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Sarah Winnemucca(NSHC statue) |
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There are 8 critical essays on Sarah Winnemucca.
Critical Essays on Sarah Winnemucca

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Critical Essay by Brigitte Georgi-Findlay
9,617 words, approx. 32 pages
 In the following excerpt, Georgi-Findlay explores Winnemucca 's Life among the Piutes as it presents the role of gender in Indian-white relations.
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Critical Essay by Catherine S. Fowler
4,959 words, approx. 17 pages
 In the following essay. Fowler offers an ethnological study of Winnemucca as a figure who attempted to assimilate with white culture.
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Critical Essay by William C. Strange
4,703 words, approx. 16 pages
 In the following essay, Strange considers Winnemucca's Life among the Piutes as a work filled with personal resonances.
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Critical Essay by H. David Brumble III
4,691 words, approx. 16 pages
 In the following excerpt, Brumble contends that Winnemucca was not aware of contemporary literary models in her writing of Life among the Piutes, but rather adapted Paiute oral conventions to the persuasion of white audiences.
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Critical Essay by Gae Whitney Canfield
4,257 words, approx. 14 pages
 In the following excerpt Canfield recounts the circumstances that led to the writing of Sarah Hopkins Winnemucca's autobiography, and the political views Winnemucca expressed in her numerous lectures.
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Critical Essay by A. LaVonne Brown Ruoff
3,392 words, approx. 11 pages
 In the following excerpt, Ruoff evaluates Life among the Piutes by comparing it to other American Indian autobiographies and slave narratives of the same period.
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Critical Essay by Kathleen Mullen Sands
2,660 words, approx. 9 pages
 In the following excerpt, Sands examines the intent and technique of Winnemucca 's Life among the Piutes: Their Wrongs and Claims.
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Critical Essay by A. LaVonne Brown Ruoff
1,289 words, approx. 4 pages
 In the following excerpt, Ruoff discusses the influence of Winnemucca's autobiography Life among the Piutes: Their Wrongs and Claims.

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