Abstrakt: |
The article discusses the daily lives of Native Americans in the 1930s. The author focuses on Indian tribes that inhabit the southwestern United States, including the Navajo, Apache, Ute, and Piute. The village of San Ildefonso, which sits on a three mile square reservation near the Rio Grande river, is profiled. The village houses about one hundred Indians, who strive to regain land that was lost or stolen from them by the United States government. The social life and customs of Indians living in the village are detailed. |