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         Bonnin Gertrude:     more books (20)
  1. The Action Of The Interior Department In Forcing The Standing Rock Indians To Lease Their Lands To Cattle Syndicates (1902) by Gertrude Bonnin, Charles H. Fabens, et all 2010-02-17
  2. AMERICAN INDIAN STORIES by ZITKALA-SA (Gertrude Bonnin), 2009-05-04
  3. Biography - Bonnin, Gertrude (1876-1938): An article from: Contemporary Authors by Gale Reference Team, 2003-01-01
  4. Old Indian Legends, 1901 First Edition (Legends of the Sioux) by Zitkala (Gertrude Bonnin); Angel De Cora (Illustration) Sa, 1901
  5. American Indian Stories (1921) by Zitkala-Sa, Gertrude Bonnin, 2009-06-13
  6. Masterpieces of American Indian Literature by George Copway, Charles Eastman, et all 1993-01-01
  7. American Indian Stories (1921) by Zitkala-Sa, Gertrude Bonnin, 2009-06-13
  8. The Soft-Hearted Sioux, Harper's Magazine Article, March 1901 by Zitkala (Gertrude Bonnin) Sa, 1901-01-01
  9. American Indian Stories (1921) by Zitkala-Sa, Gertrude Bonnin, 2010-09-10
  10. American Indian Stories (1921) by Zitkala-Sa, Gertrude Bonnin, 2010-09-10
  11. Classic American Autobiographies (Gertrude Bonnin/5 Autobiographies in) by Various, 1992-12-01
  12. American Indian Stories by Zitkala-sa, Gertrude Simmons Bonnin, 2008-12-16
  13. The American Indian Magazine: A Journal of Race Progress. Volumes 3 to 7 (1915-1920)
  14. Old Indian Legends (Forgotten Books) by Gertrude Simmons Bonnin, 2008-02-08

41. Lakota Dakota Home Page: Electronic Texts
Walker, James R Sioux Games II. Why I Am A Pagan? ZitkalaSa (Gertrude Simmons Bonnin). Impressions of an Indian Childhood Zitkala-Sa (Gertrude Simmons Bonnin).
http://puffin.creighton.edu/lakota/index_texts.html
ELECTRONIC TEXTS
Buechel, S.J., Eugene and Rogers, Dilwin Lakota Names and Traditional Uses of Lakota Plants by Sicangu (Brule) People, in the Rosebud Area, South Dakota: A Study Based on Fr. Eugene Buechel's Collection of Plants of Rosebud around 1920. This electronic edition is reproduced with permission of the Rosebud Educational Society, Inc. Carrigan, Minnie Buce: Captured by the Indians: reminiscences of pioneer life in Minnesota. Because of the nature of the search engine on this site it is necessary to go to the American Memory Search Page and enter the author's name: Minnie Buce Carrigan. The first entry retrieved should be this document about her captivity in the Minnesota Conflict of 1862. The work was published in 1912 and is posted on the Library of Congress American Memory home page. Dorsey, James Owen: Games of Teton Dakota Children This work describes a wide variety of games used by the Lakota. The games are classifed according to the age and genders of the participants. Eastman, Charles: Indian Boyhood

42. Zitkala Sa And The Carlisle Indian School
Raymond T. Bonnin and Miss Gertrude Simmons, both of Yankton Agency, were married at the home of Mr. and Mrs. EH Benedict in this city on Saturday afternoon
http://home.epix.net/~landis/zitkalasa.html
Zitkala Sa (aka Gertrude Simmons) at Carlisle.
Indian Helper References
VOL. XII. FRIDAY, July 9, 1897 NUMBER 39
Miss Gertrude Simmons is the latest addition to our force of workers. Miss Simmons is a Sioux, seven years a student of White's Institute, Indiana, and of Earlham College two years, is temporarily assisting with the clerical work in Miss Ely's office.
VOL. XII. FRIDAY, July 16, 1897 NUMBER 40
Miss Simmons is pianist for chapel services.
VOL. XII. FRIDAY, August 6, 1897 NUMBER 43
Misses Mary Bailey, Gertrude Simmons and Nellie Robertson departed for the West on Tuesday and Wednesday. Miss Bailey goes to Laguna, New Mexico, Miss Simmons to Yankton, Dakota, and Miss Robertson, to Pine Ridge Agency, South Dakota.
VOL. XII. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1897 NUMBER 50
On Monday, at the opening exercises of school, Miss Senseny, Vocal Instructress, sang in most excellent voice and with pleasing effect Lynes' "He was a Prince," and Belmont Smight's "Creole Love Song." On Tuesday, Miss Simmons talked upon "The Achievements of the White and Red Races Compared." This from a young Indian maiden was a most thrilling and earnest appeal to the youth of her race to show to the world by their earnestness of purpose that the history of the Indian has been wrongly written, and that their motives as a people have been misunderstood. From this on, the Indian will be judged by the growing generation, who should be industrious and worthy. Every student who heard her remarks should be quickened into a deeper intensity. On Wednesday, Miss Barclay talked on "Li Hung Chang's visit to the United States." This, also, was very interesting and instructive, entering into the details of his daily life.

