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234 pages, Paperback
First published April 21, 2014
The suit not only played into typical white stereotypes of Indians but also trivialized the traditional and tribal ties of Brother McPherson. He was a Cherokee wearing a generic Hollywood rendition of a Plains Indian warrior suit. Most ordinary Indians retained some traditional dress that was not as garish as the Indian suit and proved more functional - velvet skirts for Navajo women, elaborate hairstyles for Hopi women, and traditional jewelry that graced the bodies of both men and women from any number of tribes. As a rule, Indians did not wear traditional dress every day. They tended to dress like working-class Americans - especially the men, whose standard uniform was that of the day laborer: jeans, t-shirt, flannel overshirt, and heavy boots. Ordinary Indian dress would not draw the white American public, however, and Brother McPherson understood that he would garner more attention if he wore Indian costume rather than the standard three-piece suit of a Pentecostal evangelist (pp. 104-05).