This is a disappointing book. It might even be a dangerous book. Disappointing because although it looks like a reference book, it turns out to have too many errors to be of much use in that fashion. Dangerous because if it finds its way into school libraries, then many of those errors will invariably find their way into student papers and student minds. Almost to add insult to injury, in what I assume is an attempt to provide a simple, readable text to a wide (and perhaps school-aged) population, the writers have adopted a remarkably awkward style. Some examples should suffice to make the problems clear
Without Indians-or, rather, their imaginings of them-white Americans would hardly know how to define...
This anthology of Native American legends is a fine supplement to the Erdoes and Ortiz work, America...
This book begins to meet a significant need; ignorance of writings by women of color prevails throug...
In Woman, Native, Other, Trinh T. Minh-ha has taken on an ambitious task, which is to explain someth...
Edited by Ellen C. DuBois and Vicki L. Ruiz, two respected historians, Unequal Sisters: A Multicultu...
Harriet Sigerman attempts to synthesize recent scholarship on women in the American West into a narr...
This book about the various ethnic people in the state is disappointing in two ways: its format, and...
In Joan Mark\u27s introduction to the Bison edition of this classic work, she offers a good analysis...
American Indians are not conquered. The heart of the American Indian woman is not on the ground. In ...
Review of: A Stranger in Her Native Land: Alice Fletcher and the American Indians. Mark, Joan
The original edition of The Ethnic American Woman was published in 1978 with 381 pages. For the 1989...
This much needed resource is an annotated bibliography of nearly sixteen hundred works in print and ...
The author, Nancy Oestreich Lurie, is a native of Wisconsin born in Milwaukee, where she is now the ...
The editors of this book, associate professors at the University of Chicago, state that their work s...
Patterns of immigration to the U.S. have been changing since the 1990s. The geographic dispersion of...
Without Indians-or, rather, their imaginings of them-white Americans would hardly know how to define...
This anthology of Native American legends is a fine supplement to the Erdoes and Ortiz work, America...
This book begins to meet a significant need; ignorance of writings by women of color prevails throug...
In Woman, Native, Other, Trinh T. Minh-ha has taken on an ambitious task, which is to explain someth...
Edited by Ellen C. DuBois and Vicki L. Ruiz, two respected historians, Unequal Sisters: A Multicultu...
Harriet Sigerman attempts to synthesize recent scholarship on women in the American West into a narr...
This book about the various ethnic people in the state is disappointing in two ways: its format, and...
In Joan Mark\u27s introduction to the Bison edition of this classic work, she offers a good analysis...
American Indians are not conquered. The heart of the American Indian woman is not on the ground. In ...
Review of: A Stranger in Her Native Land: Alice Fletcher and the American Indians. Mark, Joan
The original edition of The Ethnic American Woman was published in 1978 with 381 pages. For the 1989...
This much needed resource is an annotated bibliography of nearly sixteen hundred works in print and ...
The author, Nancy Oestreich Lurie, is a native of Wisconsin born in Milwaukee, where she is now the ...
The editors of this book, associate professors at the University of Chicago, state that their work s...
Patterns of immigration to the U.S. have been changing since the 1990s. The geographic dispersion of...
Without Indians-or, rather, their imaginings of them-white Americans would hardly know how to define...
This anthology of Native American legends is a fine supplement to the Erdoes and Ortiz work, America...
This book begins to meet a significant need; ignorance of writings by women of color prevails throug...