43. Research Results
Famous Sioux writer Gertrude Simmons (later Bonnin) aka Zitkala Sa came to Carlisle, taught, fell for Thomas Marshall (Sioux), who was a Dickinson College
http://home.epix.net/~landis/couples.html
Some of the Names
. . . with introduction by Barbara Landis. In 1995, I met Genevieve Bell at a museum exhibit gallery in Carlisle, PA. I was astonished to hear her explain that her computer housed the entire database of the Carlisle Indian School student files of the National Archives Record Group 75. She had all the names. We have, since our first meeting, shared those names. Among them - the Family names, the Christian names, the Indian names, the Married names and our own Terms of Endearment. For us, the name "Nellie" can be only one Nellie although there were dozens of Nellie's at the Carlisle School. The Nellie we know best is that girl who took a trip to the moon in 1890. It was that Nellie who came to Carlisle as a student, graduated in the second class (1890), went on to university, returned to Carlisle as teacher and then matron, and was one of the last people on campus when it closed in 1918. It was that Nellie who generously donated the school publications to the State Museum of Pennsylvania in order that a most complete collection of publications survives today. One passion Genevieve and I share is to get the names to the nations to whom they belong. That passion brings with it distractions, as with each name comes not one story but a web of stories connecting child to family and family to clan and clan to nation. So - we make promises to send names to nations - and - we get around to it . . . eventually. In the meantime, what follows are some of the distractions borne out of the research requests Genevieve and I have gotten as a consequence of this amazing medium that has brought so many Carlisle descendants to our email boxes.

44. Stories, Listed By Author
BONNEY, BRUCE * Ultimate Journey, (ss) Campfire Legends, ed. John Long, ICS Books 1993. Bonnin, Gertrude SIMMONS; see pseudonym ZitkalaSä
http://users.ev1.net/~homeville/anth/s20.htm
Miscellaneous Anthologies
Stories, Listed by Author
Previous Table-of-Contents
BOCCACCIO, GIOVANNI (continued)

45. Stories, Listed By Author
Roses from France, (ar) Colliers Jun 27 1942. Bonnin, Gertrude SIMMONS; see pseudonym ZitkalaSä (chron.) BONOMI, MIKE (chron.) * The Last Word, (ss) Sir!
http://users.ev1.net/~homeville/fictionmag/s128.htm
The FictionMags Index
Stories, Listed by Author
Previous Table-of-Contents
BOND, RICHARD (chron.) (continued)
BOND, RUSKIN (chron.)

