
To Come to a Better Understanding
Medicine Men and Clergy Meetings on the Rosebud Reservation, 1973–1978
Sandra L. Garner
Publisher: University of Nebraska Press
Imprint: University of Nebraska Press
Published: 06/2016
Pages: 208
Subject: Social Science
eBook ISBN: 9780803286979
DESCRIPTION
Garner examines the exchanges of these two very different cultures, which share a history of inequitable power relationships, to explore questions of cultural ownership and activism. These meetings were another form of activism, a "quiet side" without the militancy of the American Indian Movement. Based on ethnographic fieldwork and archival analysis, this volume focuses on the medicine men participants—who served as translators, interpreters, and cultural mediators—to explore how modern political, social, and religious issues were negotiated from an indigenous perspective that valued experience as critical to understanding.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Sandra L. Garner is an assistant professor of American studies at Miami University.
REVIEWS
"We are experiencing a reassessment of twentieth-century American Indian activism. Where all roads once led to the American Indian Movement, we now see multiple pathways leading to multiple destinations. By focusing on interactions between the Medicine Men Council and Catholic clergy at Rosebud, Sandra Garner shows us yet another dimension of this important story."—Brian Hosmer, H. G. Barnard Chair of Western American History at the University of Tulsa and coeditor of Tribal Worlds: Critical Studies in American Indian Nation Building
"A vitally important book that combines community-based research with fine-grained archival investigation. . . . The result is a compelling narrative that successfully demonstrates how multiple and sometimes competing viewpoints existed within the Indigenous rights movements of the 1960s and 1970s."—C. Joseph Genetin-Pilawa, assistant professor of history at George Mason University and author of Crooked Paths to Allotment: The Fight Over Federal Indian Policy after the Civil War
"A vitally important book that combines community-based research with fine-grained archival investigation. . . . The result is a compelling narrative that successfully demonstrates how multiple and sometimes competing viewpoints existed within the Indigenous rights movements of the 1960s and 1970s."—C. Joseph Genetin-Pilawa, assistant professor of history at George Mason University and author of Crooked Paths to Allotment: The Fight Over Federal Indian Policy after the Civil War
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