Community in Native America: Continuity and Change among the Sioux

Community in Native America: Continuity and Change among the Sioux. The idea of « community », because it embodies the moral sense of a group integrated by common interest, is an important concept for understanding the social realities of American Indian life. In historical times, variations in comm...

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Main Author: Raymond J. DeMallie
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Société des américanistes 2009-07-01
Series:Journal de la Société des Américanistes
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/jsa/10792
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author Raymond J. DeMallie
author_facet Raymond J. DeMallie
author_sort Raymond J. DeMallie
collection DOAJ
description Community in Native America: Continuity and Change among the Sioux. The idea of « community », because it embodies the moral sense of a group integrated by common interest, is an important concept for understanding the social realities of American Indian life. In historical times, variations in community size and composition throughout the year brought about realignments of people according to seasonal activities. Since the creation of reservations, most American Indian communities have become sedentary, year-round settlements. This paper examines the Sioux Indians of the Great Plains ethnohistorically to track changes over time in the composition and meaning of community. In recent times, new definitions of community based on ideologies of blood and race are competing with older definitions based on kinship and face-to-face social interaction, common language, and common culture.
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publisher Société des américanistes
record_format Article
series Journal de la Société des Américanistes
spelling doaj-art-4b0efa81e3a64714ac3f5ca1d3abca032025-02-05T15:54:51ZengSociété des américanistesJournal de la Société des Américanistes0037-91741957-78422009-07-0195118520510.4000/jsa.10792Community in Native America: Continuity and Change among the SiouxRaymond J. DeMallieCommunity in Native America: Continuity and Change among the Sioux. The idea of « community », because it embodies the moral sense of a group integrated by common interest, is an important concept for understanding the social realities of American Indian life. In historical times, variations in community size and composition throughout the year brought about realignments of people according to seasonal activities. Since the creation of reservations, most American Indian communities have become sedentary, year-round settlements. This paper examines the Sioux Indians of the Great Plains ethnohistorically to track changes over time in the composition and meaning of community. In recent times, new definitions of community based on ideologies of blood and race are competing with older definitions based on kinship and face-to-face social interaction, common language, and common culture.https://journals.openedition.org/jsa/10792kinshipracecommunity
spellingShingle Raymond J. DeMallie
Community in Native America: Continuity and Change among the Sioux
Journal de la Société des Américanistes
kinship
race
community
title Community in Native America: Continuity and Change among the Sioux
title_full Community in Native America: Continuity and Change among the Sioux
title_fullStr Community in Native America: Continuity and Change among the Sioux
title_full_unstemmed Community in Native America: Continuity and Change among the Sioux
title_short Community in Native America: Continuity and Change among the Sioux
title_sort community in native america continuity and change among the sioux
topic kinship
race
community
url https://journals.openedition.org/jsa/10792
work_keys_str_mv AT raymondjdemallie communityinnativeamericacontinuityandchangeamongthesioux