"Fighting sioux" Essays and Research Papers

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    Sitting Bull

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    Nicole Smith Professor Ben Beshwate History of the United States (132) Homework Assignment 2 05 February 2013 Sitting Bull With the possible exception of Crazy Horse‚ nobody is a more recognizable figure in the Indian resistance against the US settlers. I believe the author chose him as the focal point of this chapter not only for that reason‚ but because he‚ perhaps more than anybody else‚ embodied the spirit of the Lakota people‚ and nobody fought with more determination to protect it.

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    Black Elk Speaks Essay

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    Personal Essay Black Elk Speaks Before reading Black Elk Speaks I thought that Native Americans were all the same they fought wars and rode around on horse. They either won or lost the wars they fought in and they all lived in teepees. I really didn’t have much knowledge on them. I’ve always know that they had a very deep spiritual connection to nature and their world around them but I didn’t know the reasons why. Before reading I didn’t think about things as much like the world and animals; I

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    One of my favorite movies is Dances With Wolves. Dances With Wolves is a 1990 American epic western film directed and produced by Kevin Costner. Kevin Costner plays the star character‚ Lieutenant‚ John J. Dunbar. He is wounded in the American Civil War. He chose to try to commit suicide over having his foot amputated by taking a horse and riding it up to and along the confederate soldiers’ front lines. They failed to shoot him. The Union Army attacks the line while the confederate soldiers

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    Biography of Gertrude Bonnin (Zitkala-Sa) Notes 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 (Red Bird) Age 8 she was determined to learn the white man’s ways raised in a tipi on the Missouri River until she was 12 when she went to a Quaker missionary school for Indians (White’s Manual Institute) in Wabash‚ Indiana. Though her mother was reluctant to let her

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    Charles

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    arrival‚ he experienced a disastourous dust storm and later would come across the aftermath of a massacre. The massacre was due to altercations of warfare on the northern Plains. The tribes consisted of the following: the Lokotas who were known as the Sioux from the western portion and the Dakotas who were known as the mdewakantons‚ Sisseton‚ Wahpekute‚ and Wahpeton from the east. The western tribes‚ the Lakotas‚ had claimed most of the northern Plains country which consisted of an area known as the Black

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    Black Elk Speak Analysis

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    Response Paper on Black Elk Speaks BB Nicholas Black Elk‚ Lakota visionary and healer communicates his painful conclusion to John G. Neihardt at the end of his interviews in the following way: “[…]The nation’s hoop is broken and scattered. There is no center any longer‚ and the sacred tree is dead”(207). After he narrates the unspeakable tragedy of his nation‚ the concluding lines mark the tragic end of a personal life and that of a national

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    In the film “Dances with Wolves” Kevin Costner has one main goal to achieve in making this film was to do away with any predetermined notions that the viewer might have had about the Native Americans being some sort of savage race. Costner does this by unraveling this in front of the audience of the mysteriousness that was held by the Indian culture and then brings in the viewer to have this connectedness with Indians and their culture. By doing this we the viewer find ourselves feeling some sort

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    Lit review

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    Manuel Rodriguez Professor Dr.Selitto Enc 1101 W50 2/18/2014 “Alone on the Hilltop” In Lame Deers story “ Alone on the Hilltop” he recalls the moment in life when his first hanblechia occurred at the age of 16. The first scene begins on the hilltop where Lame Deer had been brought by Chest‚ the medicine man. Lame Deer has been left all alone on the hilltop for 4 days nights with no water or food. The only thing that he had with him where his star blanket which his grandmother had knitted

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    Native American Pipeline

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    Native Americans were confined to bleak reservations in vast stretches of the country‚ that no one thought was good for much of anything else. But those areas‚ ironically enough‚ turn out to be essential for the production and transportation of the last great stocks of hydrocarbons (Mckibben). Repeating history‚ our government and huge corporations are diving through hoops and trampling over morals‚ wreaking havoc on what little land indigenous people have left. A 1‚172- mile‚ sweet crude oil pipeline

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    Lakota Tribe Ritual

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    The Sundance‚ or known to the Lakota as Wiwanyag Wachipi‚ is one of the most fundamental and sacred rites of the Lakota people. It is also one of the more complex rituals‚ as it is a dance aligned with the sun for three days and two nights and there are numerous small details that must be done before the ritual can take place. Created as a means of bringing together the Lakota people and providing community during hardship‚ the Sundance is the largest and quickest pan-Indian movement up to date.

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