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James Verne Dusenberry

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James Verne Dusenberry
BornApril 7, 1906
DiedDecember 16, 1966(1966-12-16) (aged 60)
OccupationAnthropologist

James Verne Dusenberry (April 7, 1906 – December 16, 1966)[1] was a publicly acclaimed scholar. He is best known for his writings on and the relationships he built with many of the various Montana tribes throughout his lifetime.

Early life

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Verne Dusenberry was born in Corning, Iowa on April 7, 1906.[2] When Dusenberry was young, his family moved to Montana. His interest in Native Americans grew and he soon became well-acquainted with the surrounding tribes of Montana. In 1937, he was adopted by a Pend d'Oreille chief and given the name "Many Grizzly Bears". After working his way through college and dealing with tuberculosis, he earned a job located on the Flathead Indian Reservation.

Dusenberry was previously married and had a daughter named Lynn Dusenberry, who was very involved with her father's research. She too, was well acquainted with the Montana Native tribes and assisted her father with his book.

Influence

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Robert M. Pirsig was a personal friend and one of Dusenberry's supportive colleagues in the Montana State College English Department. Dusenberry appeared as a pivotal thematic figure in Pirsig's book Lila: An Inquiry into Morals. Pirsig said that "Verne was misunderstood and underestimated both as a person and as a scholar" and that he hoped the publication of Lila would "help to set the record straight."[3]

Publications

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  • Chief Joseph's Flight Through Montana (1952)
  • The Rocky Boy Indians (1954)
  • The Northern Cheyenne (1955)
  • Montanans Look at their Indians (1955)
  • Horn in the Ice (1956)
  • The Development of Montana's Indians (1957)
  • Waiting for a Day that Never Comes (1958)
  • Indians and the Pentecostals (1958)
  • Gabriel Nattau's Soul Speaks (1959)
  • Vision Experience of a Pend d'Oreille Indian (1959)
  • Notes on the Material Culture of the Assiniboine (1960)
  • An Appreciation of James Willard Schultz (1960)
  • The Significance of the Sacred Pipes to the Gros Ventre of Montana (1961)
  • Ceremonial Sweat Lodge of the Gros Ventre Indians (1962)

References

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  1. ^ "Accession 85015 - Verne Dusenberry Papers, ca. 1885-1966 :: Montana State University Library".
  2. ^ Carling Malouf (April 1968). "Verne Dusenberry 1906–1966". American Anthropologist. 1970 (2): 326–327. doi:10.1525/aa.1968.70.2.02a00090.
  3. ^ Verne Dusenberry, Lynne Dusenberry Crow The Montana Cree: A Study in Religious Persistence 1998 ISBN 0806130253 p8