Native American Culture Essay

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    America truly is the salad bowl of cultures from around the whole world. However, there is often times a dominating cultural structure that makes it difficult to attain peace among the diverse cultural groups of America. Sherman Alexie’s short story, Because my Father Always Said He Was the Only Indian Who Saw Jimi Hendrix Play ‘The Star-Spangled Banner’ at Woodstock, displays the difficulty of the Native American people having to cope with the dominating culture that they are inevitably being shoved

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    Throughout history, Native Americans have remained one of the most marginalized minorities in America. Ever since the first Europeans arrived, the native people have faced a profuse number of stereotypes, misconceptions, and caricatures. The conquest of the Europeans came with a hierarchy of power and an intentional act to take over land and eliminate communities. During this time Native Americans were forced to assimilate to new ideas, cultures, and religion. An example of this is the boarding schools

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    Hollywood and the film industry represent Native Americans in classic movies as savages. In the documentary, "Reel Injun", Neil Diamond goes into how Native Americans are only portrayed as barbarians. This is vastly different from how Native Americans are portrayed in the documentary, "The Shackles of Tradition". This essay will compare and contrast Reel Injun, The Shackles of Tradition, and other movies that portray Native Americans. The basic characteristics that are portrayed, strengths and weaknesses

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    assimilation has been fought for and against. Many people, such as the Native Americans, were forcibly stripped of their culture and Americanized. Others, such as the German Americans, willingly assimilated in political views but tried to hold onto their culture. All of these situations lead to hatred from white Americans at some point throughout our history. The Native Americans during the westward expansion, German Americans during WWI, and Japanese immigrants during WWII. Even though some of these

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    feeling and opinions on how American had looked at native American and that he really understood what Native American went through on the reservations. In the first poem, Alexie likes to talk about how a Native American is on a train traveling and the women next to him were trying to tell him all the history about the house on the hill. However, the native American claimed he didn’t “give a shit” about any of the history because he had already known because it was his culture. I analyzed this by taking

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    cohesive country. Sherman Alexie’s story Reservation Blues explores the lives of some Native Americans who wrestled with cultural, racial, and religious barriers to embrace the rest of the country. The story reflects the process of racial and cultural integration the country has been going through since its inception, revealing an underlying struggle by the minority groups in the country to become part of the Americans culture that is often dominated by the majority white population. The process of assimilation

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    Health care providers interact with patients from many different cultures. It is important to be knowledgeable and respectable of other cultures. Health care providers will be able to improve the experience of the patient if they are more culturally. More than 500 nations of Native Americans exist in the United States with a population of over four million people. Each has their own language, culture, healers, and tribal customs and religions informed (B. Stuart, Cherry, & J. Stuart, 2011).

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    of disappearing natives a myth? Use a specific quote from the text to support this. Many mediums, such as photographs and museums, portray Native Americans as a dying race that was more involved in the past than the present. Throughout many forms of media “images of Indians that suggest they are a part of American history that is no longer with us are abundant.” These misleading photos lead to the common belief that Native group are becoming extinct. However, many Native American groups still exist

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    Native American History Essay

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    Popular culture has shaped our understanding and perception of Native American culture. From Disney to literature has given the picture of the “blood thirsty savage” of the beginning colonialism in the new world to the “Noble Savage,” a trait painted by non-native the West (Landsman and Lewis 184) and this has influenced many non native perceptions. What many outsiders do not see is the struggle Native American have on day to day bases. Each generation of Native American is on a struggle to keep

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    initial contact between Native Americans and the Europeans was far more unique than any other racial interaction because the Native Americans were already residing in the United States. As for other ethnic groups, they were foreign to the new soil in Northern America. At first, the Native Americans held hospitality towards the arriving Europeans, whereas, the Europeans did not hold any hospitality towards the arriving immigrants. The Europeans response to the Native Americans hospitality was to slaughter

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