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Category: 7. Literature; creative writing
by Lumbee people
290. Buffalo Child Long
Lance [Sylvester Clark Long]. Long Lance: The Autobiography of a Blackfoot
Chief. New York: Cosmopolitan, 1928.
A. LaVonne Ruoff (American Indian Literatures,
1990) states that this is actually a fictional account of growing
up on the far western Plains, beginning in the 1890's (p. 70).
Simply and engagingly written, it describes Blackfeet battles with enemy
tribes, the brutal indoctrination of male children, war dances, strength
contests, the derivation of Indian names, medical practices, the Sun
Dance, hunting, Chief Carry-the-Kettle, warrior Almighty Voice, and
more. Smith (entry 356) discusses at length this book by a Croatan who
gained acclaim and acceptance by claiming to be a Blackfoot. Microfilmed
by the Library of Congress.
Publication type: Book
Additional subjects: Long, Sylvester C.
This annotation first appeared in The Lumbee Indians:
An Annotated Bibliography (McFarland, 1994) by Glenn Ellen Starr.
Home Page URL: lumbeebibliography.net
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