Post by grahamew on Apr 3, 2013 3:18:01 GMT -5
Saw this in a Mike Cowdrey post on Plains Indian Seminar II
Uniting the Tribes
The Rise and Fall of Pan-Indian Community on the Crow Reservation
Frank Rzeczkowski
May 2012
336 pages, 18 photographs, 6 x 9
Cloth ISBN 978-0-7006-1851-4, $39.95
Native American reservations on the Northern Plains were designed like islands, intended to prevent contact or communication between various Native peoples. For this reason, they seem unlikely sources for a sense of pan-Indian community in the late-nineteenth and early-twentieth centuries. But as Frank Rzeczkowski shows, the flexible nature of tribalism as it already existed on the Plains subverted these goals and enabled the emergence of a collective “Indian” identity even amidst the restrictiveness of reservation life. Rather than dividing people, tribalism on the Northern Plains actually served to bring Indians of diverse origins together.
Tracing the development of pan-Indian identity among once-warring peoples, Rzeczkowski seeks to shift scholars’ attention from cities and boarding schools to the reservations themselves. Mining letters, oral histories, and official documents—including the testimony of native leaders like Plenty Coups and Young Man Afraid of His Horses—he examines Indian communities on the Northern Plains from 1800 to 1925. Focusing on the Crow, he unravels the intricate connections that linked them to neighboring peoples and examines how they reshaped their understandings of themselves and each other in response to the steady encroachment of American colonialism.
Rzeczkowski examines Crow interactions with the Blackfeet and Lakota prior to the 1880s, then reveals the continued vitality of intertribal contact and the covert—and sometimes overt—political dimensions of “visiting” between Crows and others during the reservation era. He finds the community that existed on the Crow Reservation at the beginning of the twentieth century to be more deeply diverse and heterogeneous than those often described in tribal histories: a multiethnic community including not just Crows of mixed descent who preserved their ties with other tribes, but also other Indians who found at Crow a comfortable environment or a place of refuge. This inclusiveness prevailed until tribal leaders and OIA officials tightened the rules on who could live at—or be considered—Crow.
Reflecting the latest trends in scholarship on Native Americans, Rzeczkowski brings nuance to the concept of tribalism as long understood by scholars, showing that this fluidity among the tribes continued into the early years of the reservation system. Uniting the Tribes is a groundbreaking work that will change the way we understand tribal development, early reservation life, and pan-Indian identity.
“Rzeczkowski’s on-the-ground narrative brilliantly reveals both the rise of cross-tribal identities and the processes that undermined them. His study has much to teach us about Indian peoples and about the uneven power of colonialism.”—Fred Hoxie, author of Parading through History: The Making of the Crow Nation in America, 1805–1935
“Provides a fresh look at the importance of intertribal relationships and the permeable boundaries of the too often calcified concept of ‘tribes.’”—Kathleen Sherman, author of Lakota Culture, World Economy
“An eye-opening study that frames the subject in an original way.”—Alexandra Harmon, author of Rich Indians: Native People and the Problem of Wealth in American History
FRANK RZECZKOWSKI is visiting assistant professor of history at Xavier University.
Uniting the Tribes
The Rise and Fall of Pan-Indian Community on the Crow Reservation
Frank Rzeczkowski
May 2012
336 pages, 18 photographs, 6 x 9
Cloth ISBN 978-0-7006-1851-4, $39.95
Native American reservations on the Northern Plains were designed like islands, intended to prevent contact or communication between various Native peoples. For this reason, they seem unlikely sources for a sense of pan-Indian community in the late-nineteenth and early-twentieth centuries. But as Frank Rzeczkowski shows, the flexible nature of tribalism as it already existed on the Plains subverted these goals and enabled the emergence of a collective “Indian” identity even amidst the restrictiveness of reservation life. Rather than dividing people, tribalism on the Northern Plains actually served to bring Indians of diverse origins together.
Tracing the development of pan-Indian identity among once-warring peoples, Rzeczkowski seeks to shift scholars’ attention from cities and boarding schools to the reservations themselves. Mining letters, oral histories, and official documents—including the testimony of native leaders like Plenty Coups and Young Man Afraid of His Horses—he examines Indian communities on the Northern Plains from 1800 to 1925. Focusing on the Crow, he unravels the intricate connections that linked them to neighboring peoples and examines how they reshaped their understandings of themselves and each other in response to the steady encroachment of American colonialism.
Rzeczkowski examines Crow interactions with the Blackfeet and Lakota prior to the 1880s, then reveals the continued vitality of intertribal contact and the covert—and sometimes overt—political dimensions of “visiting” between Crows and others during the reservation era. He finds the community that existed on the Crow Reservation at the beginning of the twentieth century to be more deeply diverse and heterogeneous than those often described in tribal histories: a multiethnic community including not just Crows of mixed descent who preserved their ties with other tribes, but also other Indians who found at Crow a comfortable environment or a place of refuge. This inclusiveness prevailed until tribal leaders and OIA officials tightened the rules on who could live at—or be considered—Crow.
Reflecting the latest trends in scholarship on Native Americans, Rzeczkowski brings nuance to the concept of tribalism as long understood by scholars, showing that this fluidity among the tribes continued into the early years of the reservation system. Uniting the Tribes is a groundbreaking work that will change the way we understand tribal development, early reservation life, and pan-Indian identity.
“Rzeczkowski’s on-the-ground narrative brilliantly reveals both the rise of cross-tribal identities and the processes that undermined them. His study has much to teach us about Indian peoples and about the uneven power of colonialism.”—Fred Hoxie, author of Parading through History: The Making of the Crow Nation in America, 1805–1935
“Provides a fresh look at the importance of intertribal relationships and the permeable boundaries of the too often calcified concept of ‘tribes.’”—Kathleen Sherman, author of Lakota Culture, World Economy
“An eye-opening study that frames the subject in an original way.”—Alexandra Harmon, author of Rich Indians: Native People and the Problem of Wealth in American History
FRANK RZECZKOWSKI is visiting assistant professor of history at Xavier University.