LUISENO SOCIAL ORGANIZATION
Author: RAYMOND C WHITE
Publisher:
Published: 1963
Total Pages: 118
ISBN-13:
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Author: RAYMOND C WHITE
Publisher:
Published: 1963
Total Pages: 118
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: William Duncan Strong
Publisher:
Published: 1926
Total Pages: 90
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Carleton S. Jones
Publisher:
Published: 1992
Total Pages: 224
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Chad Oliver
Publisher:
Published: 1971
Total Pages: 412
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Lisbeth Haas
Publisher: Univ of California Press
Published: 1995-06-06
Total Pages: 300
ISBN-13: 0520918444
DOWNLOAD EBOOKSpanning the period between Spanish colonization and the early twentieth century, this well-argued and convincing study examines the histories of Spanish and American conquests, and of ethnicity, race, and community in southern California. Lisbeth Haas draws on a diverse body of source materials (mission and court archives, oral histories, Spanish language plays, census and tax records) to build a new picture of rural society and social change. A borderlands and Chicano history, Haas's work provides a richly textured study of events that took place in and around San Juan Capistrano and Santa Ana in present-day Orange County. She provides a vivid sense of how and why the past acquires meaning in the lives that make up the historical identities she discusses. The voices of Juaneño and Luiseño Indians, Californios, and Mexicans are heard along the shifting faultlines of economic, social, and political change. This is one of the first truly multiethnic histories of California and of the West. It makes clear that issues of multiculturalism and ethnicity are not recent manifestations in California—they have characterized social and cultural relationships there since the late eighteenth century.
Author: Lisbeth Haas
Publisher: Univ of California Press
Published: 2014
Total Pages: 270
ISBN-13: 0520280628
DOWNLOAD EBOOKSaints and Citizens is a bold new excavation of the history of Indigenous people in California in the late eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, showing how the missions became sites of their authority, memory, and identity. Shining a forensic eye on colonial encounters in Chumash, Luiseño, and Yokuts territories, Lisbeth Haas depicts how native painters incorporated their cultural iconography in mission painting and how leaders harnessed new knowledge for control in other ways. Through her portrayal of highly varied societies, she explores the politics of Indigenous citizenship in the independent Mexican nation through events such as the Chumash War of 1824, native emancipation after 1826, and the political pursuit of Indigenous rights and land through 1848.
Author: Patricia Roberts Clark
Publisher: McFarland
Published: 2009-10-21
Total Pages: 321
ISBN-13: 0786451696
DOWNLOAD EBOOKScholars have long worked to identify the names of tribes and other groupings in the Americas, a task made difficult by the sheer number of indigenous groups and the many names that have been passed down only through oral tradition. This book is a compendium of tribal names in all their variants--from North, Central and South America--collected from printed sources. Because most of these original sources reproduced words that had been encountered only orally, there is a great deal of variation. Organized alphabetically, this book collates these variations, traces them to the spellings and forms that have become standardized, and supplies see and see also references. Each main entry includes tribal name, the "parent group" or ancestral tribe, original source for the tribal name, and approximate location of the name in the original source material.
Author: Sam D. Gill
Publisher: University of Chicago Press
Published: 1991-09-24
Total Pages: 212
ISBN-13: 9780226293721
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAttributed to Tecumseh in the early 1800s, this statement is frequently cited to uphold the view, long and widely proclaimed in scholarly and popular literature, that Mother Earth is an ancient and central Native American Figure. In this radical and comprehensive rethinking, Sam D. Gill traces the evolution of female earth imagery in North America from the sixteenth century to the present and reveals how the evolution of the current Mother Earth figure was influenced by prevailing European-American imagery of Americaand the Indians as well as by the rapidly changing Indian identity.
Author: University of California, Berkeley
Publisher:
Published: 1920
Total Pages: 516
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: James Robert Moriarty
Publisher:
Published: 1977
Total Pages: 760
ISBN-13:
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