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Custer Died for Your Sins: An Indian Manifesto is a 1969 non-fiction book by the lawyer, professor and writer Vine Deloria, Jr. The book was noteworthy for its relevance to the Alcatraz-Red Power Movement and other activist organizations, such as the American Indian Movement, which was beginning to expand.
Vine Victor Deloria Jr. (March 26, 1933 – November 13, 2005, Standing Rock Sioux) was an author, theologian, historian, and activist for Native American rights.He was widely known for his book Custer Died for Your Sins: An Indian Manifesto (1969), which helped attract national attention to Native American issues in the same year as the Alcatraz-Red Power Movement.
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His father was a scholar, writer, and activist for Native American rights who earned national recognition for his 1969 book, Custer Died for Your Sins: An Indian Manifesto. [5] Philip J. Deloria's paternal great aunt Ella Deloria worked as an ethnologist, and Ella's sister Mary Sully was an artist. [6]
Custer Died for Your Sins, a 1969 book by Vine Deloria, Jr., with its title derived from a bumper sticker slogan, covers Custer and American relations with Indians in general. American author Michael Blake wrote his historical novel Marching To Valhalla as a first-person diary of Custer. [4]
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OPINION: So often, when weaponizing MLK's words against Black people, white people like to lecture us about "what he died for" as if his death was voluntary. It was not. The post Dear white people ...
Vine Deloria Jr (Standing Rock), Custer Died For Your Sins (1969) Duane Niatum , Ascending Red Cedar Moon (1974) Leslie Marmon Silko (Laguna descent), Ceremony (1977) Gerald Vizenor , Darkness in Saint Louis Bearheart (1978) James Welch (Blackfeet and A'aninin), Winter in the Blood (1974) Joy Harjo (Muscogee Nation), The Last Song (1975)