Trail of Tears : a Native American documentary collection.
Material type:
FilmPublisher number: MV50916 | Mill Creek EntertainmentPublisher: Minneapolis, MN : Mill Creek Entertainment, 2010Description: 2 videodiscs (4 hour, 23 minutes) : sound, color, black and white ; 4 3/4 inContent type: - two-dimensional moving image
- video
- videodisc
- Unrated
- Rated TV-PG
- General
- Native American documentary collection
- Trail of Tears, 1838-1839
- Cherokee Indians -- Relocation
- Cherokee Indians -- History -- 19th century
- Cherokee Indians -- Government relations
- Indians, Treatment of -- United States -- History -- 19th century
- African Americans -- Relations with Indians
- Indians of North America -- Mixed descent
- Indians of North America -- Medicine
- Indians of North America -- Ethnobotany
- Indians of North America -- Education -- History
- Off-reservation boarding schools -- United States
- Discrimination in education -- United States -- History
- 970.004/97 22
- E77 .T73 2010
| Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Barcode | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| DVD | John Tomay Memorial Library | DVD Nonfiction | DVD NF TRA (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 31030100161769 |
Title from container.
Trail of Tears : Cherokee legacy (2006, 105 min.) / written by Daniel Blake Smith ; produced by Chip Richie, Steven R. Heape ; directed by Chip Richie -- Black Indians : an American story (2001, 52 min.) / written by Daniel Blake Smith ; directed by Chip Richie -- Native American healing in the 21st century (2004, 52 min.) / written by Howard Fisher ; produced and directed by Chip Richie -- Our spirits don't speak English : Indian boarding school (2008, 53 min.) / written by Dan Agent ; directed by Chip Richie.
Narrators: James Earl Jones (Trail of Tears, Black Indians), Gregg Howard (Native American healing in the 21st century), Gayle Ross (Our spirits don't speak English) ; Wes Studi, presenter (Trail of Tears).
"Black Indians" originally broadcast on television.
Documents the forced removal in 1838 of the Cherokee Nation from the southeastern United States to Oklahoma; explores issues of racial identity between the mixed-descent peoples of both Native American and African American heritage; examines the crossover of ancient native remedies to present-day medical practices; documents the 1869, U.S. government-enacted policy of educating Native American children in the ways of western society.
Rating: Not rated, TV-PG.
DVDs, Dolby digital stereo.
For private home use only.
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