Item Detail
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31795
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1
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17
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English
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When Wakara Wrote Back : The Creation and Contestation of the “Paper Indian” in Early Mormon Utah
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Essays on American Indian and Mormon History
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Salt Lake City, Utah
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University of Utah Press
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"This chapter examines a moment in early Utah history when Ute Chief Wakara created a physical document that illustrates Wakara’s literacy and the agency he exerted by putting pen to paper." [Author]
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A History of Indian Education by the Mormons, 1830-1900
An Intimate Chronicle : The Journals of William Clayton
Brigham Young : American Moses
Brigham Young and Mormon Indian Policies : The Formative Period, 1836-1851
History of Indian Depredations in Utah
Indian Relations on the Mormon Frontier
On Zion's Mount : Mormons, Indians, and the American Landscape
Open Hand and Mailed Fist : Mormon-Indian Relations in Utah, 1847-52
Playing Jane : Re-presenting Black Mormon Memory through Reenacting the Black Mormon Past
Race and the Making of the Mormon People
Religion of a Different Color : Race and the Mormon Struggle for Whiteness
The Mormons : A Discourse Delivered Before the Historical Society of Pennsylvania
The Mormons, or Latter-day Saints, in the Valley of the Great Salt Lake
The Walker War : Defense and Conciliation as Strategy
Thomas Bullock as an Early Mormon Historian
Wakara Meets the Mormons, 1848-52 : A Case Study in Native American Accommodation
Wilford Woodruff's Journals