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Native American
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315 papers
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Native American history is a broad and deeply significant field examined across disciplines including American history, ethnic studies, anthropology, literature, and political science. Students engage with this topic to understand the complex histories of Indigenous peoples on the American continent, from pre-contact civilizations through colonization, displacement, and contemporary struggles for rights and recognition. The subject raises fundamental questions about land, sovereignty, cultural survival, and the construction of national identity, making it academically rich and often urgent in its implications for understanding American society as a whole.

The papers archived here approach the topic from a wide range of angles. Some take historical perspectives, examining the collision and blending of European and Indigenous cultures following fifteenth-century contact, or analyzing specific colonial settlements like Jamestown in relation to Native peoples. Others focus on legal and civil rights frameworks, including constitutional protections for Native American Indians. Cultural and literary analysis appears as well, with essays reflecting on Native American ethnic literature and representation. Additional papers address social and health disparities such as alcoholism and diabetes, the overrepresentation of minorities in special education, and race, gender, and class issues facing Native Americans in the twenty-first century.

A strong essay on this topic requires a clearly scoped thesis that connects a specific historical moment, policy, or cultural phenomenon to broader patterns affecting Native American communities. Evidence drawn from historical records, legal documents, and cultural texts tends to carry the most weight. A common pitfall is treating Native Americans as a single, uniform group rather than acknowledging the distinct histories, traditions, and experiences of different nations and peoples.

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Paper Undergraduate
Native American Solutions to Global
The world faces a crisis of unprecedented proportions, one which threatens not only our future economic, social, and political well-being, but the very life force of the planet itself.
Paper Undergraduate
Educational Outcomes for Youth in Foster Care: Key Research
The importance of this issue for social workers -- vis-a-vis the educational achievements of at-risk individuals and the overall, ongoing need for an educated, productive society -- is reflected in the fact that an…
Paper Doctorate
Move Frida and the Mexican Culture in Which She Lived
Julie Taymor's "Frida" is (in addition to a biography of the Mexican painter Frida Kahlo) a motion picture offering insight in Mexican culture and of the Central American society in general.
Paper Undergraduate
Inclusive Curriculum for Special Education: Multicultural Approaches
¶ … special education experiences more inclusive means making those experiences more meaningful as well. For a child at the elementary level who has great emotional, intellectual and/or physical challenges it is…
Essay Doctorate
William Apess\' Bible-Based Arguments Against Racism
This paper discusses William Apess's Bible-based arguments against racism, drawing from Apess's essay "An Indian's Looking-Glass for the White Man" and memoir "A Son of the Forest." Apess's argument for racial equality is predicated on the fact that Jesus was not white and that the Bible emphasizes loving one's neighbor.
Paper Undergraduate
Captivity and slavery in American history
Journey towards Freedom of Mind: Understanding the Worldviews of Mary Rowlandson, Captive, and Olaudah Equiano, Slave
Research Paper Undergraduate
HIV / AIDS on Women
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported that more than 58,000 women in the United States had been diagnosed with AIDS by 1994 (Hackl, Somlai, Kelly & Kalichman, 1997).
Paper Doctorate
Themes and Personal Exploration in Sedgwick's Hope Leslie
Sedgwick's novel Hope Leslie was far ahead of its own time in terms of how it explored the Puritans' relationship with the Native Americans during the 17th century. Most novels written at the same time do not give equal…
Paper Masters
Cinderella narrative variations across cultures and time periods
"In the sea of malice envy frequently gets out of her depth; and, while she is expecting to see another drowned, she is either drowned herself, or is dashed against a rock, as happened to some envious girls, about whom…
Paper Undergraduate
Violent Juveniles Removed From Homes
The legal relationship between the Americans and Native Americans has long been one that ensured the European descendants of the earlier settlers had and would retain legal domain over the territory and lands originally…