Talking leaf. Vol. 49, no. 9.
- Published
- Los Angeles, CA : Robert Vasquez, 1984.
- Physical Description
- 1 online resource
- Additional Creators
- Sequoyah National Research Center and AM (Publisher)
Access Online
- Series
- Summary
- Referring to itself as "Los Angeles' only Indian Newspaper" and "an Indian Magazine", Talking Leaf was the successor and namesake to an earlier title from 1935, which was also published in Los Angeles. Beginning life as the newsletter of the city's Indian Center, the publication changed format - first to a magazine and then a newspaper. The paper was an important part of the Indigenous community in Los Angeles, providing information on programs for Indigenous city-dwellers, calendars of local and national events, job listings, human interest stories and political pieces. Editorial pieces often targeted local issues; publishing details of births, deaths, engagement, politics, sporting events and news specific to the American Indian inhabitants of the city proved a particularly effective way to foster a larger sense of Indigenous community.
- Subject(s)
- Reproduction Note
- Electronic reproduction. Marlborough, Wiltshire : AM, 2024. Digitized from a copy held by the Sequoyah National Research Center and made available by AM.
- Location of Originals
- Sequoyah National Research Center, University of Arkansas, Little Rock
- Copyright Note
- Material sourced from Sequoyah National Research Centre, University of Little Rock at Arkansas.
View MARC record | catkey: 44273289