The Book of the American Indian
Hamlin Garland author Keith Newlin editor
Format:Paperback
Publisher:University of Nebraska Press
Published:1st Sep '05
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
A collection of stories that sympathetically capture the life of tribes during the difficult years of transition to reservation life
Best known for his collection of short stories Main-Travelled Roads, Hamlin Garland (1860-1940) was also an accomplished writer of tales of American Indians struggling to adapt to reservation life during a time of confusion and government brutality. This edition reprints two of Garland's essays indicting the treatment of Indians.A Hopi child is torn from his parents and sent off to boarding school; white settlers encroach on the Cheyenne reservation, and the Cheyenne vow to fight to the death rather than give up their land; Howling Wolf witnesses the brutal murder of his brother and, when he protests, is in turn brutalized; after Sitting Bull’s triumph over Custer’s forces, he vows to fight to the death rather than submit to the white invaders. In these and other stories written from 1890–1905, Hamlin Garland sought to capture his vision of the spirit of the Native American Indian in transition. Based on ten years of visits to reservations in the American West, these stories are of interest for readers today in part because they illustrate a sincere and well-intentioned white reformer coming to understand a culture radically at odds with his own—and discovering in the process that his own culture is less “advanced” than he had supposed.
ISBN: 9780803271210
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 363g
286 pages