of many Lakota, Dakota and Nakota nations, it has often ...
This is an insider\u27s account of the attempt of the Oglala and Minneconjou tribes to establish the...
Although Black Elk Speaks was first published in 1932, it was not until the 1960s that the book gain...
Indigenous groups that occupied the Black Hills for thousands of years established economic, spiritu...
In the latter half of the nineteenth century a deadly clash of cultures swept across the Great Plain...
The occupation of Wounded Knee, South Dakota, in 1973 by members of the American Indian Movement (AI...
The reciting of oral traditions, or storytelling, is the oldest form of human literary achievement. ...
Colonialism becomes the lens through which Jeffrey Ostler both analyzes and interprets the history o...