Pearl E. Casias served as the Southern Ute Indian Tribe's chief judge for twelve years. She also served on the Southern Ute Indian Tribal Council and was the first woman elected chair of the tribe.
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Description
"Red Woman is a good story skillfully told, perfectly capturing the life of a woman who lived under difficult circumstances and whose difficulties are described in a straightforward way. A person of great integrity and compassion, Pearl E. Casias demonstrates how Indigenous peoples blend tradition and change and how family and community uphold the Ute people despite the pressures of poverty and isolation."--Katherine M. B. Osburn, author of Southern Ute Women: Autonomy and Assimilation on the Reservation, 1887-1934 "The way Pearl E. Casias combines her personal story with the history of her tribe as well as that of the larger world is illuminating. She possesses self-knowledge and an appreciation for justice that have enabled her to become a leader in her society. She writes with a candor that is unusual, almost disarming. I was hooked from the first word."--Margaret Randall, author of Letters from the Edge: Outrider Conversations and More Letters from the Edge: Outrider Conversations

