
Rebecca Kugel
Rebecca Kugel's varied ethnic background includes two Native American
tribal groups (Ojibwe and Shawnee) plus French, Irish, German,
Jewish, Danish and Polish ancestry. She received a BA from the ...
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To Be the Main Leaders of Our People
A History of Minnesota Ojibwe Politics, 1825-1898
Rebecca Kugel
Winner of the Choice Magazine
Outstanding Academic Book Award
In the spring of 1868, people from several Ojibwe villages located
along the upper Mississippi River were relocated to a new
reservation
at White Earth, more than 100 miles to the west. In many public
declarations that accompanied their forced migration, these people
appeared to embrace the move, as well as their conversion to
Christianity and the new agrarian lifestyle imposed on them. Beneath
this surface piety and apparent acceptance of change, however, lay
deep and bitter political divisions that were to define fundamental
struggles that shaped Ojibwe society for several generations.
In order to reveal the nature and extent of this struggle for
legitimacy and authority, To Be The Main Leaders of Our
People
reconstructs the political and social history of these Minnesota
Ojibwe communities between the years 1825 and 1898. Ojibwe political
concerns, the thoughts and actions of Ojibwe political leaders, and
the operation of the Ojibwe political system define the work's
focus.
Kugel examines this particular period of time because of its
significance to contemporary Ojibwe history. The year 1825, for
instance, marked the beginning of a formal alliance with the United
States; 1898 represented not an end, but a striking point of
continuity, defying the easy categorizations of Native peoples made
by non-Indians, especially in the closing years of the nineteenth
century.
In this volume, the Ojibwe "speak for themselves," as their words
were recorded by government officials, Christian missionaries, fur
traders, soldiers, lumbermen, homesteaders, and journalists. While
they were nearly always recorded in English translation, Ojibwe
thoughts, perceptions, concerns, and even humor, clearly emerge.
To
Be The Main Leaders of Our People expands the parameters of how
oral
traditions can be used in historical writing and sheds new light on
a
complex, but critical, series of events in ongoing relations between
Native and non-Native people.
American Indian Studies Series
Notes, photographs, maps, tables, index
230 pp., 6.00" x 9.00", April 1999
Cloth, $27.95,
0-87013-431-0 978-0-87013-431-9
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