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Playing Indian by Philip Deloria

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[[File:Playing_Indian.jpg|thumbnail|left|300px|<i>Playing Indian</i> by Philip Deloria]]
Philip Deloris's <i>Playing Indian</i> seeks to explain why white Americans have consistently mimicked or played Indian for the past two hundred fifty years. Deloria sought to untangle the various reasons for this “persistent tradition in American culture.” (Deloria, 7.) Americans, according to Deloria, have usually played Indian to order define “themselves as a nation.” (Deloria, 5.) As an amalgamation of various European and African immigrants and Native Americans, the United States had an understandably unclear and muddled national identity. White Americans, Deloria suggests, sought to create something uniquely American. One of the key ways they accomplished this was by appropriating Indian dress and traditions to fashion and inspire a separate and distinct American character. While the specific rationale behind playing Indian changed from generation to generation, Americans adopted various aspects of Indian culture to aid them in this quest. While White Americans saw the utility in adopting some aspects of Indian culture, they struggled with whether they should only adopt the mythical and stereotypical perceptions of Indian society or if they should try accurately portray Native Americans.
{{#dpl:category=Book Review|ordermethod=firstedit|order=descending|count=7}}
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[[Category:Book Review]] [[Category:Historiography]] [[Category:United States History]] [[Category:Native American History]]

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