YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Canada and Native Americans
Essays 331 - 360
In seven pages this paper examines Silko's novel from a historical context in an analysis of what Ceremony reveals about the latte...
white slave owners, the material culture that the slaves remembered in Africa, and the material culture of the Native American peo...
during the summer of 2006, hidden in the walls of Lenas grandmothers house" (Meland, 2007). The spirit of Ezol begins to come to L...
This paper reveals one common factor in the way whites have perceived Native Americans through our interactions over time. Example...
This paper compares and contrasts the positives and negatives of nineteenth century boarding schools for Native Americans. There a...
This paper pertains to Ishi, the last member of the Yahi tribe, who journeyed out of the wild where he had lived alone for 35 year...
while in other ways in a project such as this, it could spell disaster, and very nearly did. When peoples lives are at stake such...
This paper asks whether we have bastardized Native American language by appropriating it in sports and mass marketing. There are ...
There the Choctaw would ally themselves with the French and would have extensive warfare with the Chickasaw. The Creeks on the ot...
from Indian lands (Clark, 1999). The act has caused a great deal of controversy in the field of archaeology and has in many ways c...
Although the Supreme Court decision in Seminole versus Florida went against the tribe, its our contention that the decision was wr...
This 5 page paper discusses how mainstream white culture has treated Native Americans as inferiors throughout much of our country'...
This research paper/essay presents an argument that it would be morally and legally right for the federal government to return to ...
This essay looks at the battle of the Little Bighorn, which is famous as the location of Custer's defeat by Native Americans, and ...
This paper examines art like a diversity of art to discern its impact on our culture. World War II's Rosie the Riveter is explore...
The non-Native culture epitomized in the fledgling U.S. was almost one-hundred percent different from Native American culture. Th...
contact, for women typically remained at home when the men of tribe had contact with the Europeans who encroached ever closer into...
survival of the species, but the females of many species look with disdain on the losers of battle between the males. These femal...
members of particular racial and ethnic groups which are often compared in relation to the majority or dominant group within the p...
away to make room for the whites" If this were the case then why was...
one can take from this article is a one-sided story told from the point of view of the Native Americans. However, this...
non-Native culture, Zitkala was forced to leave her home and family at the young age of twelve. She was sent to a Quaker missiona...
believed that the Puritans were more organized, unified, visionary and disciplined certainly had not done a great deal of study of...
its westward expansion, the U.S. Biological Survey "declared the extermination of the wolf as the paramount objective of the gover...
the pressure put on them by the Puritans were generally members of the larger, autonomous tribes, such as the Narragansett, the Wa...
(variously called Teocipactli) and Xochiquetzal survived to repopulate the earth (Leon-Portilla). In the Toltec version of ...
effort in categorizing the tribes that populated the area and speculating as to their origin. He observed their subsistence patte...
inaccuracies which are depicted. The time bracketing the latter part of the nineteenth century and the first years of the t...
doing so, Boorstin puts this within the context of the historical era. For example, he explains that fifteenth century sailors sta...
culture as a living culture by placing the Native American in a kind of cultural "museum." Momaday wrote: "...[the Native Americ...