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The Journal of San Diego History
Spring 1982, Volume 28, Number 2
Contents of This Issue
Book Reviews
Richard H. Peterson, Book Reviews Editor
Crosscurrents Along the Colorado: The Impacts of Government
Policy on the Quechan Indians. By Robert L. Bee. Tucson: The University of
Arizona Press, 1981. Bibliography. Index. Maps. 184 pages. $7.50.
Reviewed by John W. Steiger, Social Sciences Department, San Diego Mesa College.
Anti-government Anglos should not let the excellence of
Professor Bee's criticisms of the "Feds" lead them to believe that they and
Quechans have similar problems. As the author reminds us, "Quechans were not
Anglos, nor were they brimming with the protestant ethic . . . " If Quechans
were thwarted religiously, politically, economically and socially,
as Bee admirably documents, then it is, and was, because the Interior
Department merely reenforced what the majority of Americans demanded of their government.
Crosscurrents also amply illustrates the resiliency of
cultural pluralism in the face of these majoritarian pressures. In this respect,
the experiences of Quechan people with alien invaders, first the Spanish and
then the more aggressive Anglos, mirror what happened to many other American
Indian tribes. Two chapters, "Pre-Colonial Setting" and "From Garrison to
Reservation," establish an ethnohistorical introduction to the effects of
foreign invasions on the Quechans (some may prefer to call them Yumas). The
first chapter is not designed to be exhaustive ethnologically but to introduce
Quechan culture and to set the stage for the impacts resulting from federal
government policy as implemented after 1850. Those familiar with the late
nineteenth century will not be surprised by the contents of chapter two. The
expected patterns are observable in forced boarding school requirements, hair
and dress styles, tribal factionalism and the eventual "Agreement" (in 1893)
forcing a fixed reservation on Quechans.
Since 75 % of the book deals with events since 1900, the
principal focus of Bee's analysis can be noted in the following chapter titles.
They succinctly illustrate the main external pressures affecting the reservation
for the next seventy years. Quechan responses to "Amalgamation, Allotment and
Paternalism," "New Deal and Termination Threats" and "Politics and Problems of
Self-Help" make for very interesting reading. For example, those who celebrate
the marvel of the All-American Canal may be interested in its negative effect on
Quechans. Water subsidy for Anglo agriculturalists increased soil alkalinity on
reservation lands. It took the Interior Department almost forty years to
acknowledge this adverse impact.
A final chapter, "The Quechan Community as a Product of
Internal Colonialism," provides an interpretive commentary on the period from
1961 to 1974. In using the analytical framework of "internal colonialism" to
evaluate Quechan history, Bee reflects the approach used by Joseph Jorgensen in
his study of the Ute and Shoshone tribes (The Sun Dance Religion: Power for
the Powerless, 1972).
All chapters contain short summaries that aid the reader in
reevaluating contents and interpretations. Although illustrations and
photographs are missing from this book, it does contain two maps that assist
readers geographically and reveal land loss. Notes, bibliography and index are
adequate. Since the footnotes are placed at the end of the book, some may find
this detracts from their usefulness. Many citations show both a sociological
emphasis and a field study approach to the subject. The author noted that he had
spent "thirteen years of intermittent research with the Quechan tribe." Because
it focuses on the twentieth century, Crosscurrents makes an especially
valuable contribution to Native American history.
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