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Clyde Warrior - Tradition, Community, and Red Power (Hardcover)
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Clyde Warrior - Tradition, Community, and Red Power (Hardcover)
Series: New Directions in Native American Studies Series
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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The phrase Red Power, coined by Clyde Warrior (1939-1968) in the
1960s, introduced militant rhetoric into American Indian activism.
In this first-ever biography of Warrior, historian Paul R.
McKenzie-Jones presents the Ponca leader as the architect of the
Red Power movement, spotlighting him as one of the most significant
and influential figures in the fight for Indian rights. The Red
Power movement arose in reaction to centuries of oppressive federal
oversight of American Indian peoples. It comprised an assortment of
grassroots organizations that fought for treaty rights, tribal
sovereignty, self-determination, cultural preservation, and
cultural relevancy in education. A cofounder of the National Indian
Youth Council, Warrior was among the movement's most prominent
spokespeople. Throughout the 1960s, he blazed a trail of cultural
and political reawakening in Indian Country, using a combination of
ultranationalistic rhetoric and direct-action protest.
McKenzie-Jones uses interviews with some of Warrior's closest
associates to delineate the complexity of community, tradition,
culture, and tribal identity that shaped Warrior's activism. For
too many years, McKenzie-Jones maintains, Warrior's death at age
twenty-nine overshadowed his intellect and achievements. Red Power
has been categorized as an American Indian interpretation of Black
Power that emerged after his death. This groundbreaking book brings
to light, however, previously unchronicled connections between Red
Power and Black Power that show the movements emerging side by side
as militant, urgent calls for social change. Warrior borrowed only
the slogan as a metaphor for cultural and community integrity.
Descended from hereditary chiefs, Warrior was immersed in Ponca
history and language from birth. McKenzie-Jones shows how this
intimate experience, and the perspective gained from participating
in powwows, summer workshops, and college Indian organizations,
shaped Warrior's intertribal approach to Indian affairs. This
long-overdue biography explores how Clyde Warrior's commitment to
culture, community, and tradition formed the basis for his vision
of Red Power.
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