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The Karankawa Indians: The Coast People of Texas by Albert S. Gatschet is one of the earliest and most authoritative ethnographic studies of a vanished people -- the Karankawa Indians, the once-powerful hunter-gatherers who lived along the Gulf Coast of Texas. Drawing upon fieldwork, archival sources, and linguistic study, Gatschet reconstructs the life, customs, and beliefs of a tribe long shrouded in myth and misunderstanding.
Written in the late nineteenth century under the auspices of the Bureau of American Ethnology, this work examines every facet of Karankawa existence -- their language, social organization, material culture, spiritual practices, and encounters with Spanish, French, and Anglo-American settlers. Gatschet challenges many of the sensationalized accounts that had portrayed the Karankawa as "savage" or "cannibalistic," offering instead a nuanced portrait of a people adapted to the harsh coastal environment and endowed with a rich cultural identity.
Through his precise documentation of vocabulary, folklore, and early colonial records, Gatschet rescues the Karankawa from obscurity, presenting them not as relics of a vanished past but as part of the enduring human story of resilience and adaptation. His work also stands as a pioneering example of linguistic anthropology -- one of the first systematic attempts to preserve fragments of a nearly lost language.
For readers of anthropology, Native American studies, and Texas history, The Karankawa Indians: The Coast People of Texas remains a cornerstone reference -- a scientific, humane, and enduring contribution to our understanding of the earliest peoples of the Gulf Coast.
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