“Ishi and the Wood Ducks, Part 2, or Ishi, The ‘Urban’” Indian” is the first play in a five-play cycle, which dramatizes the events surrounding the life and death of a tribal man named Ishi who was immortalized in Theodora Kroeber’s (1961/1989) best-selling Ishi in Two Worlds: A Biography of the Last Wild Indian in North America.
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FosterG. M. (2003). Assuming responsibility for Ishi: An alternative interpretation. In KroeberK.KroeberC. (Eds.), Ishi in three centuries (pp. 89-99). Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press.
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KroeberC. (2003). Introduction to part one. In KroeberK.KroeberC. (Eds.), Ishi in three centuries (pp. 3-10). Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press.
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KroeberK.KroeberC. (2003). Editor’s introduction. In KroeberK.KroeberC. (Eds.), Ishi in three centuries (pp. xi-xxi). Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press.
22.
KroeberT. (1989). Ishi in two worlds: A biography of the last wild Indian in North America, with a new foreword by Karl Kroeber. Berkeley: University of California Press. (Original work published 1961)
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KroeberT. (1964). Ishi: Last of his tribe. New York, NY: Bantam Books.
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LuthinH.HintonL. (2003). The ways of a life: What Ishi’s stories can tell us about Ishi. In KroeberK.KroeberC. (Eds.), Ishi in three centuries (pp. 318-354). Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press.
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MadleyB. (2016). An American genocide: The United States and the California Indian catastrophe, 1846-1873. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.
27.
MelvilleH. (1851). Moby-dick. New York, NY: Charles Scribner.
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PerryJ. (2003). When the world was new: Ishi’s stories. In KroeberK.KroeberC. (Eds.), Ishi in three centuries (pp. 275-292). Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press.
29.
Scheper-HughesN. (2003). Ishi’s brain, Ishi’s ashes: Reflection on anthropology and genocide. In KroeberK.KroeberC. (Eds.), Ishi in three centuries (pp. 99-131). Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press.
30.
ShackleyM. S. (2003). The stone tool technology of Ishi and the Yana. In KroeberK.KroeberC. (Eds.), Ishi in three centuries (pp. 120-159). Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press.
31.
StarnO. (2004). Ishi’s brain: In search of America’s last “wild” Indian. New York, NY: W.W. Norton.
32.
VizenorG. (1995). Ishi and the wood ducks. In VizenorG. (Ed.), Native American literature: A brief introduction and anthology (pp. 299-336). New York, NY: Longman.
33.
VizenorG. (2000). Chancers: A novel. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press.
34.
VizenorG. (2003). Mister Ishi: Analogies of exile, deliverance, and liberty. In KroeberK.KroeberC. (Eds.), Ishi in three centuries (pp. 363-372). Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press.
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VizenorG. (2008). Aesthetics of survivance. In VizenorG. (Ed.), Survivance: Narratives of native presence (pp. 1-24). Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press.
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WallaceG. (1979, October8). Ishi, the last aboriginal savage in America: Finds enchantment in a vaudeville show. The San Francisco Sunday Call. (Reprinted from R. F. Heizer & T. Kroeber, Eds., Ishi, the last Yahi: A documentary history, pp. 107-111. Berkeley: University of California Press. [Original work published 1911])