The Last Days of the Sioux Nation: Second EditionYale University Press, 11 Jul 2004 - 356 halaman This award-winning history of the Sioux in the 19th century ranges from its forced migration to the reservation to the Wounded Knee Massacre. First published in 1963, Robert M. Utley’s classic study of the Sioux Nation was a landmark achievement in Native American historical research. The St. Louis Dispatch called it “by far the best treatment of the complex and controversial relationship between the Sioux and their conquerors yet presented and should be must reading for serious students of Western Americana.” Today, it remains one of the most thorough and accurate depictions of the tragic violence that broke out near Wounded Knee Creek on December 29th, 1890. In the preface to this second edition, western historian Robert M. Utley reflects on the importance of his work and changing perspectives on Native American history. Acknowledging the inaccuracy of his own title, he points out that “Wounded Knee did not represent the end of the Sioux tribes…It ended one era and open another in the lives of the Sioux people.” Winner of the Buffalo Award |
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Halaman 1815
... Ghost Dance; photograph by A. G. Johnson, York, Neb., courtesy Smithsonian Institution, Bureau of American Ethnology ... Ghost Dancers; Grabill Collection, courtesy Library of Congress 9. Gen. Nelson A. Miles; courtesy Custer Battlefield ...
... Ghost Dance; photograph by A. G. Johnson, York, Neb., courtesy Smithsonian Institution, Bureau of American Ethnology ... Ghost Dancers; Grabill Collection, courtesy Library of Congress 9. Gen. Nelson A. Miles; courtesy Custer Battlefield ...
Halaman 1817
... Ghost Dance and Wounded Knee did not represent the final days of the Sioux tribes . They went on doing what they had been doing for generations - adapting . They still live , vibrant , proud , defined by selfidentity - and adapting ...
... Ghost Dance and Wounded Knee did not represent the final days of the Sioux tribes . They went on doing what they had been doing for generations - adapting . They still live , vibrant , proud , defined by selfidentity - and adapting ...
Halaman 1818
... interpretation , of which he selected mine as the most prominent example . ( " The Lakota Ghost Dance : An Ethnohistorical Account , " Pacific Historical Review 51 [ October 1982]: 385–405). A major emphasis was that the Ghost Dance.
... interpretation , of which he selected mine as the most prominent example . ( " The Lakota Ghost Dance : An Ethnohistorical Account , " Pacific Historical Review 51 [ October 1982]: 385–405). A major emphasis was that the Ghost Dance.
Halaman 1819
... Ghost Dance was not an isolated phenomenon to be treated as separate from the traditional Lakota beliefs and practices. Rather, it was a stage in spiritual concepts that had been changing for generations, concepts that by the 1880s had ...
... Ghost Dance was not an isolated phenomenon to be treated as separate from the traditional Lakota beliefs and practices. Rather, it was a stage in spiritual concepts that had been changing for generations, concepts that by the 1880s had ...
Halaman 1821
... Ghost Dance and a 6-page chapter on Wounded Knee. They were as full of unsound history as the other 17 chapters. Yet the title illumined Wounded Knee worldwide, and the contents shaped public thinking about Indians into the twenty-first ...
... Ghost Dance and a 6-page chapter on Wounded Knee. They were as full of unsound history as the other 17 chapters. Yet the title illumined Wounded Knee worldwide, and the contents shaped public thinking about Indians into the twenty-first ...
Isi
1815 | |
1817 | |
1826 | |
1832 | |
1845 | |
The Land Agreement | 1868 |
The Indian Messiah | 1889 |
Crisis for the Sioux Agents | |
The End of Sitting Bull | |
Big Foot | |
The Search for the Miniconjous | |
Wounded Knee | |
Drexel Mission | |
Tightening the Ring | |
The Final Reckoning | |
Bibliography | |
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agent American Annual Report 1891 Army arrest battle Belt Big Foot Brooke Brulés buffalo Bull Head Bull’s cabin camp Capt Captain Cheyenne River Cheyenne River Agency chiefs command Commissioner council Crow dancers December Dewey Beard Elaine Goodale Fechet fight fire Foot’s Forsyth Fort Yates Ghost Dance Grand River guns Horse hostile Hotchkiss gun Hunkpapas Indian Affairs Indian Bureau Infantry Interview Kicking Bear killed land Lieutenant Lower Brulé McGillycuddy McLaughlin Messiah Miles to Adjt military Miniconjous Nebraska officers Oglala Pine Ridge Agency police policemen rations ravine Red Cloud regiment religion Ricker Collection rifle rode Rosebud Royer Ruger scouts Secretary sent Seventh Cavalry Shangreau Short Bull Sioux Reservation Sitting Bull soldiers South Dakota Standing Rock Stronghold Sumner surrender tepees Teton tribes troops turned valley wagon warriors Washington White Clay Creek White River Whitside WKIR women Wounded Knee Creek Wovoka