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Larre, Lionel – American Indian Quarterly, 2013
John Milton Oskison (1874-1947) was a Cherokee writer, journalist, and activist and the author of novels and biographies as well as numerous short stories, essays, and articles about a great variety of subjects. Oskison thought of himself as "an interpreter to the world, of the modern, progressive Indian." The kind of representation Oskison gave…
Descriptors: American Indians, Authors, Philosophy, Acculturation
Bess, Jennifer – American Indian Quarterly, 2013
Through his many works calling for the evolution of indigenous theory, Duane Champagne has emphasized the importance of recovering indigenous voices such as Chilocco Indian Industrial School graduate Mack Setima's and documenting forms of cultural continuity. According to Champagne, case studies such as K. Tsianina Lomawaima's scholarship on…
Descriptors: Organizational Change, American Indian Education, Boarding Schools, American Indian Culture
Daehnke, Jon – American Indian Quarterly, 2012
The recent bicentennial of Lewis and Clark's "Corps of Discovery" created increased interest in commemorations of this event along the entire course of the expedition's travels. In advance of the bicentennial, a number of states established Lewis and Clark commemorative commissions, museums at both national and local levels planned…
Descriptors: United States History, American Indian History, American Indians, Acculturation
Blansett, Kent – American Indian Quarterly, 2010
The Ozark Mountains occupy a large area within the state boundaries of southern Missouri, northern Arkansas, and northeastern Oklahoma as well as the southeastern-most tip of Kansas. Missouri and Arkansas make up the bulk of the Ozarks, while Oklahoma and Kansas straddle their outer rim. From 1800 to 1865 the Ozarks region was in constant flux, as…
Descriptors: Oral Tradition, American Indians, Sampling, Historians
Russell, Caskey – American Indian Quarterly, 2009
The term "first contact" usually conjures up an image of a group of European soldiers landing on a beach in the New World, their ship anchored just offshore, while a large group of Natives approaches the soldiers. On both sides there is caution but also curiosity. Beyond the physical collision of two different peoples there is also a…
Descriptors: Alaska Natives, Cultural Differences, Whites, World History
Newell, Quincy D. – American Indian Quarterly, 2008
Paseos, which are defined as trips away from the mission authorized by the Franciscan priests, were common among Indians baptized at Mission San Francisco during the period between 1700s to 1800s. Indians went on these journeys in order to harvest acorns and other wild foods, to hunt and fish, and to visit friends and family outside the mission.…
Descriptors: Religion, Experience, Ceremonies, Birth
Neuman, Lisa K. – American Indian Quarterly, 2008
As neocolonial institutions designed to assimilate American Indians to European American cultural and religious values, social institutions, and economic practices, most schools run by the federal government and missionaries during the first part of the twentieth century sought to suppress all or most aspects of their young students' Indian…
Descriptors: American Indians, American Indian Education, Ideology, Federal Government
Kidwell, Clara Sue – American Indian Quarterly, 2009
The academic field of Native American/American Indian studies (NAS/AIS) has been and largely remains a product of political forces at the national level and now at the tribal level. The very recognition of American Indians as a unique group by the U.S. government is a political statement of survival. In this article, the author revisits the…
Descriptors: American Indian Studies, American Studies, Indigenous Knowledge, American Indians

Wright, Anne – American Indian Quarterly, 1982
Describes the reproductive cycle (menarche, menstrual cycle, fertility and contraceptive use, and menopause) as experienced by two groups of contemporary Navajo women. Eighty Navajo women, 40 traditional and 40 acculturated, participated in the 1978 research project which focused on influences of menopause. (ERB)
Descriptors: Acculturation, Attitudes, Cultural Influences, Females
Lambert, Valerie – American Indian Quarterly, 2007
The Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma is headquartered in southeastern Oklahoma and has a tribal citizenry of just over 175,000. The tribal government currently compacts almost all of the tribe's Bureau of Indian Affairs and Indian Health Service program funding and runs dozens of tribal businesses that today fund more than 80 percent of the tribal…
Descriptors: Tribes, Nationalism, American Indian Languages, American Indians

Thornton, Russell; And Others – American Indian Quarterly, 1991
Examination of census data, 1910-1980, indicates that the fertility of American Indians has decreased in the past four decades; continues well above that of the total U.S. population; and positively relates to intermarriages and the identity of American Indian. (SV)
Descriptors: Acculturation, American Indians, Birth Rate, Females

Metcalf, Ann – American Indian Quarterly, 1982
Contains an overall picture of urban relocation of American Indians occurring in mid-1950s; a summary of observations made in early 1970s with a sample of young Navajo women in San Francisco Bay area; and new research strategies for the 1980s which take into account changes over a quarter century of relocation. (ERB)
Descriptors: Acculturation, Adjustment (to Environment), Females, Quality of Life

Barsh, Russel Lawrence – American Indian Quarterly, 1991
Progressive-era bureaucrats viewed subdivision of Indian lands, establishment of tribal governments, and transfer of federal responsibilities to the states as stages of a single policy of gradual integration of Indians. Arthur Ludington's 1912 long-term plan for citizenship training and assimilation accurately anticipated events of the next 50…
Descriptors: Acculturation, American Indian History, Bureaucracy, Federal Government
Blee, Lisa – American Indian Quarterly, 2007
This essay investigates how various perspectives differ and converge in the span of an afternoon, thus illustrating how divergent narratives, through their very difference, enhance one's understanding of the past. The case study of the 1925 Fort Union Indian Congress points to the process of narrativizing experience and underscores how meaning is…
Descriptors: American Indians, United States History, American Indian History, Social Attitudes
White, Frederick – American Indian Quarterly, 2006
As many linguists continue to work with and analyze First Nations/Native American languages, the consensus opinion usually direly predicts the loss of daily use for almost all of the extant Indigenous languages. Tremendous efforts are being expended for renewing, revitalizing, and restoring these languages to everyday use. The model upon which…
Descriptors: American Indian Languages, Second Language Learning, Language Maintenance, Acculturation