Southern Ute Women: Autonomy and Assimilation on the Reservation, 1887-1934

By Katherine Osburn.

Southern Ute Women: Autonomy and Assimilation on the Reservation, 1887-1934

Description

After the passage of the Dawes Severalty Act in 1887, the Southern Ute Agency was the scene of an intense federal effort to assimilate the Ute Indians. The Southern Utes were to break up their common land holdings and transform themselves into middle-class patriarchal farm and pastoral families. In this assimilationist scheme women were to surrender the greater autonomy they enjoyed in traditional Ute society and to become house-bound homemakers, the "civilizers" of their fathers, husbands, brothers, and sons. This history of Southern Ute women shows that they accommodated Anglo w...

ISBN(s)

0826318630, 9780826318633

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