46. Digital History
Blackwell, Elizabeth; Blaine, James G. Bok, Edward; Bonnin, Gertrude; Boone, Daniel; Borah, William E. BourkeWhite, Margaret; Bradford
http://www.digitalhistory.uh.edu/biographies/biographies.cfm
Biographical Directory of American History A B C D ... Z Please note: These articles are from other sites and are not under the control of Digital History. Each link will open in a new window. Close that window to return to this page. A Back to Top B
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C
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47. Work Cited
Bonnin, Gertrude. A Warrior s Daughter. The Singing Spirit. Ed. Bernd C. Peyer. 86. Bonnin, Gertrude. The Soft Hearted Soiux. The Singing Spirit. Ed.
http://www.mehs.educ.state.ak.us/portfolios/steve_johnson/school/english/work_ci
Steve Johnson Work Cited This is an example of a perfect work sited document for our american literature unit. Bonnin, Gertrude. "A Warrior's Daughter." The Singing Spirit. Ed. Bernd C. Peyer. London: UAP, 1989. 86. Bonnin, Gertrude. "The Soft Hearted Soiux." The Singing Spirit. Ed. Bernd C. Peyer. London: UAP, 1989. 78. Clemens, Samual. "Cannibalism in the Cars." The Oxford Book of American Short Stories. Ed. Joyce Carol Oates. Oxford: Oxford UP, 1992. 110. Eastman, Charles. "The Singing Spirit" The Singing Spirit. Ed. Bernd C. Peyer. London: UAP, 1989. 107. Eastman, Charles. "The Gray Cheiftain" The Singing Spirit. Ed. Bernd C. Peyer. London: UAP, 1989. 99. Freeman, Mary E. Wilkins. "Old Woman Magoun." The Oxford Book of American Short Stories. Ed. Joyce Carol Oates. Oxford: Oxford UP, 1992. 206. Hughes, Langston. "Red Headed Baby." The Oxford Book of American Short Stories. Ed. Joyce Carol Oates. Oxford: Oxford UP, 1992. 365. Hurston, Zora Neale. "Sweat." The Oxford Book of American Short Stories. Ed. Joyce Carol Oates. Oxford: Oxford UP, 1992. 352.

48. Zitkala
Sources. Introduction. ZitkalaŠa ( 1876-1938), later known as Gertrude Bonnin, was born on the Yankton Sioux Reservation, South Dakota.
http://www.humanistictexts.org/zitkala.htm
Authors born between 1800 and 1900 CE [ Zitkala-Sa ] Gandhi Click Up For A Summary Of Each Author Contents Introduction Indian Tears The Custom of Hospitality Temptation in Red Apples ... Sources
Introduction
Zitkala-Ša ( 1876-1938), later known as Gertrude Bonnin, was born on the Yankton Sioux Reservation, South Dakota. Her Sioux mother, Táte I Yóhin Win (Reaches for the Wind), was also known as Ellen Simmons. After being brought up in the oral traditions of the Sioux, Gertrude Simmons left home to attend a missionary boarding school in the east. The shock of the transition between cultures is described vividly in the extracts from her writing given below. The education she received at different schools culminated at Earlham College, Indiana, (1895-97) before illness caused her to leave. At college, Bonnin won prizes for violin and piano performances, and for oratory and singing. She placed second in an Indiana state oratory contest, with Biblical rhetoric that condemned hypocritical Christianity in particular and white society in general. This nevertheless drew public attention and acclaim, and probably provided her with the recognition that she could contribute successfully to public life. She subsequently taught at an industrial training school for Indians and attended the New England Conservatory of Music in 1900. In the following three years, Bonnin published articles under her adopted Indian name, Zitkala-Ša (Red Bird). In these she joined other Native American pioneers, such as Sarah Winnemucca (Paiute), in putting forward for the first time a view of Indian life that was not filtered through a non-native translator. She was able to articulate her outrage at the treatment of indigenous Indians by European immigrants. Her articles in

49. 1800-1900
ZitkalaŠa. Zitkala-Ša ( 1876-1938), later known as Gertrude Bonnin, was born on the Yankton Sioux Reservation, South Dakota. She
http://www.humanistictexts.org/1800.htm
Zitkala-Ša
Zitkala-Ša ( 1876-1938), later known as Gertrude Bonnin, was born on the Yankton Sioux Reservation, South Dakota. She went to Earlham College, Indiana, where she won prizes for violin and piano performances, and for oratory and singing. Bonnin published articles under her adopted Indian name, Zitkala-Ša (Red Bird), articulating her outrage at the treatment of indigenous Indians by European immigrants and at the cruel treatment of Indian children. Gertrude Bonnin became secretary of the Society of American Indians, in 1916, moving with her husband to Washington, D.C., where she sought the granting of U.S. citizenship to Indians. For the rest of her life, Gertrude Bonnin and her husband campaigned for recognition of the Indian rights throughout the U.S.
Gandhi Mohandas K. Gandhi (1869-1948), later known as Mahatma Gandhi, was born in Porbandar, India, where he first went to school. He was the son of Kaba Gandhi, a Prime Minister in Porbandar and a member of a court body for settling disputes between chiefs and their clansmen. . His mother and father were deeply religious, and strict vegetarians, as was Gandhi himself. Gandhi devoted his life to public service. In South Africa he successfully developed a special form of non-violent protest (Satyagraha), which led to the removal of discriminatory laws against Indians in the early Twentieth Century. Gandhi focused the latter part of his life to gaining independence for India. Through an extraordinary effort of will he had more impact on this massive undertaking than any other person.

