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NATIVE AMERICANS.
Term Paper ID:29156
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Essay Subject:
Discusses the past and present of this group.... More...
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5 Pages / 1125 Words
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Paper Abstract: Discusses the past and present of this group. Ancient Indian cultures. Initial welcoming of Europeans by Native Americans. Ensuing conflicts. Native American culture. "Confederation" document of the Iroquois nation, including a voting system. Issue of sovereignty and early political empowerment. Modern empowerment. Modern cultural anthropology, ethnography and impact of the Internet.
Paper Introduction: Native Americans: Yesterday and Today
Introduction
For centuries before the white man set foot on American soil, Native Americans, had been living in America. When the Europeans came here, there were probably about 10 million Indians populating America north of present-day Mexico. And they had been living in America for quite some time. It is believed that the first Native Americans arrived during the last ice age, approximately 20,000 - 30,000 years ago through a land bridge across the Bering Sound, from northeastern Siberia into Alaska. The oldest documented Indian cultures in North America are found in the cave paintings and petroglyphs in Wyoming, which are usually dated to 20,000 B.C.E. (Marcus & Fischer, 1986).
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In this case,the most globalizing influence of all, the Internet. Nature to the Europeans - and the Indiansdetected this - was something of an obstacle, even an enemy. As a starter, the arrivingEuropeans seemed attuned to another world, they appeared to be oblivious tothe rhythms and spirit of nature. The Japanese had beenconstantly cracking our codes, so the Army enlisted 4 Navajo whocommunicated over the radio using their native tongue. Fifteen states are named after words in Native tongues(Richter, 2 2). Philosophy in a new key: A study in thesymbolism of reason, rite, and art, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press Marcus, G.E.; Fischer, M.M.J. It is the thesis ofthis paper that the impact of the Internet has had separate but equalimpact on the two groups of people whom we will call "Americans" and"Navajos." Traditionally, when the people being studied have been ignored bytraditional ethnographers as not significantly defined in the normativenotions of self and society are achieved only at the expense of an"Other/Our" identity (Marcus & Fischer, 1986, 114). Chicago: University ofChicago Press Perry, R.J. "The Natives regarded their white-complexioned visitors as somethingof a marvel, not only for their outlandish dress and beards and wingedships but even more for their wonderful technology - steel knives andswords, fire-belching arquebus and cannon, mirrors, hawkbells and earrings,copper and brass kettles, and so on" (Perry, 1991, 42). In the 197 s, the Council of Energy Resource Tribes, ( an organizationof over 2 tribes, such as the Navajo, Osage, Yakima, Blackfoot, NorthernCheyenne, Crow, etc.) consulted with OPEC nations in order to moreefficiently assess and develop the resources found on the reservations.Their reason was that federal management of Indian resources is appallinglysub-standard (Richter, 2 2). His goal was to defend the Haudenosaunee cause before the Britishsecretary of the Colonial Office and the League of Nations in Geneva. This problem is heightened when a third element -- that of culturalgermination based on extra-continental persuasion is added. Facing East from Indian Country: A NativeHistory of Early America. Political Empowerment In the 192 s, a man by the name of Deskaheh, a Cayuga, also known asLevi General, brought to the Six Nations his concept of reaffirming anddefending Iroquois sovereignty, which proved to have a significant effectin renewing enthusiasm and interest in this issue. The communities disperse and in different places joined others withwhom they felt a common purpose. (2 2). Ed.). Although his two years of persistence wereineffective in the political sense, Deskaheh did succeed in reintroducingthe Iroquois to the nations of the world.Few people realize that were it not for the Navajo Code Talkers, the War inthe Pacific might not have been won by the U.S. When looking back on the long history of knowledge and lore that theNative American culture has contributed we find many little known facts.For example, four hundred years before the Declaration of Independence andthe Constitution, the Iroquois nation had drafted a "Confederation"document where six nations agreed to live in peace and harmony. (1986). (1991), Western Apache heritage: People of the mountaincorridor, Austin, TX: University of Texas Press Richter, D.K. When the Europeans started to arrive in the 16th-and 17th-century they were met by Native Americans, and enthusiasticallyso. The particular conceit of ethnography (that much-debated and oft-criticized sector of cultural anthropology) that a people, or peoples(considering the diversity within the Navajo society) about whom little isknown or documented can be understood by applying current or contemporaryethnocentricities and assumptions to people of the past.One of the brilliances of the Internet is that it has minimized the needfor linear language, and has given the ability to man to use iconography tocommunicate. The oldest documentedIndian cultures in North America are found in the cave paintings andpetroglyphs in Wyoming, which are usually dated to 2 , B.C.E. Two hundred years before those documents, the Algonquin had developeda system of voting, using a bean (yes) or corn (no) to signify approval ordisapproval. Indeed, structural ethnography, cultural ethnography,and psycholinguistic ethnography are now being used to deal with theessentialist conceptions of culture, human agency, and meaning itself(Langer, 1994, 118). Native Americans: Yesterday and Today Introduction For centuries before the white man set foot on American soil, NativeAmericans, had been living in America. When the Europeans came here, therewere probably about 1 million Indians populating America north of present-day Mexico. The Internet community exists in many nations, withall peoples sharing a common visual language. Even the Indiansthemselves were a resource - souls ripe for the Jesuit, Dominican, orPuritan plucking" (Richter, 2 2, 34). In many cases, patterns ofbehavior and belief once shared among a population who later diverged maychange so much that eventually they are no longer detectable assimilarities" (Perry, 1991, 82). It isbelieved that the first Native Americans arrived during the last ice age,approximately 2 , - 3 , years ago through a land bridge across theBering Sound, from northeastern Siberia into Alaska. And they had been living in America for quite some time. It was also acommodity: "A forest was so many board feet of timber, a beaver colony somany pelts, a herd of buffalo so many robes and tongues. It is exceptionally fluid,semi-aggregates to which other people they happened to encounter gavenames. However, conflicts eventually arose. Anthropology as culturalcritique: An experimental moment in the human. References Langer, S.K.(1994, 3rd. BenjaminFranklin heard about this and used it as a model for the other documents sowell known (Perry, 1991). Modern Empowerment Although some non-revisionist anthropologists might wince at thethought of comparing social and cultural life within the United States withthe social and cultural life within the Navajo reservation, it will becomeclearly valid upon the realization that -- although the reservation sharesthe same land mass as the United States -- the Navajo tribe is clearly anindigenous people and culture (Perry, 1991). Modern cultural anthropology is undergoing the impact of criticalrevisionist theory. In terms of the Native American impact on geography, morethan 17,9 cities or towns in the US have names taken from one or more ofthe Native tongues. The name "Indian" was first applied to them by Christopher Columbus,who believed mistakenly that the mainland and islands of America were partof the Indies, in Asia. (Marcus &Fischer, 1986). That is the reason for the return to theold ways. This ability brings communications down to levels of basichuman understanding. Cambridge: Harvard University Press No one was able tocrack the language, and the Allied forces won (Richter, 2 2). "At best, ethnographic reconstruction is limited tothe gleaning of all-too-meager bits and pieces. In response to Canadianpolicies, he traveled on an Iroquois passport to Europe as representativeof the Confederacy Council at Grand River. Heargued, as the Iroquois have consistently maintained, that they have nevergiven up any sovereignty.
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