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This innovative cultural history examines wide-ranging issues of
religion, politics, and identity through an analysis of the
American Indian Ghost Dance movement and its significance for two
little-studied tribes: the Shoshones and Bannocks. The Ghost Dance
has become a metaphor for the death of American Indian culture, but
as Gregory Smoak argues, it was not the desperate fantasy of a
dying people but a powerful expression of a racialized
'Indianness'. While the Ghost Dance did appeal to supernatural
forces to restore power to native people, on another level it
became a vehicle for the expression of meaningful social identities
that crossed ethnic, tribal, and historical boundaries. Looking
closely at the Ghost Dances of 1870 and 1890, Smoak constructs a
far-reaching, new argument about the formation of ethnic and racial
identity among American Indians. He examines the origins of
Shoshone and Bannock ethnicity, follows these people through a
period of declining autonomy vis-a-vis the United States
government, and finally puts their experience and the Ghost Dances
within the larger context of identity formation and emerging
nationalism which marked United States history in the nineteenth
century.
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