50. American Passages - Unit 8. Regional Realism: Author Activities
ZitkalaSa (Gertrude Simmons Bonnin) Back Back to Author Activities The links below lead to additional resources for this author.
http://www.learner.org/amerpass/unit08/author_activ-10.html
Home Channel Video Catalog About Us ... Contact Us Select a Different Unit 1. Native Voices 2. Exploring Borderlands 3. Utopian Promise 4. Spirit of Nationalism 5. Masculine Heroes 6. Gothic Undercurrents 7. Slavery and Freedom 8. Regional Realism 9. Social Realism 10. Rhythms in Poetry 11. Modernist Portraits 12. Migrant Struggle 13. Southern Renaissance 14. Becoming Visible 15. Poetry of Liberation 16. Search for Identity
Regional

Realism

Unit Overview
Using the Video ... PBL Projects
Activities: Author Activities
Zitkala-Sa Biography

This link leads to biographical and contextual materials for this author.
Zitkala-Sa (Gertrude Simmons Bonnin)
Back to Author Activities
The links below lead to additional resources for this author.
Teaching Tips
Author Questions Selected Archive Items This tool builds multimedia presentations for classrooms or assignments. An online collection of 3000 artifacts for classroom use. Download the Instructor Guide PDF for this Unit. Home Channel Catalog ... Contact Us

51. American Passages - Unit 8. Regional Realism: Authors
Authors ZitkalaSa (Gertrude Simmons Bonnin) (1876-1938) 1801 JN Choate, Group of Omaha boys in cadet uniforms, Carlisle Indian
http://www.learner.org/amerpass/unit08/authors-10.html
Home Channel Video Catalog About Us ... Contact Us Select a Different Unit 1. Native Voices 2. Exploring Borderlands 3. Utopian Promise 4. Spirit of Nationalism 5. Masculine Heroes 6. Gothic Undercurrents 7. Slavery and Freedom 8. Regional Realism 9. Social Realism 10. Rhythms in Poetry 11. Modernist Portraits 12. Migrant Struggle 13. Southern Renaissance 14. Becoming Visible 15. Poetry of Liberation 16. Search for Identity
Regional

Realism

Unit Overview
Using the Video ... Activities
Authors: Zitkala-Sa (Gertrude Simmons Bonnin) (1876-1938)
] J. N. Choate, Group of Omaha boys in cadet uniforms, Carlisle Indian School, Pennsylvania (1880), courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration [NWDNS-75-IP-1-10].
Zitkala-Sa Activities

This link leads to artifacts, teaching tips and discussion questions for this author. Writer, musician, educator, and Indian rights activist, Zitkala-Sa (or Red Bird) was born on the Sioux Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota. After her white father abandoned the family, she was brought up by her Indian mother in traditional Sioux ways. At the age of eight, Zitkala-Sa's life was transformed when white missionaries came to Pine Ridge and convinced her to enroll in a boarding school in Wabash, Indiana. Part of a movement to "civilize" Indian children by removing them from their native culture and indoctrinating them in Euro-American ways, the school trained Indian pupils in manual labor, Christianity, and the English language. Zitkala-Sa found it a hostile environment and struggled to adapt.

