Preview

The Other America

Better Essays
Open Document
Open Document
2276 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
The Other America
History of the counterculture in the US: The Other America

What is the Other America? Is it correct to talk about the “Other America”? Who are the “other Americans”? Indians, “Nigros”, workers, immigrants (emigrants?) can all be accounted for that role.
But why are they called “others”? Others to whom? Isn't it correct to say that the Other America actually is the real America?

History first. When did this phenomenon start?
The date that most recognise as the beginning of the Other America is the December 29th, 1890.
That day at least 150 Lakota had been killed and 50 wounded in the Wounded Knee massacre.
Why?
The “Americans” were willing to conquer all the American land, but first they had to destroy Indian culture even by killing thousands of natives. First the Indians were confined into reservations that didn't allow them to free-roam as they had always been used to. They had to stay into defined borders, they couldn't travel around anymore, they couldn't hunt their food anymore, they could just hand down their traditions to they youngsters and hope for a brighter future.
It didn't happen. The once proud Indians found their nomadic life destroyed, the buffalos gone, themselves confined to reservations dependent on Indian Agents for their existence. In a desperate attempt to return to the days of their glory, many sought salvation in a new mysticism. The preacher of this movement was a man called Wovoka, who considered himself the Messiah and prophesied that the dead would soon join the living in a world in which the Indians could live in the old way surrounded by plentiful game. A tidal wave of new soil would cover the earth, bury the whites, and restore the prairie. To hasten the event, the Indians were to dance the Ghost Dance. During the fall of 1890, the Ghost Dance spread through the Sioux villages of the Dakota reservations, revitalizing the Indians and bringing fear to the whites. A desperate Indian Agent at Pine Ridge wired his superiors in

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    Native Americans were pushed from their lands and forced to change their culture by the…

    • 362 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Apush Chapter 13 Summary

    • 618 Words
    • 3 Pages

    -Battle of Wounded Knee: December 29, 1890; the Seventh Cavalry rounded up and killed 300 unarmed Sioux; this marked the end of the Indian Wars.…

    • 618 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    When in reality it was the Spaniards who were the true savages for treating Native Americans as an evil creature due to their religious views. It was sad to read about how Indians families were torn apart and many choose not to have kids because of this. I was disgusted by how the Spaniards would cut off native women’s breasts and throw their infants to a pack of dogs. The teachings of Popes prepared the ground for the mass Genocide of Native Americans because they taught genocide because anyone who would go against their God would be killed. There are many major statements in this book. One of which is the statement that history books have incorrect information on the conquest of the Americas by the Spaniards. This is important to understand because it shows how young students are being taught wrong information as well as being taught to think that Native Americans are horrible people when the reality was that they were the victims in the situation. Another important statement addressed in the book was how it explained the mistreatment of Native American by the…

    • 588 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    With new changed American perceptions came new changes to laws and government. There were a bunch of new beliefs arising. Now the idea was to get rid of the Indians, make the land uninhabited so the wilderness land could be preserved. Spencer goes on to say that getting rid of that wilderness preservation went hand in hand with getting rid of the Indians. It…

    • 719 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    As the author mentioned, American national identity is as unique as being American itself. At the formation of our nation with a document forged by Thomas Jefferson The Declaration of Independence, at the time it written eloquently demanded the rights of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. The problem with this document was that it was only exclusive to some, mainly white Anglo - Saxon males. Groups such as African Americans, women, and Native Americans were not inclusive of these rights in a new American society. In fact it has been documented that the words originally drafted in the early stages of the declaration by Jefferson stated “the rights of life, liberty, and property” a line borrowed form 17th century philosopher John Locke’s “Two Treaties of Government” but was later changed to “pursuit of happiness” for a broader understanding. African Americans and women had no legal standing to be inclusive as it pertain to this document due to slavery and women's no existed rights under the husband. Both of these groups were regarded as property in the beginnings of our nation.…

    • 2480 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Indians were surrounded by the heavily armed United States troops on December 29th. “Surrounded by heavily armed troops, It’s unlikely that Big Foot’s Band would have started the Fight” (Wounded Knee, History.com). This shows that the United States had some preparedness for something that sounded like a battle or massacre to occur even before it actually happened because of all of the heavy weaponry they were carrying. “ Some historians believed that the 7th cavalry were deliberately taking revenge for the regiment’s defeat at Little Bighorn in 1876”(“Wounded Knee”, History.com Staff) . The United States had an advantage already and really from the beginning which is one of the reasons they started this. When a shot was fired, it really didn’t matter which side had fired it because the United States was ready for it which is why around 300 Indians including children were shot and killed. (Massacre At Wounded Knee, 1890, Eyewitness…

    • 927 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Contributing factors for the demise of the Native American relationship between the "White Man" are shown through blood shed and tears. With new white settlers coming to the west, Native American lands shrunk significantly. In 1862 the lands of the Santee Sioux, near the Minnesota River had been whittled down so drastically, the Sioux decided to retaliate. The Sioux frustrations over lands lead to the one of the first of many large Native American wars with the White man. The Sioux War ended in 1868 with the signing of the Treaty of Fort Laramie, Which established two large Native American reservations. The Reservations where located in Oklahoma and Dakota Badlands. Only six years later Colonel George Armstrong Custer led an expedition into the Scared Black Hills of the Sioux. Like many U.S. government treaty’s to Native American, Custer violated of the treaty of 1868 and started the uproar and killings for the next ten years.…

    • 799 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Yesterday, December 29, the continuous American tension with Indians finally shatters into a massacre between the Sioux Indians and the U.S Army’s 7th regiment.…

