Native Americans In The Film Dances With Wolves

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The population of America was rapidly increasing. So the United States started moving west for land and gold. Americans thought they had the right to invade the Indian Territory and that provoked the Indians. In the movie Dances with Wolves, John Dunbar ventures out on his own, ending up abandoning his white heritage. Dunbar settled out on his own in the middle of the great plains. Indians soon found him, but unlike any other white American they befriended Dunbar. He soon received a new name from the Indians, Dances with Wolves. He enjoyed that, he realized white American names had no value. Dances with Wolves abandoned his white heritage because Americans valued very little, were thieves, killed for fun,
Americans do not value anything other than themselves. In the movie Dances with Wolves the whites kill the
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The soldiers kept shooting at Two Socks just for the fun of it. Dances with Wolves strongly valued Two Socks. For that reason, the Indians would have never had a thought about killing the wolf. Dances with Wolves cared for so much. He wouldn’t kill anything just for fun. There were better things to do than kill. Americans killed anything, just for fun.
Indians only killed when it was a life or death situation. They killed buffalo to have food and shelter. Without killing the buffalo, they would have very little to eat. Smiles a lot killed a white American Soldier He had never killed anyone. It took him awhile to get through this tough situation. Dances with Wolves noticed how hard it was for Indians to kill things. Killing things was a way of survival for Native Americans.
Indians valued almost everything. The native Americans valued family, buffalo, and land. They fought for their land. The land had been their home for a very extensive amount of time. They used every part of the buffalo carefully. Dances with Wolves described Indians valuing family as harmony. The Native Americans cared for everything around

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