52. Diane Camurat. The American Indian In The Great War, Real And Imagined. Bibliogr
Bonnin, Gertrude, Secretary of the SAI to SAI members, September 27, 1917. Pratt, RH, to Newton D. Baker, December 17, 1918. Bonnin, Gertrude (Zitkala-Sa).
http://www.lib.byu.edu/~rdh/wwi/comment/Cmrts/Cmrtbib.html
The American Indian in the Great War: Real and Imagined By Diane Camurat
BIBLIOGRAPHY The classification of the following bibliography is inspired by and adapted from Frederick E. Hoxie's bibliography in A Final Promise: The Campaign to Assimilate the Indians, 1880-1920 . Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1989 (1984). Apart from the archival sources enumerated in the section of the same name, I found most of my information in the following places: Centre de Recherches sur l'Histoire des Etats-Unis (C.R.H.E.U.), Paris. Library of the Institut Charles V, Paris VII University. 1. Archival Sources Carlos Montezuma Papers, C.R.H.E.U. (Centre de recherches sur l'histoire des Etats-Unis), Paris, France: Larner, John William, Jr., ed. The Papers of Carlos Montezuma, M.D. including the Papers of Maria Keller Montezuma Moore and the Papers of Joseph W. Latimer. Wilmington, Delaware: Scholarly Resources, Inc., n.d. (Microfilm) Roll 4.: Correspondence 29 October 1914 through 1 September 1920: - Bonnin, Gertrude, Secretary of the SAI to SAI members, September 27, 1917.

53. Scanned By Michael Van Dyke
WHY I AM A PAGAN. By Gertrude Bonnin (ZitkalaSa). From The Atlantic Monthly. December, 1902. Vol. 90, No. 542, pp. 801-803. When the
http://www.expo98.msu.edu/people/Bonnin.htm
WHY I AM A PAGAN By Gertrude Bonnin (Zitkala-Sa) From The Atlantic Monthly December, 1902 Vol. 90, No. 542, pp. 801-803 When the spirit swells my breast I love to roam leisurely among the green hills; or sometimes, sitting on the brink of the murmuring Missouri, I marvel at the great blue overhead. With half closed eyes I watch the huge cloud shadows in their noiseless play upon the high bluffs opposite me, while into my ear ripple the sweet, soft cadences of the river’s song. Folded hands lie in my lap, for the time forgot. My heart and I lie small upon the earth like a grain of throbbing sand. Drifting clouds and tinkling waters, together with the warmth of a genial summer day, bespeak with eloquence the loving Mystery round about us. During the idle while I sat upon the sunny river brink, I grew somewhat, though my response be not so clearly manifest as in the green grass fringing the edge of the high bluff back of me. At length retracing the uncertain footpath scaling the precipitous embankment, I seek the level lands where grow the wild prairie flowers. And they, the lovely little folk, soothe my soul with their perfumed breath. Their quaint round faces of varied hue convince the heart which leaps with glad surprise that they, too, are living symbols of omnipotent thought. With a child's eager eye I drink in the myriad star shapes wrought in luxuriant color upon the green. Beautiful is the spiritual essence they embody.

54. Hoefel, Roseanne. " Zitkala-Sa: A Biography."
A vital link between the oral cultures of tribal America and the literate culture of contemporary American Indians, Gertrude Bonnin was the third child of
http://www.facstaff.bucknell.edu/gcarr/19cUSWW/ZS/rh.html
Hoefel, Roseanne. "Zitkala-Sa: A Biography." The Online Archive of Nineteenth-Century U.S. Women's Writings . Ed. Glynis Carr. Online. Internet. Posted: Winter 1999. http://www.facstaff.bucknell.edu/gcarr/19cUSWW/ZS/rh.html
Zitkala-Sa
A Biography:
By Roseanne Hoefel
A vital link between the oral cultures of tribal America and the literate culture of contemporary American Indians, Gertrude Bonnin was the third child of Ellen Tate 'I yohiwin Simmons, a full-blood Yankton Sioux. Born in 1876 on a Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota and known as Zitkala-Sa, which means Red Bird, she was raised in a tipi on the Missouri River until she was 12 when she went to a Quaker missionary school for IndiansWhite's Manual Institutein Wabash, Indiana. Though her mother was reluctant to let her go to the boarding school she herself had attended when young, she wanted to ensure her daughter's ability to fend for herself later in life among an increasing number of palefaces. As with many uprooted children, Zitkala-Sa returned after three years to a heightened tension with her mother and ambivalence regarding her heritage. The assimilationist schooling left her "neither a wild Indian, nor a tame one," as she later described herself in "The School Days of an Indian Girl" (1900). Four years later, Zitkala-Sa re-entered school, graduated on to Earlham College to become a teacher, remaining socially reclusive even after congratulatory gestures by schoolmates when she won oratory contests. As a student at the Boston Conservatory she went to Paris in 1900 with Carlisle Indian Industrial School (CIIS) as violin soloist for the Paris Exposition. Increasingly, she devoted herself to her people's cause and to overcoming her own cultural alienation through her fiction, as expressed in her 1901 collection

