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Books LLC : Oklahoma Politicians: Alexander Posey, Russell M. Perry, Dewey F. Bartlett, Jr., Michael J. Hunter, A. Dewade Langley
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Author: Books LLC
Title: Oklahoma Politicians: Alexander Posey, Russell M. Perry, Dewey F. Bartlett, Jr., Michael J. Hunter, A. Dewade Langley
Moochable copies: No copies available
Topics:
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Published in: English
Binding: Paperback
Pages: 30
Date: 2010-05-28
ISBN: 1157118852
Publisher: Books LLC
Weight: 0.13 pounds
Size: 5.98 x 9.02 x 0.04 inches
Description: Product Description
Purchase includes free access to book updates online and a free trial membership in the publisher's book club where you can select from more than a million books without charge. Excerpt: Alexander PoseyAlexander Posey (Eufaula, Oklahoma, 1873-27 May, 1908) was an Amerindian Maskoki writer and politician. He was the son of a Scottish father and a Harjo mother. Posey worked at Indian Journal, where he published poems. In 1895, he became a member of the Creek Parliament. He was also the director of a Creek Orphanage and in 1901 he edited the journal Eufaula Gazette, where he satirised about Creek Politics. In 1904, he worked as an interpreter in Dawes Commission and died in an accident where he drowned while crossing the flooded Oktahutche River. There is an anthology about his works published in 1910. Alexander Posey's life was cut short on May 27, 1908. At the age of thirty-five, the Creek writer drowned while crossing the flooded Oktahutche River. It was barely a year since Indian Territory and the tribal governments within it had been dissolved. Born in the Creek Nation, Posey died in the brand-new state of Oklahoma. The end of tribal governments and the advent of statehood were long, bitterly contested transitions. As a poet, politician, and political satirist, Posey had a strong and complicated voice in the deliberations. Often called a "progressivist" because he believed that native peoples needed at least partially to assimilate to white culture in order to survive, Posey criticized "traditionalists," calling them "pull back" Indians who couldn't possibly survive in the imminent future. Nevertheless, he respected older Creeks who remembered another way of life. Posey has been somewhat reviled among Creeks for his participation in the bureaucracy surrounding the dissolution of tribal government and for his subsequent activities as a real estate speculator in formerly tribal land. But he is recognized as having penned s... More: http://booksllc.net/?id=13233125
URL: http://bookmooch.com/1157118852
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