Amy Lonetree (Ho-Chunk) is an assistant professor of American studies at the University of California, Santa Cruz. She has conducted research on the representation of Indigenous peoples in both national and tribal museums and published articles in the American Indian Quarterly and the Public Historian. ¿ Amanda J. Cobb (Chickasaw),¿an associate professor of American studies at the University of New Mexico, oversees the Chickasaw Nation¿s division of history and culture and serves as the editor of American Indian Quarterly. Cobb¿s book, Listening to Our Grandmothers¿ Stories: The Bloomfield…mehr
Amy Lonetree (Ho-Chunk) is an assistant professor of American studies at the University of California, Santa Cruz. She has conducted research on the representation of Indigenous peoples in both national and tribal museums and published articles in the American Indian Quarterly and the Public Historian. ¿ Amanda J. Cobb (Chickasaw),¿an associate professor of American studies at the University of New Mexico, oversees the Chickasaw Nation¿s division of history and culture and serves as the editor of American Indian Quarterly. Cobb¿s book, Listening to Our Grandmothers¿ Stories: The Bloomfield Academy for Chickasaw Females, 1852¿1949, won the North American Indian Prose Award and the American Book Award, and is available in a Bison Books edition. Contributors: Elizabeth Archuleta, Sonya Atalay, Janet Berlo, Mario Caro, Myla Vicenti Carpio, Cynthia Chavez, Amanda J. Cobb, Robin Maria Delugan, Patricia Pierce Erikson, Gwyneira Isaac, Ira Jacknis, Aldona Jonaitis, Amy Lonetree, Judith Ostrowitz, Ruth B. Phillips, Beverly Singer, Paul Chaat Smith, and Pauline Wakeham.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Amy Lonetree (Ho-Chunk) is an assistant professor of American studies at the University of California, Santa Cruz. She has conducted research on the representation of Indigenous peoples in both national and tribal museums and published articles in the American Indian Quarterly and the Public Historian. Amanda J. Cobb (Chickasaw), an associate professor of American studies at the University of New Mexico, oversees the Chickasaw Nation's division of history and culture and serves as the editor of American Indian Quarterly. Cobb's book, Listening to Our Grandmothers' Stories: The Bloomfield Academy for Chickasaw Females, 1852-1949, won the North American Indian Prose Award and the American Book Award, and is available in a Bison Books edition. Contributors: Elizabeth Archuleta, Sonya Atalay, Janet Berlo, Mario Caro, Myla Vicenti Carpio, Cynthia Chavez, Amanda J. Cobb, Robin Maria Delugan, Patricia Pierce Erikson, Gwyneira Isaac, Ira Jacknis, Aldona Jonaitis, Amy Lonetree, Judith Ostrowitz, Ruth B. Phillips, Beverly Singer, Paul Chaat Smith, and Pauline Wakeham.
Inhaltsangabe
List of Figures Acknowledgements Dedication Introduction The National Museum of the American Indian: Critical Conversations
By Amy Lonetree and Amanda J. Cobb
Conversation One: History and Development 1. A New Thing?: The NMAI in Historical and Institutional Context By Ira Jacknis 2. Decolonizing the Nation's Attic: The NMAI and the Politics of Knowledge-Making in a National Space By Patricia Pierce Erikson 3. Concourse and Periphery: Planning the NMAI By Judith Ostrowitz
Conversation Two: Indigenous Methodology and Community Collaboration 4. Critical Reflections on the Our Peoples Exhibit: A Curator's Perspective By Paul Chaat Smith 5. Collaborative Exhibit Development at the Smithsonian's National Museum of the American Indian By Cynthia Chavez 6. The Making of 'Who We Are' Now Playing at the NMAI Lelawi Theater By Beverly Singer
Conversation Three: Interpretations and Response 7. Gym Shoes, Maps, and Passports, Oh My!: Creating Community or Creating Chaos at the NMAI? By Elizabeth Archuleta 8. "Indian Country" on the National Mall: The Mainstream Press vs. the NMAI By Janet Berlo and Aldona Jonaitis 9. What Are Our Expectations Telling Us?: Encounters with the NMAI By Gwyneira Isaac 10. No Sense of the Struggle: Creating a Context for Survivance at the NMAI By Sonya Atalay 11. (Un)disturbing Exhibitions: Indigenous Historical Memory at the NMAI By Myla Vicenti Carpio 12. "Acknowledging the Truth of History": Missed Opportunities at the NMAI By Amy Lonetree
Conversation Four: Questions of Nation and Identity 13. The NMAI as Cultural Sovereignty By Amanda J. Cobb 14. Performing Reconciliation at the NMAI: Postcolonial Rapprochement and the Politics of Historical Closure By Pauline Wakeham 15. "South of the Border" at the NMAI By Robin Maria Delugan 16. Disrupting Past Paradigms: The NMAI and the Canadian Museum of Civilization By Ruth B. Phillips 17. The NMAI and the Siting of Identity By Mario Caro
List of Figures Acknowledgements Dedication Introduction The National Museum of the American Indian: Critical Conversations
By Amy Lonetree and Amanda J. Cobb
Conversation One: History and Development 1. A New Thing?: The NMAI in Historical and Institutional Context By Ira Jacknis 2. Decolonizing the Nation's Attic: The NMAI and the Politics of Knowledge-Making in a National Space By Patricia Pierce Erikson 3. Concourse and Periphery: Planning the NMAI By Judith Ostrowitz
Conversation Two: Indigenous Methodology and Community Collaboration 4. Critical Reflections on the Our Peoples Exhibit: A Curator's Perspective By Paul Chaat Smith 5. Collaborative Exhibit Development at the Smithsonian's National Museum of the American Indian By Cynthia Chavez 6. The Making of 'Who We Are' Now Playing at the NMAI Lelawi Theater By Beverly Singer
Conversation Three: Interpretations and Response 7. Gym Shoes, Maps, and Passports, Oh My!: Creating Community or Creating Chaos at the NMAI? By Elizabeth Archuleta 8. "Indian Country" on the National Mall: The Mainstream Press vs. the NMAI By Janet Berlo and Aldona Jonaitis 9. What Are Our Expectations Telling Us?: Encounters with the NMAI By Gwyneira Isaac 10. No Sense of the Struggle: Creating a Context for Survivance at the NMAI By Sonya Atalay 11. (Un)disturbing Exhibitions: Indigenous Historical Memory at the NMAI By Myla Vicenti Carpio 12. "Acknowledging the Truth of History": Missed Opportunities at the NMAI By Amy Lonetree
Conversation Four: Questions of Nation and Identity 13. The NMAI as Cultural Sovereignty By Amanda J. Cobb 14. Performing Reconciliation at the NMAI: Postcolonial Rapprochement and the Politics of Historical Closure By Pauline Wakeham 15. "South of the Border" at the NMAI By Robin Maria Delugan 16. Disrupting Past Paradigms: The NMAI and the Canadian Museum of Civilization By Ruth B. Phillips 17. The NMAI and the Siting of Identity By Mario Caro
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