cart Cart 0 items
Login | Register | Help
Drummers & Dreamers by  Click Relander (Now Tow Look) - Used Book - Paperback - 1986 - from North American Rarities and Biblio.com
(+) Detailed zoom
(+) Regular zoom

Drummers & Dreamers

by Look), Click Relander (Now Tow


Paypal American Express Discover Visa Mastercard
Price: $27.50

  • Bookseller: North American Rarities US (US)
  • Bookseller Inventory #: 20273
  • Format/binding: Softcover
  • Book condition: Very Good+ with no dust jacket
  • Binding: Paperback
  • ISBN 10: 0914019090
  • ISBN 13: 9780914019091
  • Publisher: Northwest Interpretive Assn
  • Date published: 1986
  • Size: 5.75 x 8.75 x 1 inches
  • Weight: 1 pounds
  • Keywords: Sociology, Social Sciences, Nonfiction, Books, Nonfiction: Social Sciences: Sociology: General, Archive, Custom Stores, Specialty Stores, Paperback
  • Subjects: ART / American / Native American;

Book Description

Northwest Interpretive Assn. Very Good+ with no dust jacket. 1986. Softcover. Crisp and clean. Uncreased spine. Solid, squared binding. 1 x 8.75 x 5.75 Inches 343 pages Based on the author's first-hand experience and research with followers of the Wanapum Indian prophet Smohalla. The Wanapum, or River People, were a small Columbia River tribe, their remnants now absorbed into the Yakama, but Smohalla's movement resonated throughout the Northwest Plateau tribes. His message was one of resolute refusal to compromise Native spiritual values; he is most widely remembered today for his words, "You ask me to plow the earth? Shall I take a knife and cut my mother's breast?" which was in fact the practical creed of his followers. He preached nonviolent passive resistance to the white invaders and to all their efforts to change the Indian way of life, strengthening Native resistance in the Northwest to taking up farming, and Smohalla's movement had a strong influence on Chief Joseph and his band of Nez Perce. The religious tradition that Smohalla founded is still practiced in much of the Northwest, such as on the Warm Springs reservation in Oregon. This book is a perceptive, touchingly empathetic look at the Smohalla movement, written by a journalist who knew the Indian people about whom he was writing personally and had deep affection and caring for them. .

Bookseller Terms of Sale

30 Day Refund Policy. If you are unhappy with the book, return for refund within 30 days of receipt. Refund Policy is stated at: http://northamericanrarities.net/REFUNDPOLICY.html




My shopping cart


...your cart is currently empty



Sign up to receive offers and updates: