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Blood Politics : Races, Culture, And Identity In The Cherokee Nation Of Oklahoma, By Circe Sturm

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In Circe Sturm’s novel “Blood Politics: Races, Culture, and Identity in the Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma” the history of the Cherokee people is put under a microscope and their obsession with blood percentages is examined in a new light. This new light allows one to draw their own conclusion about the Cherokee people and begin to understand how they have come so far and changed so much. The Cherokee people are an amazing group that has persisted through centuries of slavery, war, disease and more. Before Spanish explores arrived to colonize, the Cherokee people lived in the woodlands of the southeast United States of America, present day Georgia, North Carolina, Tennessee, and Alabama(14). They lived here peacefully for many generations before they came into contact with the Europeans. Quickly after meeting the Europeans their lifestyle changed dramatically. Disease and pillaging tore through their population and a once great nation of indigenous peoples was crushed under the boot of European imperialism. Alongside this change in culture came a change in religion. The Cherokee people traded their native religion for one similar to a Christian Baptist, more over they adopted slavery of black people, albeit a slightly modified version. When the Cherokee people were forced out of their native land into Indian Territory, by the Dawes Act which helped Oklahoma achieve statehood at the same time as relocating thousands of natives, some took their new religion and slavery with

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