55. Gertrude
Gertrude Stein (18741946) American writer. Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney (1875-1942) American sculptor. Gertrude Bonnin (1876-1938) American writer.
http://www.geocities.com/edgarbook/names/g/gertrude.html
For many more names, please Return to Edgar's Main Page. Gertrude
Gender : Feminine
Language : English
Etymology
Gertrude
History
The Germanic name Gertrude first appeared in England during the early Middle Ages, probably from Dutch and Flemish settlers. Gertrud , the German form, had always been very popular in Germany due two two saints: St. Gertrude of Nivelles (626-659), and St. Gertrude the Great (1256-1302). Gertrude was common during the 16th and 17th centuries and came to popularity again during the late 19th century, but has since faded.
Pronunciation : GERR-trood.
Diminutives
Danish Trudel
English Gert Gertie Trudi Trudie , T rudy German (Low) Geerta Geertke Geertje Alternates Gertrud Gertrudis Dutch Gertruida Finnish Kerttu Kerrttu German Gertraud Hawaiian Kelekuke Portuguese Gertrudes Spanish Gertrudis Surnames Gattie Famous Bearers Artists and Authors Cuban playwright. Gertrude Jekyll English architect. American photographer. Gertrude Atherton American novelist. Gertrude Stein American writer. Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney American sculptor.

56. Links For 3e. Native American Perspectives [Beyond Books - American Literary Voi
Voices From the Gaps Gertrude Simmons Bonnin owl owl owl Visit http//voices.cla.umn.edu/authors/GertrudeSimmonsBonnin.html Here is a fine biography of
http://www.beyondbooks.com/lam12/3e_link.asp
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From Old Indian Legends
Simon Pokagon was a Native American chief who wrote about the problems of his race.
Land of the Spotted Eagle
Fellow wanderer: the coyote
Search BB Program Contents Page American Literary Voices Part 2 [Introduction] 1. The New Landscape: Americans Feel the Pain 1a. Sherwood Anderson: Life in a Small Town 1b. Thornton Wilder Our Town 1c. Problems on Main Street : Sinclair Lewis 1d. William Carlos Williams: Paterson Poet 1e. Robert Frost: Feelings from New England 1f. Quick Cuts: John Dos Passos's U.S.A. 2. America Land of Opportunity? A Tree Grows in Brooklyn 2b. Anzia Yezierska and Bread Givers 2c. Theodore Dreiser and An American Tragedy Sister Carrie 2e. Preserving Tradition: Isaac Bashevis Singer 3. Truth or Dare: Taming the American West 3a. Jack London's Adventure in the Klondike 3b. Steinbeck and the Social Conscience Grapes of Wrath Of Mice and Men 3e. Native American Perspectives 3f. Mexican-American Voices 4. Poetry Beyond the Rhyme

57. 3e. Native American Perspectives [Beyond Books - American Literary Voices Part 2
Click to hide Teasers. Did You Know? Native American author Gertrude Simmons Bonnin won a scholarship to the Boston Conservatory of Music as a violinist.
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Native American author Gertrude Simmons Bonnin won a scholarship to the Boston Conservatory of Music as a violinist. There, she went on to co-compose an opera entitled Sun Dance
"The wind, that wind / Shakes my tipi, shakes my tipi, / And sings a song for me."
Search BB How did you hear about Beyond Books? Teacher or colleague at my school or district Administrator at my school or district A student A family member A friend Educational publication Newspaper article Advertisement Online search At a tradeshow Representative from Beyond Books Representative from a different company Other Program Contents Page American Literary Voices Part 2 [Introduction] 1. The New Landscape: Americans Feel the Pain 1a. Sherwood Anderson: Life in a Small Town 1b. Thornton Wilder Our Town 1c. Problems on Main Street : Sinclair Lewis 1d. William Carlos Williams: Paterson Poet 1e. Robert Frost: Feelings from New England 1f. Quick Cuts: John Dos Passos's U.S.A. 2. America Land of Opportunity? A Tree Grows in Brooklyn 2b. Anzia Yezierska and

