Now showing items 1-5 of 5

    • Acculturation of the Choctaw and Comanche Indians a Quantitative Study of the Family, 1900 

      Weisend, Stephen Lance (Oklahoma State University, 1982-07-01)
      The history of the United States, indeed all of the Americas, owes much of its uniqueness to the relationships that emerged where diverse races and cultures met and mixed. Particularly, as a consequence of miscegenation, ...
    • David Folsom and the Emergence of Choctaw Nationalism 

      Thorne, Barry Eugene (Oklahoma State University, 1988-05-01)
      Few historians have used nationalism as a concept relevant to Native Americans. Because of this oversight there is a need for re-evaluation. During the early nineteenth century the Choctaw Indians of present day Mississippi ...
    • Lambaesis to the Reign of Hadrian 

      Everman, Diane Marie Hopper (Oklahoma State University, 1980-07-25)
    • Nativistic Movements and Traditionalism in Cherokee History 

      May, Katja Helma (Oklahoma State University, 1986-12-01)
      In the recent tradition of "New Indian History" which developed in the 1970s and 1980s, this study centers on the Indians as actors and "makers" of history and seeks to reinterpretate "old" histories. Heretofore Cherokee ...
    • New Deal Work Relief for Women: the Case of Oklahoma 

      Davis, Tanya Adele (Oklahoma State University, 1986-07-01)
      This study examines the Depression Era work relief programs for women during the New Deal of President Franklin Roosevelt; how they began, what they offered, and what women gained from them, especially from the sewing room ...