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Four Deaths: The Near Destruction of Western Oregon Tribes and Native Lifeways, Removal to the Reservation, and Erasure from History

David G. Lewis

Oregon historical quarterly, 2014-09, Vol.115 (3), p.414-437 [Periódico revisado por pares]

Oregon Historical Quarterly

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  • Título:
    Four Deaths: The Near Destruction of Western Oregon Tribes and Native Lifeways, Removal to the Reservation, and Erasure from History
  • Autor: David G. Lewis
  • Assuntos: Boarding schools ; Children ; Cultural history ; History instruction ; Indigenous peoples ; Native Americans ; Treaties ; Treaty lands ; Tribal chiefs ; Tribal land
  • É parte de: Oregon historical quarterly, 2014-09, Vol.115 (3), p.414-437
  • Descrição: Whether physical, cultural, legal, or in scholarship, death has been part Western Oregon tribes' lives since contact with newcomers. Yet, Native people have survived. This shared tribal legacy, however, is still unknown to many people throughout the state, and according to Lewis, “such historical ignorance is another kind of death — one marked by both myth and silence.” He shares stories of his ancestors' death experiences through removal, assimilation, and termination. As tribal historian for the Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde, Lewis works to ensure that Native voices are heard in order to “produce and interpret history that continue[s] to develop and will result in a better history for all Oregonians.”
  • Editor: Oregon Historical Quarterly
  • Idioma: Inglês

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