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Buffalo Nation: American Indian Efforts to Restore the Bison (Bison Original)
 
 
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Buffalo Nation: American Indian Efforts to Restore the Bison (Bison Original) [Paperback]

Ken Zontek (Author)
3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Book Description

Bison Original March 1, 2007
The gruesome story of the devastation of buffalo herds in the late nineteenth century has become uncomfortably familiar. A less familiar story, but a hopeful one for the future, is Ken Zontek’s account of Native peoples’ efforts to repopulate the Plains with a healthy, viable bison population. Interspersing scientific hypothesis with Native oral traditions and interviews, Buffalo Nation provides a brief history of bison and human interaction from the Paleolithic era to present preservation efforts.
 
Zontek’s history of bison restoration efforts is also a history of North American Native peoples’ pursuit of political and cultural autonomy, revealing how Native peoples’ ability to help the bison has fluctuated with their overall struggle. Beginning in the 1870s, Native North Americans established captive bison breeding programs despite the Wounded Knee Massacre and a massive onslaught on Native cultural and religious practices. These preservation efforts were so successful that a significant percentage of bison today carry the bloodlines of these original Native-sponsored herds. At the end of the twentieth century, more than fifty tribes banded together to form the Intertribal Bison Cooperative. This group has made significant progress in restoring bison herds in the United States, while Canadian First Nations work with national parks and other government entities to select and manage free-ranging herds.
 
Buffalo Nation offers insights into the ways that the Native North American effort to restore the buffalo nation inspires discourse in cultural perseverance, environmentalism, politics, regionalism, spirituality, and the very essence of human-animal interaction.
(20071101)

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Editorial Reviews

Review

“This is a complete book on Natives and their relationship to bison. It is an important historical record, yet is as up-to-date as today’s headlines in the continuing search for compromise and success in providing wildlife biodiversity once again in the Great Plains.”—Francis Moul, Lincoln Journal Star
(Lincoln Journal Star )

“Highly recommended. A very good book.”—Choice

(W.J. Gribb CHOICE )

“[Buffalo Nation] is a book that, for the first time, begins to give a coherent voice to the role of American Indians in the preservation and return of the bison from near-extinction. . . . In his notes and list of references, the author touches on studies and publications that give the reader a good foundation for further research. I would recommend Buffalo Nation as a good introduction to the relationship between bison and North American native people. The author does a thorough job in his presentation of the efforts to restore the bison.”—Paige Baker, South Dakota History
(South Dakota History )

About the Author

Ken Zontek, PhD, teaches history at Yakima Valley Community College and serves as an adjunct professor at Heritage University on the Yakama Reservation.  He is an active scholar in central Washington, and contributed to the Encyclopedia of the Great Plains (Nebraska 2004).

Product Details

  • Paperback: 256 pages
  • Publisher: Bison Books (March 1, 2007)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0803299222
  • ISBN-13: 978-0803299221
  • Product Dimensions: 9 x 6.4 x 0.6 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.6 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #407,523 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Politically correct bison history, July 17, 2010
By 
This review is from: Buffalo Nation: American Indian Efforts to Restore the Bison (Bison Original) (Paperback)

This book provides a brief, readable overview of Native Americans' efforts to restore bison to the western range. This includes historical efforts to save small herds from the slaughter of the 1880s, early tribal efforts, and the large-scale restoration supported by the Intertribal Bison Cooperative today.

The core of the narrative is infused with Zontek's ideological perspective. For example, he buys uncritically the "ecological Indian" idea though he is aware of debates over Pleistocene extinctions and knowledgeable about opposition to bison herds from Indian livestock producers.

Zontek also tries to build parallels between US Indian policies such as the Dawes Act or termination and US bison policies. Many of those are a stretch. In addition, as he admits, those parallels don't work for Canadian policy. That suggests that the parallels aren't really causal or helpful, and he should have dropped them.

Still, that perspective means that he wants to call bison slaughter a form of racism. He means this not in the sense of General Philip Sheridan, who saw bison slaughter as a tool of war (genocide) against Plains Indians by removing their food supply. No, Zontek means to classify bison slaughter as genocide, really, as equivalent to killing so many millions of people. One can be opposed to bisoncide without needing to identify it with genocide.

It's also worth noting that, for Zontek, the phrase "Buffalo Nation" in the title has at least three referents - - bison, Native American nations dependent on the bison, and the symbiotic relation of bison and Natives. This regularly creates some ambiguity throughout the text. Usually, it's easy to figure out what Zontek means, but some of that ambiguity is unnecessary.

Finally, the book has too many minor factual errors - for example, he puts Chief Mountain in Canada, not on the Glacier NP-Blackfoot IR border. He also makes minor errors of official titles and agency affiliations for some government employees.

And yet, at the heart of it all, Zontek has a readable introduction to the topic. He has visited a lot of sites and talked to a lot of people, and those interviews provide information not available elsewhere.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Native Americans, United States, Cheyenne River, South Dakota, First Nations, Walking Coyote, North America, Fort Belknap, Yellowstone National Park, Flathead Valley, National Park Service, Wood Bison, Little Thunder, Wood Buffalo National Park, Buffalo Jones, Great Plains, Gros Ventres, Intertribal Bison Cooperative, Jim Garrett, Michel Pablo, Northwest Territories, American Bison Society, Charles Allard, Courtesy Montana Historical Society, Nez Perce
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