The Ghost Dance War: A Story of Hope, Fear, and the Road to the Massacre at Wounded Knee

The Ghost Dance War: A Story of Hope, Fear, and the Road to the Massacre at Wounded Knee - Hardcover

$87.30
Sale price  $87.30 Regular price 
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The Ghost Dance War: A Story of Hope, Fear, and the Road to the Massacre at Wounded Knee

The Ghost Dance War: A Story of Hope, Fear, and the Road to the Massacre at Wounded Knee - Hardcover

$87.30
Sale price  $87.30 Regular price 
Details

by Ward McLendon (Author)

A comprehensive narrative analysis of the Ghost Dance movement and the sociopolitical conditions culminating in the 1890 Wounded Knee massacre. Integrating primary sources and modern scholarship, this work is suitable for academic study and general readership. Ward McLendon blends eyewitness accounts, historical records, and cultural context to reveal the human stories behind one of the most tragic chapters in American history.

A peaceful ceremony. A nation in fear. A tragedy born from misunderstanding.

In the winter of 1890, the Ghost Dance swept across the Plains. For the Lakota, it was a sacred prayer for renewal after decades of starvation, broken treaties, and the suppression of traditional life. To the United States government, it looked like the spark of an uprising. The Ghost Dance War reveals how a spiritual movement rooted in hope was transformed into a national crisis-driven by fear, political pressure, and profound cultural ignorance.

Through vivid narrative history, the book traces:

Wovoka's vision in Nevada and the spread of his peaceful prophecy

The diverse ways tribes interpreted the Ghost Dance as grief, ceremony, and survival

The federal panic fueled by newspapers, agency reports, and policy failures

The killing of Sitting Bull, which turned fear into open crisis

Big Foot's desperate flight toward Pine Ridge in the bitter winter

The encirclement of an unarmed Miniconjou band by the U.S. Army

The massacre at Wounded Knee, where misunderstanding became catastrophe

Drawing from firsthand testimonies, Indigenous oral histories, and modern scholarship, this book reframes the Ghost Dance not as a rebellion, but as a coherent religious revival emerging from profound historical trauma.

Clear, compelling, and meticulously researched, The Ghost Dance War offers a new understanding of one of America's most tragic and misinterpreted events. It restores human complexity to the people who danced for hope-and reveals how fear can turn spiritual movements into flashpoints for violence.

Perfect for readers of Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee, Empire of the Summer Moon, and The Heartbeat of Wounded Knee, this is a definitive narrative history of the winter of 1890-and the lessons it still holds today.

Number of Pages: 246
Dimensions: 0.69 x 9 x 6 IN
Publication Date: November 24, 2025

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