Cherokee Tribe: Beyond Stereotypes and Misconceptions

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When a person today thinks of Native Americans, the immediate image that emerges in one’s mind is the ‘typical Indian’, a person wearing a headdress of vibrant feathers and whom lives in a teepee. However, for members of the Cherokee Tribe this depiction could not be further from the truth or more offensive to the people of today or those who came before them (speakers). Throughout the book Blood Politics, Circe Sturm seeks to allow those outside the tribe to see the true race, culture and identity of the Cherokee people as both the past and present are explored. In the years before adventurers set foot on the soil of the “New World” looking for uncharted lands to settle, Cherokee tribes had already “occupied an area of almost 40,000
A person’s amount of Cherokee blood can depend on a multitude of traits such as one’s phenotype. The United States is known as being a melting pot of culture and ethnicities, and the modern Cherokee Nation is no different. Sturm recounts an occurrence from her time in Oklahoma with the Western Band Cherokee where her and another anthropologist friend were helping a group of older Cherokee women serve food after a church service. These women were measuring up both of the young women and asking about their heritage. Both women had a percentage of Cherokee blood, however; one looked more stereotypically Cherokee than the other, so the older women regarded her in a different way than the other whom looked less Cherokee (Sturm 111). Although “there is no universal standard of what a Cherokee should like”, some Cherokees feel that it is easier to understand another Cherokee if they are racialized in the same way, thus likely giving these people a deeper understanding as they have gone through similar adversities (Sturm 113). However, some continue to believe that one’s outward appearance has no meaning if a person is not able to participate in the Cherokee
The Cherokee language, alike the culture, has greatly declined in the amount of fluent speakers. A Cherokee speaking man stated that, “the language is critical…it’s a God-given gift to be able to communicate and speak” (Sturm 121). The death of such a language would likely be the downfall of the rest of the culture, without speaking the native language, certain implications of why a task is done a certain way may be lost or misinterpreted.
The Cherokee way of life and history of the tribe continues to impact generations of Cherokee today. Without the colorful history that the tribe has underwent, the many people living today would not know the important of living within the culture or speaking the native tongue. Without the knowledge of their ancestor’s hardships, the youth of today would likely disregard the past and only focus on the

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