Lecture 4: Born Upon the Prairie
Summary to be added
Outline of Lecture
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Webb, Wellman, and Wild Indians
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Indians and
Archeology
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The story of people who lived before the advent of
written documents used to be called Pre-History, a term with some
undesirable cultural baggage, but there is some use to a discussion
focusing on native peoples on the plains prior to European arrival—if nothing
else, for the sake of epistemology, that is, considering how we know what
we know. How do we know what we know
about the First Nations of the plains?
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Indians and
the Fur Trade
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The cultural transformation of Plains Indians due to acquisition
of the horse is well known, but that due to the fur trade is less so,
particularly in the US. Trading beaver pelts and bison robes for
guns, blankets, and other goods, Indians were inducted into a mercantile
economy. This changed the native balance
of power on the plains and gave rise to new, distinctive regional cultures,
including the Métis.
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Fatal Contacts
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Around the world, where white colonizers encountered
peoples of color, the whites assumed what would ensue was the fatal
contact—the inevitable disappearance of inferior peoples. In the story of the Great
Plains we have focused our attention on what we call the
Indian Wars, armed conflicts in the mid-19th century. These were dramatic episodes, and they
did result in military conquest of the Indians, but by no means did they
result in their disappearance.
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On the Rez
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Far from disappearing, Plains Indians on their
reservations resisted attempts to eradicate their cultures and resurged
demographically. Adapting
creatively, they forged new identities that sometimes seemed far from their
pre-reservation traditions, but nevertheless defined them distinct from
white society. By late 20th century
Plains Indians were increasing rapidly in population and fashioning
vigorous reservation cultures.
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The Great Buffalo Hunt
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The eradication of the bison from the Great
Plains was a momentous environmental change that is much
misunderstood. The images of
shooters and skinners killing herds of bison for commercial gain are
familiar. The process was complex
than that, however; it raises issues about the sustainability of Plains
Indian buffalo culture and about the proper role of bison on the plains
today.
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First Nations
and a New Nation
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The evolution of Indian relations on the Canadian plains
was somewhat different than in the US, but certain important
elements, aimed at the eradication of native cultures, were common to both
nations. A great difference between Canada and the US
was the rise in Canada
of a distinct mixed-blood people, the Métis. Their culture and their resistance to
subjugation remain potent symbols of the Canadian prairie identity today.
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Assignments
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WWW
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The lecture incorporates
material from this page at my HIST 103 site—
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Native
American Ways of Life on the Great Plains
For an example of village farmer culture, visit the
National Park Service site, the Knife River Indian Villages.
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Knife River
Indian Villages
To go along with remarks in class, I've posted Canadian
folklorist Edith Fowke's text of the folksong,
"Red River Valley," as sung in Manitoba.
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Red River Valley
The University
of Saskatchewan
provides a great resource on the events of 1885.
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The Northwest
Resistance
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Reading
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Core Text
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As indicated in class and in synopses above, you can
consider Webb's chapter on Plains Indians as both basis and point of
departure for this lecture.
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Bibliography
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Recommendations pending
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Film
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Recommendations pending
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HIST 431 Home Page
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