History of indigenous people of the United States (Amendment History)

History of indigenous people of the United States (Amendment History)


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(as of Jun 18, 2025 17:03:53 UTC – Details)


New York Times Bestseller
Now part of HBO documentaries “Extract all bruts,” written and directed by Raul Peck
American Book Award recipient
The first history of the United States told from the point of view of indigenous people
Today, in the United States, more than five hundred union recognized indigenous countries include about three million people, descendants of fifteen million native people who once resided in this land. The centuries of the US Setler-Open Dietary Consumption Program has been left to a large extent from history. Now, for the first time, acclaimed historians and activist Rocks Dunbar-Artizofers told a history of the United States from the perspective of indigenous people and explains how the original Americans actively opposed the expansion of the American Empire, for centuries.
With increasing support for movements such as campaigns to end Columbus Day and replaced it with indigenous People’s Day and Dakota Access Pipeline opposition, under the leadership of Standing Rock Siox tribe, there is a history of an indigenous people of the United States, an essential resource that is an essential resource that provides historical threads that are important to understand the present. In the history of a indigenous people in the United States, Dubbar-Artiz challenged the United States founder myth and showed that policy against indigenous people was colonialist and was designed to seize the areas of the original inhabitants, displacing or eliminate them. And as it shows Dubbar-Artis, this policy was praised in the popular culture, through writers such as James Fenimor Cooper and Walt Whitman, and in the government and the highest offices of the army. The surprising thing is that the policy of massacre reached its area under President Andrew Jackson, its cruelty was held by General Thomas S., General of the US Army. The best expressed by Jessap, who wrote about seminels in 1836: “The country can only get rid of them away.”
Spread over four hundred years, the history of this classic bottom-up Peoples fundamentally reflects American history and explodes silence that harassed our national story.
History of a indigenous people of the United States is the 2015 pen Okalland-Josephine Miles Award for Excellence in Literature.
Publisher: Bicon Press
Publication date: August 11, 2015
Version: Rage
language English
Print Length: 312 page
ISBN -10: 0807057835
ISBN -13: 978-0807057834
Items Weight: 1.03 pounds
Dimensions: 6 x 0.88 x 8.99 inch
Part of Series: Amendment History
Lexyl Measure: 1220L

Customers say

Customers find the book well-researched and informative, particularly praising its excellent compilation of historical facts and interesting perspectives. The book receives mixed feedback regarding its authenticity, with some customers appreciating its truthfulness while others criticize it for not being an indigenous account of history. Several customers describe it as disturbing and painful to read.

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