Compare And Contrast Dakota And Ojibwe

Improved Essays
Have you ever thought about the difference between Native American tribes? I am going to discuss the different ways of how the Dakota and Ojibwe Indians lived. Both Dakota and Ojibwe had specific tasks for men’s and women’s some of these tasks were the same and somewhere different. They also shared and defined food and dwelling. In this essay I am going to compare and contrast the Dakota and Ojibwe Indians.The Dakota people are a Native American tribe and First Native band governments in North (Isan-ath; “knife” + “encampment”), who reside in the eastern Dakota central Minnesota and Northern. The Ojibwe, Ojibwa, or Chippewa is an Anishinaabeg group of Indigenous Peoples in North America, known Internally as Turtle Island. In the United States,

Related Documents

  • Improved Essays

    Jamie Isaacson Mr. Zontek History 136 Participation #1 Zinn’s A People’s History of the United States pp. 18 – 22 chronicles the accomplishments of the 75 million strong Native American population spanning Alaska to Brazil, writing about their feats of agriculture (growing corn), engineering (building of dams, irrigation canals, and earthen sculptures), art (jewelry, pottery, and basket weaving), cultural unity (the five tribes of the Iroquois League) and proto-Communism (group owning of land and lodgings). He explains how the Iroquois had a culture promoting equality of the sexes, stating that women ran the government (women appointed and removed tribal leaders), agricultural affairs (women grew the crops), general life (running of day to day affairs), and home life (men joined their wife’s family on marriage) of the tribe. Zinn goes on to detail how children were taught self-reliance, independence, and the importance of equality, all in contrast to what was taught to European children.…

    • 521 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Decent Essays

    Even with the American’s generosity, some tribes continued to cause trouble. This article was written in an American’s perspective. The perspective changes the way the information was presented because all of the Americans actions were seen as civil and fair while the Indians were perceived as the bad…

    • 484 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Decent Essays
  • Improved Essays

    My mother, Walks as She Thinks, was a member of the Oglala Sioux and my father, Lone Man, was Brule Sioux. When I was around 5 years old, I lost my father. Following my father's death, my mother’s uncle, an Oglala Sioux leader named Smoke, raised me. At a young age, I sought to distinguish…

    • 556 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    The Oneida Tribe of Indians of Wisconsin is sovereign government with a long and proud history of self-government. As a part of the original five tribes of the Iroquois Confederacy, the Oneidas were under the jurisdiction of the Great Law of Peace, originally recorded on wampum belts. The Confederacy dates all the way back to the 1500s. The Oneida have persevered in the face of adversity for centuries, and we proudly and passionately continue to protect and preserve our homelands. The Iroquois Confederacy originally held millions of acres of land in what is now the state of New York.…

    • 578 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    The Walleye War Analysis

    • 1204 Words
    • 5 Pages

    The author of the novel The Walleye War: The Struggle for Ojibwe Spearfishing and Treaty Rights is Larry Nesper, an assistant professor from the University of Wisconsin-Madison. He received a Ph.D. from the University of Chicago, as an understudy for Raymond Fogelson, a well-renown American Indian ethnographers. Nesper specializes in the Ojibwe or Chippewa tribes of Northern Wisconsin. As a result, the whole scope of his career is based on the social injustices and struggles that the Ojibwe face, creating this very in depth ethnography. He has collected evidence through field work, participant observation, and interviews over a span of 9 months in Lac du Flambeau, in the heart of the Indian reservation.…

    • 1204 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    When you read this paper, I will talk about the homes they live in, all the food they ate, and a lot of interesting traditions that go on throughout the tribe. Did you know that the Seminole tribes name before that was the Creek tribe? The Seminole tribe lived in Florida with semitropical land for growing crops. Their location was in wetlands with a lot of high water…

    • 925 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Battle over land ownership and the movement of the Native American’s off of their land is part of the American story. As whites moved across America, the Indians were moved to less desirable land. In the two essays that I wrote for this class, Kaw People and Absentee Landowners the interesting connection between both essays is that not only were the Indians moved off the land but settlers and their descendants who wanted the land were priced out of the land in Chase County. Both essays are connected by the simple fact that as land became more valuable only the most powerful or richest could own the land and as a result both the Kaw and people of Chase County have became more dependent on others for support.…

    • 902 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    In John Smith’s informative writing, he narrates his experience in governing Jamestown involving the Native Americans inhabitants. Smith seemed to be fascinated by the way the Native Americans used their everyday resources to maintain a life. The land was not heavily populated, and the people differed in value, especially in language. Smith characterized the Natives as “crafty, timorous quick of apprehension, and very ingenious (America Firsthand, 20) Everything they did was extraordinary to Smith, from the apparel and being covered in the skin of a wild animal, to the homes that are similar to their arbors of small young springs bowed and tied.…

