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Everyday life of the North American Indian…
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Everyday life of the North American Indian (1979 original; edición 2003)

por Jon Manchip White

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833325,488 (3.75)Ninguno
The story of the Native American from his immigration from the Asian mainland to life on government-authorized reservations. A well-woven narrative follows the nomad, hunter, and farmer throughout the New World, and presents detailed views of daily life and culture. Index. Bibliography. 6 maps and figures. 107 black-and-white illustrations.… (más)
Miembro:FourteenShelves
Título:Everyday life of the North American Indian
Autores:Jon Manchip White
Información:Mineola, N.Y. : Dover Publications, 2003.
Colecciones:Tu biblioteca
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Everyday Life of the North American Indians por Jon Manchip White (1979)

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Everyday Life of the North American Indian by Jon Manchip White

BIBLIOGRAPHIC DETAILS:
-*Print: COPYRIGHT ©: 1979; ISBN 084190488X; PUBLISHER: Holmes and Meier Publishers, Inc.; PAGES: 256; UNABRIDGED (Hardback info from the physical copy)
-Digital: COPYRIGHT ©: 1979, 2003; ISBN: 9780486147833; PUBLISHER: Dover Publications; PAGES: 256; UNABRIDGED (Digital Info from Amazon)
Audio: COPYRIGHT ©: Not Found in Audio Format
-FEATURE FILM OR TV: No.

SERIES: No

SUMMARY/ EVALUATION:
-SELECTED. I spotted this in the Newport Beach Friends of the Library bookstore with a couple of others on the same topic and cheerfully purchase all three.
-ABOUT: Primarily, this describes North American Natives. This is the list of chapters:
The Spirits of The Ancestors
The Hunter
The Warrior
The Medicine-Man
The Artist
The Reservation
There are many illustrations—several of them are George Catlin paintings (but in black and white).
And there is a Bibliography and an Index.

-OVERALL OPINION:
I enjoyed learning these aspects of North American Natives.

AUTHOR:
Jon Manchip White (From Wikipedia)
“Jon Ewbank Manchip White (22 June 1924[1] – July 31, 2013) was the Welsh American author of more than thirty books of non-fiction and fiction, including The Last Race, Nightclimber, Death By Dreaming, Solo Goya, and his final novel, Rawlins White: Patriot to Heaven, published in 2011. White was also the author of a number of plays, teleplays, screenplays and volumes of short stories and poetry.”

GENRE:
Nonfiction; North American Natives

SUBJECTS :
American Indian; Native American; Anthropology

DEDICATION:
“To My Wife Ten Years on the Rio Grande”

EXCERPT: From “1 The Spirits of the Ancestors”
“The Conestoga wagons creak and lumber across the prairie, their canvas flapping like a convoy of little ships labouring across an enormous empty ocean. The sun is just passing its zenith and beats down pitilessly. The trail-boss and his outriders urge on the teams of tired mules and their drivers; they must make the waterhole marked-on their makeshift maps by nightfall. Suddenly the trail-boss stiffens in the saddle. He lifts his hand to his dust-streaked face and peers under it at the distant horizon. Where the edge of the vast plain meets the sky he can see a brown plume coiling into the air. Could that dim smudge be anything more than an ordinary dust-devil? No: this is Indian country. A moment later his ears catch the drumming of hoofs and the yelling of war-cries. Quickly he orders the toiling wagons to swing inwards and laager into a tight circle. Men leap out and pull down packing-casks, chests, trunks, even pieces of furniture, thrusting them beneath the wagons and into the gaps between to serve as a barricade. Winchesters and Navy Colts are snatched from their holsters and boxes of ammunition are broken open. The women crouch beside their menfolk, loading the spare weapons or huddling protectively above the children. None too soon. The first wild wave of horsemen is already breaking against the flimsy barrier. The men lying behind the upturned armchairs and chests of china and water-barrels fire into a blur of half-naked bodies daubed with paint and feathers. The air is filled with savage yells, with the crack of guns with the reek of blood and sweat and gunpowder. Again and again the attackers return to the charge, leaving their dead draped across the barricade and the upturned shafts of the wagons. Finally they fall back on their traditional tactic of riding full tilt around the besieged band, yelping and yipping, guiding their bedizened steeds with their knees, twisting sideways to loose off their arrows and fire the rifles stolen from the victims of earlier massacres or sold to them by renegade white traders. The defenders squint grimly down the scorching barrels of their guns and poor fire into the maddened mass of the savages as they pound by, the manes and tails of their mounts and their own plaited locks and headdresses streaming out behind them. Bullets thud into bodies. Redskins topple to the ground to be trampled by their own comrades as they whirl past in a vortex of dust. The trail-boss is hit. His second-in-command snatches up his rifle and takes command. There can be no surrender, for the white men know that they can expect no quarter. They will be scalped, their wives and daughters will be seized as slaves and squaws, their children will be brought up in Indian ways. And now the arrows ripping into the wagons are tipped with fire and the tindery canvas burns with an oily flame. There is no alternative but to fight to the last, to sell their lives dearly . . .
Such is the portrait of American Indian activity with which wa are familiar from watching a thousand movies. It is exciting and entertaining. But is is true? Does it really correspond to historical facts?”

RATING:.
4

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The story of the Native American from his immigration from the Asian mainland to life on government-authorized reservations. A well-woven narrative follows the nomad, hunter, and farmer throughout the New World, and presents detailed views of daily life and culture. Index. Bibliography. 6 maps and figures. 107 black-and-white illustrations.

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