Employing a broad multi-disciplinary approach which includes history, anthropology, economics, demography, ecology, and political science, Meyer, a U.C.L.A. historian, has created a sensitive and sweeping analysis of the creation and metamorphosis of the Anishinaabeg ( Chippewa or Ojibwe”) who eventually located in contemporary Minnesota on the White Earth Reservation. Eschewing stereotypes of Indians as mere victims of Euro-American history, Meyer shows how the Anishinaabeg -- themselves internally heterogeneous -- transform, adapt, innovate and respond according to their own interests and to changes around them
The Indians of Oklahoma, a survey of the sixty-seven tribes residing in the state, explains the colo...
Review of: Peoples of the Inland Sea: Native Americans and Newcomers in the Great Lakes Region, 1600...
Review of: Settling the Canadian-American West, 1890-1915: Pioneer Adaptation and Community Building...
In this work Meyer draws primarily upon the substantial resources available from the colonial U.S. b...
The land is at the core and in charge of the overlapping cultures of the Lakota and whites of Benn...
Anthropologist Landsman has written a fascinating study about the events surrounding the seizure of ...
In Encounter on the Great Plains, Karen Hansen investigates Scandinavian immigrants and settlers who...
One aftermath of European colonization of the eastern United States was the westward migration of ma...
Review of: A Stranger in Her Native Land: Alice Fletcher and the American Indians. Mark, Joan
The subject of this book is several groups of Native Americans in the Eastern United States and thei...
A sociologist, Thornton has written a thorough and balanced demographic account of Native American s...
Review of: Lakota America: A New History of Indigenous Power, by Pekka Hämäläinen
The author, Nancy Oestreich Lurie, is a native of Wisconsin born in Milwaukee, where she is now the ...
Until very recently, Indian history existed in the doldrums of guilt and ethnocentric misunderstandi...
Loewen and Friesen trace the origins of public concern about the adverse influence of immigrants in ...
The Indians of Oklahoma, a survey of the sixty-seven tribes residing in the state, explains the colo...
Review of: Peoples of the Inland Sea: Native Americans and Newcomers in the Great Lakes Region, 1600...
Review of: Settling the Canadian-American West, 1890-1915: Pioneer Adaptation and Community Building...
In this work Meyer draws primarily upon the substantial resources available from the colonial U.S. b...
The land is at the core and in charge of the overlapping cultures of the Lakota and whites of Benn...
Anthropologist Landsman has written a fascinating study about the events surrounding the seizure of ...
In Encounter on the Great Plains, Karen Hansen investigates Scandinavian immigrants and settlers who...
One aftermath of European colonization of the eastern United States was the westward migration of ma...
Review of: A Stranger in Her Native Land: Alice Fletcher and the American Indians. Mark, Joan
The subject of this book is several groups of Native Americans in the Eastern United States and thei...
A sociologist, Thornton has written a thorough and balanced demographic account of Native American s...
Review of: Lakota America: A New History of Indigenous Power, by Pekka Hämäläinen
The author, Nancy Oestreich Lurie, is a native of Wisconsin born in Milwaukee, where she is now the ...
Until very recently, Indian history existed in the doldrums of guilt and ethnocentric misunderstandi...
Loewen and Friesen trace the origins of public concern about the adverse influence of immigrants in ...
The Indians of Oklahoma, a survey of the sixty-seven tribes residing in the state, explains the colo...
Review of: Peoples of the Inland Sea: Native Americans and Newcomers in the Great Lakes Region, 1600...
Review of: Settling the Canadian-American West, 1890-1915: Pioneer Adaptation and Community Building...