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Life Among the Texas Indians - The WPA Narratives (Paperback, New edition)
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Life Among the Texas Indians - The WPA Narratives (Paperback, New edition)
Series: Elma Dill Russell Spencer Series in the West and Southwest
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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Historian David La Vere has culled from the Indian-Pioneer
Histories housed in the Indian Archives of the Oklahoma Historical
Society in Oklahoma City a wealth of vivid detail about life among
the former Texas Indian peoples. The oral histories that make up
this collection were gathered during the Great Depression by the
Works Progress Administration. From the 112 bound volumes that
resulted, Dr. La Vere has gathered all the material pertinent to
the Indians who came from Texas into an exceptional picture of the
details of daily life-war and raiding, hunting and planting,
foodways dress, parties and spiritual practices, education, health,
and housing. La Vere has edited the narratives to group excerpts
topically. Under farming, for example, he gives this report from a
Wichita man: "We raise corn, pumpkin, sweet potato. I don't know
where we got corn, probably given to my people four hundred years
ago. Other Indians didn't know how to work, to raise corn and
pumpkins. They would have to get this from Wichitas." A Caddo woman
describes in great detail the three general styles of dress for
Caddo women, and a Caddo-Delaware woman tells about the different
woods and dyes used in making baskets. A white man living in
Comanche Territory details how the Comanches tanned hides by
"working the animal's] brains over them." Children's games and
adults' dance rituals all are described in the words of those who
played, danced, and watched them. La Vere sets the stage for this
ethnographic detail with a lively, readable history of the
succession of peoples who lived in Texas from the Paleo-Indians
until the present. It is a clear overview of the basic social
structures of the tribes and the relations among tribes and, later,
of the Indians with the Europeans who came to the region.
Accompanied by dramatic and poignant photographs from Oklahoma
archives, the gift that comes through these pages is an immediacy
of observation and impression that re-inspires the historical
imagination about life among the first Texans. DAVID LA VERE is an
assistant professor of history at the University of North Carolina
at Wilmington. He has published a previous book on the Caddo
Indians. His Ph.D. is from Texas A&M University.
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