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Yohe, Jill Ahlberg – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2012
This article draws upon ethnographic fieldwork within a Navajo community to illustrate how weaving knowledge and practices shape contemporary notions of community identity and belonging. The ongoing exchange of Navajo weaving taboos and the careful management of weaving teachings offers community members various opportunities to share and keep…
Descriptors: Individual Characteristics, Navajo (Nation), Ethnography, Indigenous Knowledge
Deloria, Philip J. – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2011
This commentary reflects on the articles included in this special issue of "American Indian Culture and Research Journal" that develop the theme of "American Indian languages in unexpected places" inspired by "Indians in Unexpected Places." The articles develop two related concerns: first, American Indian linguistic practices have been…
Descriptors: American Indian Culture, Language Maintenance, American Indians, American Indian Languages
Barnes, Jim – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2011
In this article, the author recounts how he has become a writer and shares his experience in discovering who he is and what he does. The author didn't know who he was really until Ken Lincoln told him many moons ago in one of the seminal books of criticism of time. "Native American Renaissance" (1985) did much to pave the road that had been little…
Descriptors: American Indians, Authors, Literary Genres, Personal Narratives
Richland, Justin B. – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2011
In this article, the author talks about "listening," "hearing," and negotiating with tribal leaders, and the possibility that, in effect, the idea that giving voice to Native American concerns necessarily implies that tribes are going to be happy enough with the opportunity to be heard and then be willing to forgo their most powerful interests…
Descriptors: Outreach Programs, American Indians, Nonprofit Organizations, American Indian Languages
Stark, Heidi Kiiwetinepinesiik – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2010
In this article, the author focuses on the foundations of Anishinaabe treaty-making with the United States and Canada. The author first describes a story of "The Woman Who Married a Beaver," which illustrates Anishinaabe principles of respect, responsibility, and renewal that are critical in treaty making. "The Woman Who Married a…
Descriptors: Animals, Treaties, Foreign Countries, American Indians
Hodge, Felicia Schanche; Bellanger, Patricia; Norman, Connie – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2011
Surgically replacing organs in the human body has become an acceptable and successful procedure in Western medicine. In more recent years, replacing major organs in the human body with those procured from deceased or living donors has become commonplace. Disparities exist at the earliest stages in the donor and transplantation process in that…
Descriptors: American Indians, Donors, Patients, Human Body
Daehnke, Jon; Lonetree, Amy – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2011
Repatriation in the United States today is synonymous with the passage of the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA). Although repatriations of Native American ancestral remains and cultural objects certainly occurred--and continue to occur--outside of the purview of NAGPRA, this law remains the centerpiece of repatriation…
Descriptors: American Indian Culture, American Indians, Museums, Public Agencies
Martinez, David – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2011
In an art world dominated by non-Indian curators and experts, being "Indian" was confined to an ethnographic fiction of storytellers, dancers, and medicine men attired in traditional clothing and regalia, in which the colonization of indigenous lands and peoples is left to the margins like an Edward S. Curtis portrait. These are the…
Descriptors: Artists, American Indian History, United States History, Oral Tradition
Gross, Lawrence W. – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2010
In 2005 the author published an article discussing the teaching method teachers used for an introduction to American Indian studies course at Iowa State University. In his previous piece, the author did not delineate the elements that go into an American Indian pedagogy. In this article, the author discusses some elements of American Indian…
Descriptors: American Indian Studies, American Indians, American Indian Education, Teaching Methods
Metoyer, Cheryl A. – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2010
Winter lessons, or stories told in the winter, were one of the ways in which tribal elders instructed and directed young men and women in the proper ways to assume leadership responsibilities. Winter lessons stressed the appropriate relationship between the leader and the community. The intent was to remember the power and purpose of that…
Descriptors: American Indians, American Indian Education, Leadership Responsibility, Leadership
Hodge, Felicia Schanche; Maliski, Sally; Cadogan, Mary; Itty, Tracy L.; Cardoza, Briana – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2010
Communication patterns and explanatory processes are culturally specific and not often compatible with research data-gathering approaches. Particularly in areas of medical research and health and health-care behavioral research, indigenous educators and researchers note their frustration when Western paradigms, academic traditions, and medical…
Descriptors: American Indians, Researchers, Story Telling, Tales
Willow, Anna J. – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2010
For hundreds of years, North America's colonizers worked systematically to eradicate the indigenous cultural practices, religious beliefs, and autonomous political systems many venerate. This article illustrates that imperialist nostalgia underlies and directs portrayals of American Indians in environmental education today. Whether unconsciously…
Descriptors: Environmental Education, American Indians, Anthropology, Politics
Leonard, Wesley Y. – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2011
While American Indian language reclamation efforts are often motivated by a desire to learn and embrace traditional culture, they generally occur within multicultural populations in which community members speak the dominant group's language(s), practice its ways, and use contemporary technologies. For this and related reasons, some mixture of the…
Descriptors: American Indians, Multilingualism, Ideology, American Indian Languages
Anisko, Briana – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2009
Although the many American Indian tribes of the United States are unique in their own customs, languages, and histories, a common thread throughout their traditions and cultural lifestyles is that they are of a culture that reveres the elder in their communities. Elders are the carriers of the culture/history; they are the storytellers, holders of…
Descriptors: Elder Abuse, Ceremonies, American Indians, Tribes
Carocci, Max – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2009
This article analyzes the few published references to gender variation among Plains Indians in order to contribute to a growing corpus of literature concerned with building a more complete picture of the social and cultural lives of individuals accustomed to these practices. In recent years these people have been known among Native Americans under…
Descriptors: American Indians, Gender Differences, American Indian Culture, Sexuality