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Raised in a moment of immense cultural change, George Copway played a complicated role as a Methodist missionary and Ojibway historian. In this powerful work, he reflects on the cultural traditions, geographical territory, and ancestral stories of the Ojibway people. The Traditional History and Characteristic Sketches of the Ojibway Nation is a work of Indigenous American history by George Copway.

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Produktbeschreibung
Raised in a moment of immense cultural change, George Copway played a complicated role as a Methodist missionary and Ojibway historian. In this powerful work, he reflects on the cultural traditions, geographical territory, and ancestral stories of the Ojibway people. The Traditional History and Characteristic Sketches of the Ojibway Nation is a work of Indigenous American history by George Copway.


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Autorenporträt
George Copway (1818-1869) was a Mississauga Ojibwa writer, missionary, and advocate. Born in Trenton, Ontario, his Ojibwa name was Kah-ge-ga-gah-Bowh, meaning He Who Stands Forever. His father John was a medicine man and Mississauga chief who converted to Methodism in 1827. Sent to a nearby mission school, Copway became a missionary in 1834, working in Wisconsin to translate the Book of Acts and the Gospel of St Luke into Ojibwa. After earning an appointment as a Methodist minister, Copway moved with his wife to Minnesota, where they would raise a son and daughter while serving as missionaries. In 1846, accusations of embezzlement for his work on the Ojibwe General Council forced him to leave the Methodist church. The next year, he published The Life, History and Travels of Kah-ge-ga-gah-Bowh, a bestselling memoir that was the first book published by a Canadian First Nations writer. Encouraged by this success, Copway launched a weekly New York City newspaper called Copway's American Indian but failed to keep his venture afloat despite letters of support from Lewis Henry Morgan, James Fenimore Cooper, and Washington Irving. Over the next decade, he succumbed to alcoholism and debt, and was left by his wife and daughter in 1858. Copway spent the last years of his life writing on Indian history, working as an herbalist, and recruiting troops for the Union army.