

An edition of A people who would not kneel (1998)
Panama, the United States, and the San Blas Kuna
By James Howe
Publish Date
1998
Publisher
Smithsonian Institution Press
Language
eng
Pages
390
Description:
"A People Who Would Not Kneel taps an unusual wealth of historical documents and native testimony to tell the extraordinary story of the Kuna struggle against outside domination during the first quarter of this century. James Howe illuminates the triangular relationship among a weak Panamanian government intent on creating a homogenous Hispanic culture; an Indian people who used the political methods of a national society to resist; and the hemisphere's dominant nation, a colonial power that had supposedly renounced colonialism. Vividly portraying the tenacious, outspoken individuals caught up in this struggle, he chronicles Kuna confrontations with black frontiersmen, foreign corporations, and competing Catholic and Protestant missionaries. The Kuna also contended with official campaigns to suppress traditional noserings and mola blouses and to impose schools, dance clubs, and modernity. In 1924 they turned to Richard Marsh, a North American explorer in search of a mythical tribe of white Indians. Marsh helped lead an armed revolt against Panama, which led to intervention by the United States and ultimately to a shipboard peace agreement that guaranteed the Kuna much of what they had fought for."--BOOK JACKET.
subjects: Cuna Indians, Ethnic relations, Foreign relations, Government policy, History, Indians, Treatment of, Politics and government, Social conditions, Treatment of Indians, Indians of central america, social conditions, Panama, history, Indians of central america, history, Indians, treatment of, latin america, Panama, foreign relations, Panama, politics and government
Places: Panama, San Blas Coast