Incorporating previously overlooked materials, including tribal council
records, oral histories, and reservation newspapers, Ruling Pine Ridge
explores the political history of South Dakota's Oglala Lakota
reservation during the mid-twentieth century. Akim D. Reinhardt examines
the reservation's transition from the direct colonialism of the pre-1934
era to the indirect colonial policies of the controversial Indian
Reorganization Act (IRA) and the advent of the tribal council governing
system still in place today on Pine Ridge and on many other
reservations. Reinhardt demonstrates how conflicting political values
foregrounded by the new governing format led to an aggravation of social
divisions on the reservation and eventually came to a head in 1973 with
the occupation and siege of Wounded Knee. The siege is best understood,
he claims, not as a political stunt of the American Indian Movement
(AIM) but as a spontaneous, grassroots protest at least forty years in
the making.