    • 519 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    After six weeks of fighting with many casualties on both sides, the then governor of Minnesota, Henry Sibley led a final onslaught against the Dakota Indians. The Dakota warriors were subdued and captured; about three hundred and three Sioux warriors were tried and sentenced to murder for their involvement in the war. Out of the number, thirty-eight of the warriors were publicly executed on December 29, 1962; the rest was commuted to various life sentences by Abraham Lincoln, who was the president of the nation during that period. Under the command of Colonel Marshall, the bodies of the executed men were placed in four military wagons and taken to the grave which had been prepared for them. If the United States government had kept her part of the treaty, may be the war and its consequences would have been averted.…

    • 508 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Focusing on the Flandreau School in South Dakota and the Lawrence, Kansas Haskell Institute where most of the Ojibwe attended, Child was able to narrow her attention to best dissect and understand the more inner viewpoints and feelings of these Native Americans, specifically student and parent opinions, incentives, and dreams for the…

    • 521 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Superior Essays

    In the articles, the authors highlight important notions such as “sovereignty,” “recognition,” “separateness,” “domestic dependent nations,” “dominate the physical space,” “reform the minds,” and “absorb the economic”. The authors argue that the legal and juridical sovereignty of American Indian provides them with the right to maintain and protect their traditional distinct political and cultural communities. In this pretext, to deal with the growing environmental problems at an alarming level, the tribal governments have inherent and statutory right to set their own environmental standards to meet the emerging environmental challenges. These challenges are serious threats to their socio-cultural, economic, politicolegal, spatial, and temporal…

    • 1111 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Improved Essays

    The relationship between the Cherokee Indians and the Euro-Americans is one that shows the inherent destructiveness of human nature due to the Euro-American’s part in severely debilitating Cherokee culture. Traditional Cherokee culture was primarily different from the Euro-American model of “civilization.” The one way that the culture was similar was in the sedentary nature of Cherokee villages. However, Cherokees differed from Euro-Americans in concepts such as ‘living off the land’ instead of the European idea of ‘farming’, lacking a formal education system, holding a more matrilineal view on society instead of the patriarchal dominated Euro-American view, and holding religious beliefs that differed from Christianity. The Euro-Americans tried to make the Cherokee tribes ‘civilized’; however, only some components of this plan worked.…

    • 1120 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Native American Life prior to the European Arrival Contrary to the Europeans’ thoughts upon their arrival, the native peoples living in the Americas had a thriving society. While conflicts and battles did arise, the Native Americans possessed characteristics ideal for their environment and which helped their society prosper. Using their natural resources, the American Indians established a culture that, in some ways, was far superior to the society of Europe.…

    • 773 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Sherman Alexie’s The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian touches on many issues faced by many modern-day Native Americans throughout their lives, one such issue being poverty, which appears to be present in most Indian families. The sort of poverty that plagues the Spokane reservation is the same kind that has plagued Native Americans for generations. One possible root cause for the situation would be that the current natives on the reservation see that their parents couldn’t do anything to rid themselves of poverty, so they lose hope and, as a result, perpetuate the problem. While the degree of poverty in Junior’s Indian reservation is extreme, the underlying struggles that come with such a financial predicament are to be made note…

    • 1107 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    The use of specific accounts, while individually could be disregarded as anomalies from the general “ecological Indian”, collectively, describe a variety of cultures each with their own pressures and resources. On the plains, communities revolved around the buffalo because of the abundance and relative ease in hunting it, however, fires, drought, preference for cows as opposed to bulls, competition from horses and the consumer market brought by the colonizers placed strain on the communities and their main resource until it was all but depleted (Krech 138-141). In the south, deer was an important resource similar in value to the plains buffalo alongside agriculture and gathering (Krech, 154). However, similar to the narrative in the plains, with the introduction of the consumer market, hunting outside of basic need became common, reducing population sizes faster than they could recover and forcing longer travel for successful hunts which resulted in increased interactions with other tribes leading to a higher reliance on guns for conflicts meaning the tribes had to collect more hides to purchase these weapons (Krech, 158-161). Even in the example of the Piegan tribe, who “paid little attention to the trade until just before the annual trip to the post” (Krech 142), which the author uses to contend that the consumer market colonizers brought to…

    • 1260 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Improved Essays