
For This Land: Writings on Religion in AmericaBrings together over thirty years of Vine Deloria's work, expressing his concern for the religious dimensions and implication of human existence.
God is Red, A Native View of ReligionThis work critiques the Western spiritual world view and its effect on Native Americans and society as a whole.
In the Absence of the Sacred, The Failure of Technology and the Survival of the Indian NationsUrging us to come to a fuller understanding of the perils of technology, Mander explores the sociopolitical ramifications of technological innovation and the spiritual wisdom of Native Peoples, desperately needed by us at this moment in time.
Lies My Teacher Told Me: Everything Your American History Textbook Got WrongIn this revised and updated edition, James Loewen surveys six new high school history textbooks written since the first edition of Lies was published. In his inimitable style, he adds material to each of the chapters noting where new books are more accurate and where they are still fatally flawed. A must-read for teachers.
New York University, Review of Law & Social ChangeThis important issue from the colloquium, “The Native American Struggle: Conquering The Rule of Law” contains speeches by Leonard Peltier, Lorraine Canoe, and Oren Lyons and includes papers by Jack F Trope, Mark Save, Steven Paul McSloy, and Jo Corrillo. Steven T. Newcomb’s paper, “The Evidence of Christian Nationalism in Federal Indian Law: The Doctrine of Discovery, Johnson v. McIntosh, and Plenary Power” provides an important treatise of the basis upon which all land claims rest in the United States.
Popay: Architect of the First American Revolution: August 10, 1680To the Spaniards he was known as El Popay, the man from San Juan Pueblo who led the successful Pueblo Revolt of 1680 in what is now New Mexico. For Pueblo Indians, Popay is celebrated as the revolutionary figure without whom they would not have survived.
Red Earth, White Lies: Native Americans and the Myth of Scientific FactExamines modern science as it relates to Native American oral history. Deloria turns his audacious intellect and fiery indignation to an examination of modern science as it relates to Native American oral history and exposes the myth of scientific fact, defending Indian mythology as the more truthful account of the history of the earth.