Little Crow: Taoyateduta: Leader of the Dakota

Rather than simplifying the narrative into a story of inevitable white conquest over a doomed and heroic Indian leader and his people, Swain details at length the negative consequences of white encroachment, the impossible choices facing Dakota people, the compromises and lapses in integrity particu...

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Veröffentlicht in:American Indian quarterly 2005, Vol.29 (3/4), p.735-737
1. Verfasser: Wilson, Angela Cavender
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container_title American Indian quarterly
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creator Wilson, Angela Cavender
description Rather than simplifying the narrative into a story of inevitable white conquest over a doomed and heroic Indian leader and his people, Swain details at length the negative consequences of white encroachment, the impossible choices facing Dakota people, the compromises and lapses in integrity particularly at the time of the war, and the nastiness of the white settler population. In another example she provides the gruesome details about the chief's death, presenting an unflattering portrait of Minnesotans who dragged his body to the main street of Hutchinson, put firecrackers in his ears and nose, scalped and beheaded him, then displayed his remains at one of the state's most revered institutions, the Minnesota Historical Society.
doi_str_mv 10.1353/aiq.2005.0109
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ispartof American Indian quarterly, 2005, Vol.29 (3/4), p.735-737
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language eng
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source JSTOR Archive Collection A-Z Listing
subjects American history
Auditory system
Biographies
Childrens Literature
Childrens nonfiction
Death
Fiction
Indigenous Populations
Keresiouan languages
Leaders
Literary Genres
Literature
Native North Americans
Taoyateduta (Little Crow) (1810?-63)
Violence
War
Whites
title Little Crow: Taoyateduta: Leader of the Dakota
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