Review
"Moses has admirably assembled the sparse facts about Mooney''s life to produce a coherent, interesting biography, from which it is possible to ascertain those areas where Mooney was a captive of the biases of his era as well as those in which his outlook was clearly ahead of his time."—American Historical Review
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American Historical Review )
"The author brings to life Mooney''s precedent-setting work on the Ghost Dance and his research on the peyote ritual and also documents an ignored period in the history of anthropological research, when a small group of ethnologists recorded vanishing Indian cultures. This book, written with grace and wit, not only restores to Mooney the recognition he deserves but focuses on interesting questions involving the definition of professionalism and the beginnings of anthropology in the United States."—Library Journal
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Library Journal )
“James Mooney, most and deservedly remembered for his classic book on the Ghost Dance, also played a prominent role in protecting the rights of early Native American Church members, which cost him heavily in his profession. . . . Moses points out flaws in Mooney’s work and even-handedly evaluates his standing in the field but shows his work to be invaluable and his character highly creditable.”—Darrell Rice, The Watonga Republican
(Darrell Rice
The Watonga Republican )
About the Author
L. G. Moses is a professor of history at Oklahoma State University. He is the author of Wild West Shows and the Images of American Indians, 1833–1933.