also these stories and figures who kind of complicate this pattern so i mentioned earlier jane johnston schoolcraft. so her husband was henry rose schoolcraft, and he was a bureau of indian affairs agent and the author of numerous books on what was called then ethnology, right? he's an early early anthropologist and he's studying he was especially interested in geology, but he also was very interested in collecting what he called specimens of folklore. so he was looking to write down and record legends and he worked with his wife who was of native american descent and her family to to collect information and a lot of his writings actually became major sources for for figures like longfellow for james fenimore cooper, but you know one thing i think is really important. is that like you can see this dynamic process like if you read his some of his writings you can occasionally kind of glimpse her voice coming through and you know and in her own writings because she was a poet herself. she sometimes writing explicitly about and reflecting on this relationship between white and indigenous forms of know