Ishi in two worlds : a biography of the last wild Indian in North America

Bibliographic Information

Ishi in two worlds : a biography of the last wild Indian in North America

by Theodora Kroeber ; with a new foreword by Karl Krober

University of California Press, c2002

  • : pbk

Other Title

Ishi

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. [245]-253)

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The life story of Ishi, the Yahi Indian, lone survivor of a doomed tribe, is unique in the annals of North American anthropology. For more than forty years, Theodora Kroeber's biography has been sharing this tragic and absorbing drama with readers all over the world. Ishi stumbled into the twentieth century on the morning of August 29, 1911, when, desperate with hunger and with terror of the white murderers of his family, he was found in the corral of a slaughterhouse near Oroville, California. Finally identified as an Indian by an anthropologist, Ishi was brought to San Francisco by Professor T.T. Waterman and lived there the rest of his life under the care and protection of Alfred Kroeber and the staff of the University of California's Museum of Anthropology. Karl Kroeber adds an informative tribute to the text, describing how the book came to be and how Theodora Kroeber's approach to the project was both a product of her era and of her insight and her empathy.

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