Don Wildman
π€ SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
Professor Smoke, Greg, welcome.
The Ghost Dance Movement begins in the late 19th century, as I mentioned, around 1890, the end of a century that has witnessed the conquest and collapse of tribal societies across the continent, but most recently, of course, in the West, specifically with the last tribes resisting expansion, the Apache, the Shoshone, Lakota, and others.
The management of this conquest after the wars were over was done as it still is today by pushing Native peoples onto reservations.
Starts with the Indian Removal Act of 1830.
Can you take us through this process historically?
But you're absolutely right.
I'm glad you said that because as I was reading that opening that I wrote, it has such a downer feeling.
And I want to tell people that's not the note we mean to strike today.
Of course, there's that element to this.
But that's your point is that there's as much of a cultural...
kind of rediscovery going on through this movement.
Those policies you talk about are Indian Removal Act 1830, then the Indian Appropriations Act 1851, the General Allotment Act, which is also known as the Dawes Act 1887.
All of these were created policies.
And my curiosity is, how did they grow through the century in terms of an evolution?
Was it controversial at the time?