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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
Jagodinsky, Katrina – American Indian Quarterly, 2013
Just two years after losing her Danish father, Coast Salish mother, and metis sisters to an undocumented tragedy in 1877, Nora Jewell faced another tragic ordeal. The twelve-year-old cleared fields and mended fences for James Smith, a guardian appointed by the court to protect her body and estate until she reached eighteen or married. As Nora…
Descriptors: American Indians, Mothers, Children, Child Care
Stanciu, Cristina – American Indian Quarterly, 2013
In this article the author starts from the premise that, although there were no renowned Indian poets at Carlisle and other Indian boarding schools in the United States, students in federal boarding schools read and wrote poetry. She argues that the rhetorically bold Carlisle poems--along with the letters and articles published in the Carlisle…
Descriptors: American Indians, American Indian Literature, American Indian Education, Poetry
Newmark, Julianne – American Indian Quarterly, 2012
In the first three decades of the twentieth century, racial nativism wielded considerable direct and indirect influence on policies that affected broader American attitudes concerning Native American people. In this three-decade period, many factors caused the kinds of national insecurity and instability that make a cultural climate ripe for…
Descriptors: American Indians, Cultural Pluralism, Activism, Race
Fields, Alison – American Indian Quarterly, 2012
The Miller Brothers' 101 Ranch Real Wild West show ran from 1906 to 1931, outlasting the famous Buffalo Bill's Wild West show by more than a decade. From its beginnings in Oklahoma Territory, the Real Wild West show traveled national and international circuits and built a broad roster of performers, including more than 150 American Indians. During…
Descriptors: United States History, American Indian History, American Indians, Theater Arts
Jacobs, Margaret D. – American Indian Quarterly, 2013
On Christmas Day 1975, Marcia Marie Summers was born to Charlene Summers, a member and resident of the Standing Rock Sioux Nation in North Dakota. A few months later, a white couple from Indiana approached the young mother and offered to care for her infant while Summers attended school. Summers realized that the couple intended to permanently…
Descriptors: Placement, Child Welfare, American Indians, Mothers
Stark, Heidi Kiiwetinepinesiik – American Indian Quarterly, 2012
The story, known as "The Theft of Fire," illustrates numerous meanings and teachings crucial to understanding Anishinaabe nationhood. This story contains two discernible points. First, it reveals how the Anishinaabe obtained fire. The second discernible feature within this story is the marking of the hare by his theft of fire. Stories…
Descriptors: American Indians, Tribes, Treaties, American Indian History
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
Fortney, Jeff – American Indian Quarterly, 2012
This study addresses the ways in which Natives practiced self-silence in regard to public Civil War commemoration. Notwithstanding the incredible impact on Indian Territory and Indian lives, Oklahoma Indians themselves did not typically commemorate the Civil War. Therefore, Native American contribution to the Civil War was largely skewed in the…
Descriptors: United States History, American Indians, Military Personnel, War
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
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
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
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
Wiedman, Dennis – American Indian Quarterly, 2012
In the five hundred years of European and American globalization of the world, seldom have Indigenous peoples been invited to a constitutional convention and first legislature to express their perspectives and concerns. Rarely in the five-hundred-year history of the European and American colonization of the world were the rights of the Indigenous…
Descriptors: Freedom, Religion, Medicine, American Indians
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