Description |
xxiv, 239 pages : illustrations, map ; 24 cm |
Series |
Borealis |
Contents |
Things That Guide the People -- Reservation Life -- Depression, War, and a Revival of Self-government -- Today and Tomorrow -- Appendix I: The Narrators -- Appendix II: The Interviewers |
Summary |
In this remarkable collection of transcribed oral histories, first published in 1971, members of Dakota, Lakota, Winnebago, and other communities tell of their personal experiences: reservation life, the Great Depression, self-government, traditions, and life in the 1960s. Together these voices present a rich and complicated view of what it is to be an American Indian. Historians Joseph H. Cash and Herbert T. Hoover selected for this book fifty-two interviews from more than eight hundred conducted by the American Indian Research Project at the University of South Dakota |
Notes |
Originally published: New York : Holt, Rinehart, and Winston, 1971 |
Bibliography |
Includes bibliographical references and indexes |
Subject |
Indians of North America -- History.
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Oral history.
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Author |
Cash, Joseph H.
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Hoover, Herbert T.
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LC no. |
94039879 |
ISBN |
0873513061 (paper : alk. ppaer) |
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