9 Quotes by David Treuer

  • Author David Treuer
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    To understand American Indians is to understand America. This is the story of the paradoxically least and most American place in the twenty-first century. Welcome to the Rez.

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  • Author David Treuer
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    That Native American cultures are imperiled is important and not just to Indians. It is important to everyone, or should be. When we lose cultures, we lose American plurality – the productive and lovely discomfort that true difference brings.

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  • Author David Treuer
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    This book is meant to tell the story of Indian lives, and Indian histories, in such a way as to render those histories and those lives as something much more, much greater and grander, than a catalog of pain.

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  • Author David Treuer
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    As brutal and bitter as the winters are in the northern reaches of the Ojibwe homelands, there is a kind of peace that falls over the land in February and March. Or if not a peace exactly, a kind of watchful waiting: April and May will erupt with their usual vernal violence soon enough.

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  • Author David Treuer
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    I was looking for a book. A very particular book in a vast and wonderful library. I found what I was looking for. It hadn’t been opened for quite a long time judging by the dust that coated the upper edge and by the way the paper had yellowed on all sides creeping toward the gutter. When I opened it, some loose pages different from those in the book fell onto the floor. I picked them up and noticed that they were covered with a text in a language I did not understand.

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  • Author David Treuer
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    In a series of rulings known as the Marshall Trilogy, the court affirmed the rights of the Cherokee and ruled the removal of Indians unlawful. Andrew Jackson did it anyway.

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  • Author David Treuer
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    American did not conquer the West through superior technology, nor did it demonstrate the advantages of democracy. American “won” the West by blood, brutality and terror.

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  • Author David Treuer
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    To each head of a family, one-quarter of a section; To each single person over eighteen years of age, one-eighth of a section; To each orphan child under eighteen years of age, one-eighth.

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  • Author David Treuer
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    Whether this strategy was better for Indian communities than fixing the more traditional reservation system is open to debate.

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