Explore six books that highlight Black and Native histories—offering deeper insight into Afro-Indigenous experiences.
New works of nonfiction and fiction transcend stereotypes, and connect a wealth of ideas and facts for young readers. Credit...Eleni Kalorkoti Supported by By Abby McGanney Nolan Over the last 25 ...
Sonoma resident Valerie Sherer Mathes, arguably the leading scholar focusing on a significant but sometimes not fully ...
November is Native American Heritage Month, and the fall has brought an embarrassment of great new books by Native American authors.
Although sweat lodges are not part of the historical Oneida cultural tradition, Dorothy Ninham believes they are an essential practice for Indigenous people in the region to heal from addiction and ...
Machine generated contents note: -- INTRODUCTION: John Echohawk, Executive Director, Native American Rights Fund -- Preface -- Map: Indian Reservations and Communities in the United States -- I. A ...
Elizabeth Cook-Lynn’s New Indians, Old Wars argues that “the act of writing by American Indians has become a survival technique of major importance in researching and analyzing the hard issues of the ...
Matika Wilbur's intimate portraits of Native people across America appear in her book "Project 562: Changing the Way We See ...
“Events in Indian History,” published in Lancaster by G. Hills & Co. in 1841, is a curious book. The most interesting thing that draws you to the book are the crude, folk-art-like folded engravings, ...
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