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Showing 1 to 15 of 148 results Save | Export
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Gerona, Carla – American Indian Quarterly, 2012
Billy Day, a Tunica/Biloxi, recently described the significance of the sun for Caddoan people. Day quoted an "old Caddo relative" of his who said: "I used to go outside and hold my hands up and bless myself with the sun--'a'hat.' Well, I can't do that anymore because they say we are sun worshipers. We didn't worship the sun. We worshiped what was…
Descriptors: Tribes, Mythology, Change, American Indian Culture
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Peters, Jesse – American Indian Quarterly, 2013
In her novel "Power," Linda Hogan provides readers with a close look at how separatism and syncretism, or exclusion and inclusion, are complex ideologies that lead to complex decisions. A close look at the novel reveals that the tensions and sharp dichotomies between the traditional world of the Taiga elders and the European American world,…
Descriptors: Novels, American Indian Literature, American Indians, Ideology
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Kiser, William S. – American Indian Quarterly, 2012
Navajo trading has been a crucial component of that tribe's localized economy for generations and has been the subject of much scholarship over the years. The role of the Navajo trader in influencing the types and styles of crafts that Navajos created as well as providing tribal members with an outlet for those items remains important to their…
Descriptors: Navajo (Nation), Handicrafts, American Indian Culture, Financial Services
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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
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Colombi, Benedict J. – American Indian Quarterly, 2012
Change due to natural disturbances and disasters, population growth and decline, economic crises, and environmental and climate change creates significant cultural challenges. Rapid change and the transformation it brings also involve complex relationships between sovereign tribes, resources, and the global system. This article explores how salmon…
Descriptors: Coping, Change, Adjustment (to Environment), American Indian Culture
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Rinehart, Melissa – American Indian Quarterly, 2012
The World's Columbian Exposition of 1893, in celebration of the quadricentennial anniversary of Columbus's landing in the Americas, spread over six hundred acres of reclaimed marsh lands in Chicago's South Side. Fourteen great buildings and two hundred additional buildings stood on the fairgrounds, and if tourists had visited every exhibit, they…
Descriptors: American Indians, Work Environment, Exhibits, American Indian History
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Schmidt, Ethan A. – American Indian Quarterly, 2012
In August 1676 Nathaniel Bacon brought his campaign to "ruin and extirpate all Indians in general" to the Green Dragon Swamp on the upper Pamunkey River. While there, he attacked and massacred nearly fifty Pamunkey Indians, who had been at peace with the government of Virginia for thirty years. Having once formed the backbone of the…
Descriptors: American Indian History, United States History, Tribes, Leadership
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Pearlstone, Zena – American Indian Quarterly, 2011
This essay is a short history of imitation "tithu," dolls representing "katsinam," the Hopi supernaturals. It is a study of "authenticity" in the marketplace and its perceived relation to "magic," "spirituality," and "antiquity," as the article follows early changes at Hopi through the…
Descriptors: Imitation, Enrollment, American Indian Culture, Handicrafts
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Kopacz, Maria A.; Lawton, Bessie Lee – American Indian Quarterly, 2011
Online outlets for user-generated content (UGC) like YouTube have created environments for alternative depictions of marginalized groups, as UGC can be contributed by anyone with basic technology access. Preliminary findings on UGC relating to Native Americans confirm some favorable departures from the distortions prevalent in the old media. The…
Descriptors: Video Technology, Race, Cues, American Indians
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Landrum, Cynthia L. – American Indian Quarterly, 2012
For twenty-eight years, the Red Hot Chili Peppers have evolved beyond their beginnings as yet another 1980s alternative band giving voice to its generation's disaffected youth into a modern symbol (among others) of tribal identity for displaced Native Americans. These young Native people span communities both on and off reservations and reserves…
Descriptors: American Indians, Youth, Popular Culture, American Indian Culture
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Walker, William S. – American Indian Quarterly, 2011
In the summer of 1970, the Smithsonian's Festival of American Folklife, an annual event on the National Mall featuring tradition bearers from around the country, premiered a new American Indian program that combined presentations of Native traditions with panel discussions of contemporary social, political, and economic issues facing Native…
Descriptors: American Indians, American Indian Education, Museums, Exhibits
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Fowler, Cynthia – American Indian Quarterly, 2010
Over the last few years there has been a growing recognition of the trend among contemporary artists to engage methods and materials traditionally associated with craft. Sewing in particular has become a prevalent form of artistic expression among contemporary artists. This article is a consideration of sewing as an artistic practice in the works…
Descriptors: Handicrafts, Artists, American Indians, Canada Natives
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Beck, David R. M. – American Indian Quarterly, 2010
From the late nineteenth century through the early 1930s a succession of collectors, ethnologists, and other scholars scoured the Menominee Reservation for data and items of material culture, which they presented to the American public through both publication and display. They did this with the cautious aid of Menominees they hired to provide…
Descriptors: American Indian Culture, American Indian History, Tribes, American Indians
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Jacob, Michelle M. – American Indian Quarterly, 2012
In the 1970s a group of American Indian junior high school students requested that their public school, located on the Yakama Reservation, provide them with opportunities to learn traditional Yakama and powwow-style dancing. They found an advocate in their school counselor, a Yakama woman who helped them form the Wapato Indian Club dance troupe, a…
Descriptors: American Indians, Self Esteem, Clubs, School Counselors
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Willow, Anna J. – American Indian Quarterly, 2010
In this article, the author explores some of the most prominent ways that cultural revitalization has been contemplated within Anishinaabe and anthropological arenas of discourse. She draws reflexively on her own personal positionality and academic theoretical background as well as on her observations of how Anishinaabe anti-clear-cutting…
Descriptors: American Indian Culture, Cultural Maintenance, American Indians, Anthropology
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