WeRead Powered by ReaderPub
The book of the American Indian cover

The book of the American Indian

Chapter 41: FOOTNOTES:
Open in WeRead

Explore more books like this:

About This Book

The volume gathers short stories, sketches and a longer biographical narrative that observe Plains Native life amid contact with American authorities and settlers. Vignettes portray family relations, tribal councils, medicine practices, ceremonies such as the Ghost Dance, reservation schools, raids and confrontations. A central multi-chapter tale traces a chief’s rise, military engagements including the Battle of the Big Horn, captivity and resistance, and the emotional consequences of treaty-making and cultural fragmentation. The writing emphasizes daily routines, moral dilemmas, and the collision between traditional ways and imposed policies, combining sympathetic realism with scenes of ritual, warfare and personal remorse.

FOOTNOTES:

[1] In Indian use the word “medicine” should be understood to mean magic power. A medicine man may heal the sick, but a healer is not necessarily a medicine man. A medicine man is a seer, a yogi.

[2] A substantially true account of an incident well-known to border men.