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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 7 page paper considers how the paradigm of the manifest destiny influenced the culture and history of the Native American Indians. Aspect such as divine rights and noblesse oblige on the part of the white man are considered. Particular attention is paid to the Cherokees in Georgia and Indian Removal Act of 1830. The bibliography cites 2 sources.
Page Count:
7 pages (~225 words per page)
File: TS14_TEnateind.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
1830. The bibliography cites 2 sources. TEnatind.wps
Manifest Destiny and Native American Culture Written United Kingdom, March 2001 For More Information
on How To Use This Report Correctly, Please Visit /aftersale.html History is always written by the victors, this is a
fact that is little disputed. However, with the changes in the way that history is recorded there is a greater than ever chance for documents and history to survive from
the losers perspective. This can be seen as the case when it comes to the way in which the native Indian were treated and Indian policy was formulated. In this
we can see that there were many influences, from the manifest destiny and the way that noblesse oblige was a part of this to the superiority complex that appears to
have engulfed the white man in the land that they were taking from the natives. The manifest destiny is an intangible and difficult
to describe concept that concerned the way that the people of America made it what it is today by the events that occurred during the nineteenth century and the expansion
policy that swallow the country joining it from cost to coast. It was the manifest destiny that was perceived then and now
as the driving force behind the policy that expanded the United States from a set of relative small and distant states into an integrated nation. However, it is not clear
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