YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Communication of Native Americans
Essays 271 - 300
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...
In fifteen pages this paper discusses land ownership and property rights as it regards Native Americans in a consideration of the ...
In five pages this paper examines Native American culture and the factors that have contributed to its decline. Four sources are ...
and that the intervention of priests between the faithful and God was a necessary component of worship. Nevertheless, there is sti...
This 4 page paper discusses the most important Native American military alliances formed during the period 1680-1812. The writer p...
under an imposed patriarchal structure" (Osburn 10). Arranged marriages and unions born out of convenience were not an unus...
In eight pages the effects of alcoholism on Native Americans and the therapeutic impact of the film Smoke Signals are examined in ...
In five pages the essays 'For the Indians No thanksgiving' by Michael Dorris and Ward Charchill's 'Crimes Against Humanity' are co...
society has assigned this group is not that by which they prefer to be identified. The Navajo prefer to refer to themselves as th...
saying that she has helped "to destroy" her Hopi culture? What does she mean by "breaking away" from her heritage? Looking closely...
to stand in the way of colonial development for some time. In short, they were quite united and yet separate and as such are consi...
serve to further complicate these problems. Many elderly Native Americans suffering with diabetes, for example, may have been att...
(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...
In seven pages this paper examines Silko's novel from a historical context in an analysis of what Ceremony reveals about the latte...
In a paper that consists of five pages the ways the Spanish perceived Native Americans in Latin America and the Caribbean are exam...
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...
away to make room for the whites" If this were the case then why was...
members of particular racial and ethnic groups which are often compared in relation to the majority or dominant group within the p...
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...
The non-Native culture epitomized in the fledgling U.S. was almost one-hundred percent different from Native American culture. Th...
survival of the species, but the females of many species look with disdain on the losers of battle between the males. These femal...
one can take from this article is a one-sided story told from the point of view of the Native Americans. However, this...
In three pages this paper discusses the 1887 to 1934 U.S. General Allotment or Dawes Act and its impact upon Native Americans and ...
diseases such as smallpox, malaria, measles, cholera, tuberculosis, scarlet fever, whooping cough, mumps, influenza and typhoid fe...
In seven pages these novels are compared in terms of how each features the Native American identity struggle with similarities and...