58. BIBLIOGRAPHY Of PLAINS INDIAN CULTURE
Lincoln University of Nebraska Press, 1988. Bonnin, Gertrude Simmons. (ZitkalaŠa). American Indian Stories. Lincoln University of Nebraska Press, 1986.
http://www.uwec.edu/greider/Indigenous/Woodlands/DebLedo/plainsbibdla.htm
BIBLIOGRAPHY of PLAINS INDIAN CULTURE Woodlands Home Compiled by Debbie L. Ledo © 1999. This is not intended to be an all-inclusive list, but there are some great books here! American Indian Religious Freedom. First People and the First Amendment. CSQ 19:4. Wyoming: Bighorn Medicine Wheel, 1996. Black Elk and John G. Neihardt. Black Elk Speaks: Being the Life Story of a Holy Man of the Oglala Sioux . Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1988. American Indian Stories . Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1986. Bourke, John G. On the Border with Crook . Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1976. * Briggs, Marion F. The Ghost Dance Tragedy at Wounded Knee Brown, Dee. Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee: An Indian History of the American West . New York: Henry Holt and Co., 1970. Connell, Evan S. Son of the Morning Star: Custer and the Little Big Horn . San Francisco: North Point Press, 1984. Crow Dog, Mary. Lakota Woman . New York: Harper Perennial, 1990. Deloria, Ella Cara. Waterlily . Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1988.

59. Classic American Autobiographies: Mary Rowlandson/Benjamin Franklin/Frederick Do
Classic American Autobiographies Mary Rowlandson/Benjamin Franklin/Frederick Douglass/Mark Twain/ZitkalaSa (Gertrude Bonnin/5 Autobiographies in).
http://www.literaturehistoryhub.com/Classic_American_Autobiographies_Mary_Rowlan
Classic American Autobiographies: Mary Rowlandson/Benjamin Franklin/Frederick Douglass/Mark Twain/Zitkala-Sa (Gertrude Bonnin/5 Autobiographies in)
Classic American Autobiographies: Mary Rowlandson/Benjamin Franklin/Frederick Douglass/Mark Twain/Zitkala-Sa (Gertrude Bonnin/5 Autobiographies in)

by Authors: William L. Andrews , Benjamin Franklin , Mark Twain
Released: December, 1992
ISBN: 0451628527
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Our price: Book > Classic American Autobiographies: Mary Rowlandson/Benjamin Franklin/Frederick Douglass/Mark Twain/Zitkala-Sa (Gertrude Bonnin/5 Autobiographies in) > Customer Reviews: Classic American Autobiographies: Mary Rowlandson/Benjamin Franklin/Frederick Douglass/Mark Twain/Zitkala-Sa (Gertrude Bonnin/5 Autobiographies in) > Related Products
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60. Works Cited
New York Roberts Rinehart Publishers (for Carnegie Museum of Natural History), 1998. Bonnin, Gertrude Simmons (ZitkalaSa). AImpressions
http://www.faculty.de.gcsu.edu/~mmagouli/biblioall.htm
Works Cited Abu-Lughod, Lila. A The Interpretation of Culture(s) after Television in The Fate of A Culture : Geertz and Beyond , ed. Sherry B. Ortner. Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1999: 110-135. A Writing Against Culture, in Racapturing Anthropology: Working in the Present , ed. by Richard G. Fox. Santa Fe: School of American Research Press, 1991: 137-162. Alexie, Sherman. The Lone Ranger and Tonto Fistfight in Heaven . New York: The Atlantic Monthly Press, 1993. Reservation Blues . New York: The Atlantic Monthly Press, 1995. Anderson, Benedict. Imagined Communities . London: Verso, 1983. Ashworth, William. The Late, Great Lakes: An Environmental History . Detroit: Wayne State University Press (by arrangement with Alfred A. Knopf, Inc), 1986. Barker, Debra K. S. A Kill the Indian, Save the Child: Cultural Genocide and the Boarding School in American Indian Studies: An Interdisciplinary Approach to Contemporary Issues . New York: Peter Lang Publishing, Inc., 1997: 47-68. Barnouw, Victor.

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