Being Indigenous in Jim Crow Virginia : Powhatan People and the Color Line /
"Explores experiences and strategies of tidewater Virginia Indians, descendants of peoples of the seventeenth-century Algonquian Powhatan chiefdom, in maintaining, creating, and re-creating their identities as Native Americans from the 1850s through the Jim Crow era. Examines how tidewater Native in...
I tiakina i:
| Kaituhi matua: | |
|---|---|
| Hōputu: | Tāhiko īPukapuka |
| Reo: | Ingarihi |
| I whakaputaina: |
Norman :
University of Oklahoma Press,
[2022]
|
| Rangatū: | Book collections on Project MUSE.
|
| Ngā marau: | |
| Urunga tuihono: | Full text available: |
| Ngā Tūtohu: |
Kāore He Tūtohu, Me noho koe te mea tuatahi ki te tūtohu i tēnei pūkete!
|
Rārangi ihirangi:
- "A Home in a Strange Land"
- Virginia's 1924 "Racial Integrity" Law
- Constructing Native Identities, 1865 to 1931
- White Ethnographers and Salvage Ethnography
- The Aftermath of the "Racial Integrity" Law, 1930s to 1950s.