Description

Book Synopsis
A study of the significant role that Indigenous activists living in Chicago played in shaping local and national public perception of Native Americans in the early twentieth century.


Trade Review
"City Indian is a most important addition to the literature on Native activism, the history of Indigenous representation, and urban history."—Coll Thrush, Michigan Historical Review
“LaPier and Beck reconstruct a history of Indigenous people both transcending and maneuvering within that two-worlds theme, and not cowering at modernity or drifting off into the sunset. . . . Scholars of not only the vital and maturing field of Indian urbanization, but also activism, education, labor, and modern Indigeneity, should consult this volume and add a copy to their shelves.”—Douglas K. Miller, Journal of American Studies

"For anyone interested in Chicagoans—all Chicagoans—this book tells a tale that explains how the non-Indian city treated Native Americans. And, by extension, how it has treated anyone on the edges, whether African Americans, Hispanics, non-heterosexuals, women, the poor, and the unconventional."—Patrick T. Reardon, Third Coast Review
“A substantial contribution to emerging scholarship on Native Americans and cities that provides fresh insight and helps us understand the motivations, strategies, tensions, controversies, and triumphs that have characterized the work and lives of local and national Indian leaders.”—Nicolas G. Rosenthal, author of Reimagining Indian Country: Native American Migration and Identity in Twentieth-Century Los Angeles
"Rosalyn LaPier and David R.M. Beck . . . add to a growing literature on urban Indians' experiences with their fine monograph City Indian."—Paul C. Rosier, Anthropos
"A welcome addition to the robust field of studies of Indian in urban places."—Sherry L. Smith, South Dakota History

City Indian covers an important and timely topic. This history of Indians in urban settings is currently under considerable and probing reconsideration. With this book Rosalyn LaPier and David Beck have shown how Native peoples in Chicago have determined their destinies.”—Brian Hosmer, H. G. Barnard Chair of Western American History and coeditor of Tribal Worlds: Critical Studies in the History of American Indian Nation Building



Table of Contents
List of PhotographsPreface and Acknowledgments1. American Indians and Chicago in the Nineteenth Century2. The World Comes to Chicago (The 1893 World’s Columbian Exposition)3. Indian Professionals in the City4. Indian Encampments and Entertainments5. The Indian Fellowship League6. Emerging Organizations7. Definitions of Indianness at the Century of Progress8. Self-DeterminationAppendix of Tables1. Chicago Population and American Indian Population in Chicago, 1830–20102. Chicago Indians in the 1920 Census3. Chicago Indians in the 1930 CensusNotesBibliographyIndex

City Indian

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    A Hardback by Rosalyn R. LaPier, David R. M. Beck

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      Publisher: University of Nebraska Press
      Publication Date: 01/05/2015
      ISBN13: 9780803248397, 978-0803248397
      ISBN10: 0803248393

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      A study of the significant role that Indigenous activists living in Chicago played in shaping local and national public perception of Native Americans in the early twentieth century.


      Trade Review
      "City Indian is a most important addition to the literature on Native activism, the history of Indigenous representation, and urban history."—Coll Thrush, Michigan Historical Review
      “LaPier and Beck reconstruct a history of Indigenous people both transcending and maneuvering within that two-worlds theme, and not cowering at modernity or drifting off into the sunset. . . . Scholars of not only the vital and maturing field of Indian urbanization, but also activism, education, labor, and modern Indigeneity, should consult this volume and add a copy to their shelves.”—Douglas K. Miller, Journal of American Studies

      "For anyone interested in Chicagoans—all Chicagoans—this book tells a tale that explains how the non-Indian city treated Native Americans. And, by extension, how it has treated anyone on the edges, whether African Americans, Hispanics, non-heterosexuals, women, the poor, and the unconventional."—Patrick T. Reardon, Third Coast Review
      “A substantial contribution to emerging scholarship on Native Americans and cities that provides fresh insight and helps us understand the motivations, strategies, tensions, controversies, and triumphs that have characterized the work and lives of local and national Indian leaders.”—Nicolas G. Rosenthal, author of Reimagining Indian Country: Native American Migration and Identity in Twentieth-Century Los Angeles
      "Rosalyn LaPier and David R.M. Beck . . . add to a growing literature on urban Indians' experiences with their fine monograph City Indian."—Paul C. Rosier, Anthropos
      "A welcome addition to the robust field of studies of Indian in urban places."—Sherry L. Smith, South Dakota History

      City Indian covers an important and timely topic. This history of Indians in urban settings is currently under considerable and probing reconsideration. With this book Rosalyn LaPier and David Beck have shown how Native peoples in Chicago have determined their destinies.”—Brian Hosmer, H. G. Barnard Chair of Western American History and coeditor of Tribal Worlds: Critical Studies in the History of American Indian Nation Building



      Table of Contents
      List of PhotographsPreface and Acknowledgments1. American Indians and Chicago in the Nineteenth Century2. The World Comes to Chicago (The 1893 World’s Columbian Exposition)3. Indian Professionals in the City4. Indian Encampments and Entertainments5. The Indian Fellowship League6. Emerging Organizations7. Definitions of Indianness at the Century of Progress8. Self-DeterminationAppendix of Tables1. Chicago Population and American Indian Population in Chicago, 1830–20102. Chicago Indians in the 1920 Census3. Chicago Indians in the 1930 CensusNotesBibliographyIndex

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