    • 463 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Prior to the Wounded Knee Massacre, the United States government gave the Native Americans many unfulfilled promises. They seized the lands they previously promised to allow the Native Americans to keep. They promised that they would be respected and indiscriminate in American society and safeguard the peace. They also were guaranteed that their culture and sense of pride would not be lost. None of these promises were kept. Over time, the government took their land and massacred their people. One example would be the Wounded Knee Massacre where many Indians were killed in an event characterized by genocide. It never got better for the Native Americans, and even to this day their sufferings continue.…

    • 622 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Ghost Dance History

    • 529 Words
    • 3 Pages

    After finding themselves devastated from being confined to reservations and dwindling numbers of buffalo, the Sioux tribe was left with little hope of as better future. They were desperate for any means to return them to their once great life of living free on their lands, undisturbed by the white race. By the 1890s, many took comfort in the preachings of a Paiute shaman called Wovoka. Claiming himself as a Messiah, he encouraged performing what was known as the Ghost Dance. The Ghost Dance was meant to be a way of combating the white race by ensuring that they would perish from natural disasters. It also would protect the Indians that performed it, ensuring their survival by gaining the strength of their ancestors and the return of the wild game that once filled their land (Nash, 504). Many Indians of the Sioux latched onto these preachings and took part in Ghost Dances. They believed it truly would bring them a better future.…

    • 529 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    There Are Now Two Americas

    • 2936 Words
    • 11 Pages

    politics. There are definitely two Americas. I live in one, on one block in Baltimore that is part of…

    • 2936 Words
    • 11 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Moravian Mission

    • 2043 Words
    • 9 Pages

    The soldiers used any ghastly means they could to destroy. It was war at its cruelest. Some victims even burned to death, lying wounded in the searing heat of the flaming wood and bark longhouses. Some were trampled by horses and charging horses as soldiers chased them down. Fields of ripening crops were set afire and exploded into tall orange walls of fire in the dryness of August day. Soldiers cut belts of bark all around the trunks of apple and peach trees that had been cultivated for generations so they would die. Any cattle or animals were slaughtered in the riot and glut of the massacre. The sky was black with huge, billowing plumes of smoke and the air was heavy with the acrid smell of burning longhouses and flesh. When they were finished not even a hand-woven basket had escaped conversion to smoldering black ashes. Everything was "laid to waste" as General Washington had commanded and the soldier's felt full with the success of their surprise attack. They whooped and hollered and danced around congratulating each other among the slaughtered bodies of Indians. Generations of wisdom and heritage died that day on Seneca Lake.…

    • 2043 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Stranger in America

    • 1258 Words
    • 6 Pages

    What does it mean to be an “American”? To each individual person it means something very different. For the writer Bharati Mukherjee, who wrote the essay, “American Dreamer”, to be a true American someone has to want to be an American, not just prove that they merited citizenship. Her essay “American Dreamer” goes in depth into this idea and her opinion that as an American one should believe in bringing together the cultures in America. “We must think of American culture and nationhood as a constantly reforming, transmogrifying “we” (Mukherjee 438). For the author James Baldwin, who wrote the essay “Stranger in the Village”, an American is a person who is integrated with other cultures, and will never be a strictly “white” culture. “This world is white no longer, and it will never be white again.” (Baldwin 449) There are vast differences in the cultures of the world and to be integrated into a new culture can often be troublesome. These two essays have agreeing opinions on both of the authors’ predictions for the future of America and the refusal of the American culture to accept cultures other than their own, however they contrast with the authors’ own personal experiences in a culture other than their own.…

    • 1258 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    The America he’s describing is seen as a utopia. America isn’t a country of agreement between people, it’s a country of different…

    • 975 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Wounded Knee

    • 733 Words
    • 3 Pages

    Wounded Knee was a terrible event in US history. It showed how the US government didn't understand the Native Americans and treated them badly and unfairly.<br><br>Big Foot was the chief of a subtribe of the Lakota called Miniconjou. He was very old and had pneumonia. He was taking his tribe to the Pine Ridge Reservation in south-western South Dakota. <br><br>Most of the women and children in Big Foot's tribe were family members of the warriors who had died in the Plains wars. The Indians had agreed to live on small reservations after the US government took away their land. At the Wounded Knee camp, there were 120 men and 230 women and children. At the camp, they were guarded by the US Seventh Cavalry lead by Major Samuel Whitside. During the year 1890 a new dance called the Ghost Dance started among the Sioux and other tribes. The Sioux's Christ figure, Wovoka, was said to have flown over Sitting Bull and Short Bull and taught them the dance and the songs. The Ghost Dance legend was that the next spring, when the grass was high, the Earth would be covered with a new layer of soil, covering all white men. Wild buffalo and horses would return and there would be swift running water, sweet grass, and new trees. All Indians who danced the Ghost dance would be floating in the air when the new soil was being laid down and would be saved. The Ghost Dance was made illegal after the Wounded Knee massacre though. On December 28, 1890 the Seventh Cavalry saw Big Foot moving his tribe and Big Foot immediately put up a white flag. Major Samuel Whitside captured the Indians and took them to an army camp near the Pine Ridge reservation at Wounded Knee. Whitside took Bigfoot on his wagon because it was more comfortable and warmer, and Big Foot was sick. Whitside had orders to take the Indians to a military prison in Omaha the next day, but it never happened. That night Colonel James W. Forsyth took over. The Cavalry provided the Indians with tents that night because it was cold…

    • 733 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays