Date

5-1-2025

Department

College of Arts and Sciences

Degree

Doctor of Philosophy in History (PhD)

Chair

Carey Roberts

Keywords

Lakota, Intellectuals, Early 20th century

Disciplines

History

Abstract

The Lakota people, part of the larger Sioux Nation, are indigenous to the Great Plains of North America. Their history is marked by centuries of cultural heritage, resilience, and profound challenges brought about by European contact and American expansion. The process of Americanization, which began with European colonization and continued through various stages of United States history, profoundly impacted the Lakota way of life. This dissertation explores and explains the complex journey of Lakota adaptation to Americanization, examining key historical intellectual figures, events, cultural transformations, social dynamics, and the ongoing efforts to preserve Lakota identity and traditions. How did these key figures in the late nineteenth and twentieth centuries accomplish this task despite Americanization efforts by the United States government? How did some of the Lakota intellectuals of this period embrace both Lakota traditions with assimilation efforts to circumvent and keep their culture from disappearing? Did some of these Lakota intellectuals find common ground with others outside their culture, and what were they thinking in this era? The following research reveals that the Lakota were instrumental in stoking the fires of revitalization for their tribe as well as other Indigenous tribes through a variety of cultural, social, political, artistic, linguistic, and mental avenues despite colonial tactics and efforts to minimize their intellectual contributions in the fields.

Included in

History Commons

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