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Fisher, Andrew – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2012
Visitors to the Yakama Indian Reservation in south-central Washington State can't help but notice Mount Adams. Known as Patu, or snowtopped mountain, and Xwayama, or golden eagle, in the Sahaptin language of the Columbia Plateau, the 12,276-foot peak stretches more than a mile above the forested ridges of the Cascade Range. Images of the mountain…
Descriptors: American Indian History, American Indians, Memory, Federal Indian Relationship
Sarris, Greg – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2011
In this article, the author aims to answer three questions that Ken Lincoln asked in the introduction to his book. Where have Indians come? What have they learned? And what lies ahead? The author argues that many Indian tribes have power now with their business opportunities. Things are changing in many ways for them. They can say what they want…
Descriptors: American Indians, Tribes, American Indian Studies, American Indian History
Against the Intentional Fallacy: Legocentrism and Continuity in the Rhetoric of Indian Dispossession
Wolfe, Patrick – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2012
The road of US Indian law and policy, like its companion to hell, is paved with good intentions. Critics of its generally diabolic outcomes have had little difficulty demonstrating the moral chasm between the appealing rhetoric in which a policy or judgment was framed and the oppressive consequences to which it practically conduced. With a nod to…
Descriptors: Rhetoric, American Indians, Court Litigation, American Indian History
Warrior, Robert – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2011
In this paper, the author talks about some of the issues of the beginnings of Native and Indigenous studies and suggests that one looks more precisely at what people mean when they talk about those beginnings. The author is not a big fan of Native people emerging vaguely from the mists of time, but he is always tracing a history of Native studies…
Descriptors: American Indian Studies, American Indians, American Indian History, Futures (of Society)
Nash, Gary B. – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2011
In this article, the author shares his comments on the past, present, and future of the American Indian Studies Center (AISC). He discusses how AISC was established and describes how American Indian studies have come a long way from the neglect and disparagement of Native Americans in the way American history is written and taught. He also…
Descriptors: American Indian Studies, United States History, American Indians, Educational Change
Whalen, Kevin – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2012
In this article, the author talks about labored learning under the auspices of the "outing program" of Sherman Institute, an Indian boarding school in Riverside, California. The outing system functioned as a vital part of a larger federal Indian boarding school system that sought, in the words of historian Matthew Sakiestewa Gilbert, to…
Descriptors: Boarding Schools, American Indian Education, Vocational Education, Laborers
Phillips, Lisa – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2011
This exploration of the languages of contact in the North American British-US borderlands in the period between 1783 and 1860 provides insights into the types of extended contact that occurred in the areas north of 42[degrees] and south of 50[degrees]. Although multilingualism was the norm in the Old Northwest and the old Oregon Territory during…
Descriptors: Language Usage, Multilingualism, Primary Sources, North Americans
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
Nash, Gary B. – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2011
In this article, the author talks about native Americans, the national parks and the concept of historical inevitability. The notion of historical inevitability, always a victor's argument, is as old as the stories of the ancient conquerors. It has permeated the history of Indian America, as told by white historians, and people are still today…
Descriptors: American Indian Studies, United States History, American Indians, American Indian History
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
Sahota, Puneet Chawla – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2012
Native Americans have been underrepresented in previous studies of biomedical research participants. This paper reports a qualitative interview study of Native Americans' perspectives on biomedical research. In-depth interviews were conducted with 53 members of a Southwest tribal community. Many interviewees viewed biomedical research studies as a…
Descriptors: American Indians, Disproportionate Representation, Biomedicine, Research
Matsui, Kenichi – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2011
As of December 2010, the US Congress had enacted more than twenty major community-specific Native water-rights settlements, and the state of Arizona had more of these settlements (eight) than any other US state. This unique situation has invited voluminous studies on Arizona's Native water-rights settlements. Although these studies have clarified…
Descriptors: Water, American Indians, Federal Government, United States History
Black, Jason Edward – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2012
This essay--a combination of authorial narrative and scholarly critique--examines a grassroots organization's (Friends of Historic Northport) campaign to preserve a site in west Alabama where a pivotal Choctaw-Upper Creek battle took place in 1785. The organization has faced opposition from city planners and business leaders intent on developing…
Descriptors: Activism, Social Action, Citizen Participation, Historic Sites
Vest, Jay Hansford C. – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2012
In north central Virginia there is a local tale--The Legend of Jump Mountain, which purports to explain the origins of the Hayes Creek Indian Burial Mound. A highly romantic legend, it immortalizes post colonial intertribal warfare during the early nineteenth century while ignoring the antiquity of the mound and the local descendants of its…
Descriptors: American Indians, Local History, Tales, Story Telling
Palmer, Mark H. – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2011
The fragmentation of large nineteenth-century reservations resulted in the creation of American Indian allotment geographies in the United States. Federal Indian policy, namely the General Allotment Act of 1887, allowed the US government to break up large reservations, allot land to individual Indians, and sell the surplus to non-Indian settlers.…
Descriptors: American Indians, Tribes, United States History, American Indian History