Road On Which We Came
An edition of Road On Which We Came (1994)
Po'i pentun tammen kimmappeh : a history of the western Shoshone
By Steven J. Crum
Publish Date
1994
Publisher
University of Utah Press
Language
eng
Pages
240
Description:
A hundred fifty years ago, the Western Shoshone occupied a vast area of present-day Nevada - from Idaho in the north to Death Valley in the south. Today, the Newe hold a fraction of their former territory, still practicing native lifeways while accepting many aspects of American culture. Their story deserves telling. The Road on Which We Came is the first comprehensive history of the Great Basin Shoshone. Written by historian Steven Crum, an enrolled tribal member, this book presents the Shoshone as an active force in their own history, effectively adapting to a harsh physical environment, defending their territory in the nineteenth century, and working to modify or reject assimilationist policy in the present. Noting that Native American history did not end with Wounded Knee, Crum pays substantial attention to twentieth-century events up to 1990 and emphasizes that in every period tribal actions can be characterized by a plurality of voices and opinions.
subjects: Government relations, History, Shoshoni Indians, Social life and customs, Indians of north america, west (u.s.), Indians of north america, history, Indians of north america, middle west, Indians of north america, social life and customs, Indians of north america, government relations, Great basin
Places: Great Basin