
Contested Territory
Since, by the late 1800s, the Indian and Oklahoma Territories were the only place where the three ""founding"" cultures of American society co-existed in significant numbers, the area provides an excellent case study in the contrasting racial policies aimed at separate ethnic groups. As Wickett shows, racial separation versus integration sparked a bitter debate that factionalized both blacks and Indians. While white government officials and humanitarian reformers sought- and often forced- the assimilation of Native peoples into Anglo-American society, they strove, at the same time, to secure the strict segregation of African Americans. As African Americans desperately fought a losing battle to maintain their civil rights, Native Americans, for the most part, rejected the benefits white society encouraged them to accept.
Wickett tells his fascinating and complex story with a mix of sources that includes poems, anecdotes, and particularly well-chosen pictures. Through government records, newspapers, diaries, and oral history interviews, he also allows those who experienced the temper of the times first hand to speak for themselves.
- Undertittel
- Whites, Native Americans, and African Americans in Oklahoma, 1865-1907
- Forfatter
- Murray R. Wickett
- ISBN
- 9780807126479
- Språk
- Engelsk
- Vekt
- 363 gram
- Utgivelsesdato
- 30.10.2000
- Antall sider
- 260
