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Native America: A Brief
Bibliography
Here are a few books and publications
of interest; the list is by no means complete, and we'll add to
it as we can.
General (in rough
order from most general and introductory-- and most accessible--
to most comprehensive, complex, complete and demanding)
- David Hurst Thomas
et. al., The Native Americans: An Illustrated History.
(New York: Turner Publications, 1995). Currently listed as out
of print, this book is still readily available on the 'web. It's
an excellent general anthology
- Carl Waldman and Molly Braun, Atlas of the
North American Indian (New York: Facts on File, 2000). This
is a solid history and cultural introduction with excellent maps
that help to delineate the various tribes and show their patterns
of movement.
- Alice B. Kehoe, North American Indians: A
Comprehensive Account (New York: Prentice-Hall, 1992). This
is one of the standard textbooks for an introductory course in
the history of Native America, and it was one of the first to
take a chronological approach beginning with the earliest humans
on the continent.
- Roger L. Nichols, American Indians in U.S.
History (Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma Press, 2004).
This is Nichols's attempt to make a relatively brief (300 page)
comprehensive history out of his numerous and far more exhaustive
scholarly studies. By concentrating on Indian-European contact
and conflict, Nichols makes a solid narrative that is perhaps
willing to sacrifice chapters full of nuance in order that the
reader survive the encounter intact.
- Colin Calloway, First People: A Documentary
Survey of American Indian History (New York: Bedford/St.
Martins, 2003). A dense and very useful selection of documents
and materials.
- Albert Hurtado and Peter Iverson, Major Problems
in American Indian History: Documents and Essays (New York:Houghton-Mifflin,
2000). Part of the larger "Major Problems in..." series,
this is a book aimed at more advanced university students and
their professors.
More Specific Topics: Tribes, Issues, etc.
- Peter Iverson, The Dine: A History of the
Navajo (Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 2002).
Iverson is a truly authoritative voice and this is the best and
most up-to-date history of the Navajo, very well illustrated with
photographs.
- Raymond Friday Locke, The Book of the Navajo
(Mankind Publishing Co., 2002). This is a sprawling work by a
nonprofessional but until Iverson's book, it was the only broadly
conceived history of the Navajo and is still a valuable resource.
- Ward Minge, Acoma: Pueblo in the Sky
(Albuquerque, NM: University of New Mexico Press, 1995). This
is the "officially sanctioned" history of Acoma, well-treated
and useful for basing a teaching module.
- Peter Nabokov and Robert Easton, Native American
Architecture (New York and London: Oxford University Press,
1995). A very valuable resource; by looking at the housing, religious
ceremonial locations, functional and social buildings of Native
American tribes, Nabokov and Easton have provided an excellent
way of extending and specifying our knowledge of tribes and peoples
as they live their daily lives.
- Charles Alexander Eastman, The Soul of the
Indian (New York: Dover Publications, 2003). Eastman was
born and raised a Sioux, left the tribe to receive higher education
including a medical degree, then returned to the reservation;
he was the only doctor to treat the Indians at Wounded Knee in
1890. This is his "human" interpretation of Indian religious
practices as he knew them. A deeply affecting work, full of complicated
insights, but also deeply imbedded in the conceptions of Indianness
at the turn of the century, including the romanticism of Curtis
and the like. Any edition will do-- Dover is the cheapest.
- Edward Curtis, The North American Indian.
This huge project, photographing as many tribes and as many individuals,
events, rituals, activities, and materials of Indian culture is
a setpiece of a sort of romanticized invention of The Indian.
Published between 1907 and 1930, they are the model of the "white
man's Indian." Still, these photographs are indispensable,
in whatever form you might find them, from postcards to Dover
reprints: just remember that any sentimental yearnings you might
feel when you see them are a mark of your own prejudices and not
an accurate description of the conditions of those people depicted
in the pictures.
- Robert Berkhofer, The White Man's Indian:
Images of the American Indian from Columbus to the Present
(New York: Vintage Books, 1979). Still in print, this is one of
the classic cultural analyses of the ways identity was projected
on Native Americans by Europeans and Americans. Indispensable.
- Philip J. Deloria, Playing Indian (New
Haven: Yale University Press, 1999). This is the excellent extension
of Berkhofer's book.
- Jacquelyn Kilpatrick, Celluloid Indians:
Native Americans and Film (Lincoln, Nebraska: University
of Nebraska Press, 1999. Though often frustrating, this is still
an important work on a very necessary subject, and a fitting introduction
to any serious looking at movies in which Indians and Native Americans
(both) appear.
- Sherman Alexie, The Lone Ranger and Tonto
Fistfight in Heaven ( New York: Harper Perennial, 1994).
Almost anything by Sherman Alexie will entrance and captivate
students; these are short stories about adolescent Indians on
the rez' and they are as revelatory of the interior life of the
child-adult as they are of contemporary Native American life.
From these characters came Alexie's charming and deeply moving
film, Smoke Signals, which makes a wonderful audiovisual
addition to the curriculum. While you're at it, though, have the
more advanced English-language students read Reservation Blues,
Alexie's novel about the same characters when they form an all-Indian
rock band.
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