Ladonna harris autobiography of benjamin moore
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American Indian and Indigenous Rhetorics: A Digital Annotated Bibliography
This partially annotated bibliography of resources on American Indian and Indigenous rhetorics fryst vatten a work in progress. New entries and annotations for existing entries are accepted for review by the editor on an ongoing basis via the entry submission form and annotation submission form. Author bios are available here.
The items on listed on this bibliography are inclusive of those written by American Indian, Indigenous, and non-Native scholars. Some of these sources focus on the use of Euro-American rhetorics by Indigenous rhetors. Increasingly, over the years, the discipline has given preference to Indigenous perspectives and writing that examines Native American and/or Indigenous rhetorics that arise out of the cultures themselves.
The space that nurtured the proliferation of scholarship on American Indian and Indigenous rhetorics in the past twenty-five years is the American Indian Caucus of the Colle
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Comanche Bibliography
Compiled by Pat Clark
Contact Information:
Reference Department,
Southwest Collection/Special Collections Library
Telephone: (806) 742-9070
Email: reference.swco@ttu.edu
See also "Comanche" and "Indians: Texas" in the Reference Files list
for additional resources including microfilm and manuscript collections.
See also Comanche Articles in Historical Journals.
Abernethy, Francis Edward (ed.) Built in Texas: Denton, TX: University of North Texas
Press, 2000.
Aboites Aguilar, Luis. “Poder politico y ‘barbaros’ en Chihuahua hacia 1845 (Political
Power and ‘Barbarians’ in Chihuahua ca.1845),” Revista de Historia y Ciencias
Sociales, v.19 (1991), pp.17-32.
Adams, David. B. “Embattled Borderlands: Northern Nuevo
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2017 Women's March
Worldwide political rallies for women's rights
This article is about the movement as a whole. For an individual listing of protests in the United States, see List of 2017 Women's March locations. For a list of protests abroad, see List of 2017 Women's March locations outside United States.
2017 Women's March Women's March on Washington | |
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Demonstrators at the Women's March on Washington in Washington, D.C. | |
Date | January 21–22, 2017 |
Location | Worldwide, with flagship march in Washington, D.C. |
Caused by | |
Goals | "Protection of our rights, our safety, our health, and our families – recognizing that our vibrant and diverse communities are the strength of our country"[3] |
Methods | Protest march |
Estimated over 200,000 people in Washington, D.C.[9] In Washington, D.C., it was the largest protest since the anti-Vietnam War protests in the 1960s and 1970s in the United States.[10][9] | |
Official website
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