Notes on Contributors
Introduction
Chris Andersen and Jean M. O’Brien
PART ONE: EMERGING FROM THE PAST
Chapter One: Historical Sources and Methods in Indigenous Studies: Touching on the Past, Looking to the Future
Jean M. O’Brien
Chapter Two: Literary Reflections on Indigenous Literary
Nationalism: On Home Grounds, Singing Hogs, and Cranky Critics
Daniel Heath Justice
Chapter Three: History, Anthropology, Indigenous Studies
Pauline Turner Strong
Chapter Four: Reclaiming the Statistical "Native": Quantitative
Historical Research Beyond the Pale
Chris Andersen and Tahu Kukutai
PART TWO: ALTERNATIVE SOURCES AND METHODOLOGICAL REORIENTATIONS
I. Reframing Indigenous Studies
Chapter Five: Recovering, Restorying, and Returning Nahua
Writing in Mexico
Kelly McDonough
Chapter Six: Mind, Heart, Hands: Thinking, Feeling, and Doing in
Indigenous History Methodology
K. Tsianina Lomawaima
Chapter Seven: Relationality: A Key Presupposition of an
Indigenous Social Research Paradigm
Aileen Moreton-Robinson
Chapter Eight: Standing With and Speaking as Faith: A
Feminist-Indigenous Approach to Inquiry
Kim TallBear
Chapter Nine: Stepping In It: How to Smell the Fullness of
Indigenous Histories
Vicente Diaz
Chapter Ten: Intellectual History and Indigenous Methodology
Robert Warrior
Chapter Eleven: A Genealogy of Critical Hawaiian Studies, Late 20th to
21st Century
Noenoe K. Silva
Chapter Twelve: Placing the City: Crafting Urban Indigenous
Histories
Coll Thrush
II. All in the Family
Chapter Thirteen: "I do still have a letter:" Our Sea of
Archives"
Alice Te Punga Somerville
Chapter Fourteen: History with Nana: Family, Life, and the
Spoken Source
Aroha Harris
Chapter Fifteen: Elder Brother as Theoretical Framework
Robert Innes
Chapter Sixteen: Histories with Communities: Struggles, Collaborations, Transformations
Amy E. Den Ouden
Chapter Seventeen: Places and Peoples: Sámi Feminist
Technoscience and Supradisciplinary Research Methods
May-Britt Ohman, Uppsala University
Chapter Eighteen: Oral History
William Bauer, Jr.
III. Feminism, Gender, and Sexuality
Chapter Nineteen: Status, Sustainability, and American Indian
Women in the Twentieth Century
Jacki Thompson Rand
Chapter Twenty: Representations of Violence: (Re)Telling
Indigenous Women’s Stories and the Politics of Knowledge
Production
Shannon Speed
Chapter Twenty-One: Feminism and History, Sources and Methods in Indigenous History
Mishuana Goeman
Chapter Twenty-Two: History and Masculinity
Brendan Hokowhitu
Chapter Twenty-Three: Indigenous is to Queer as . . . : Queer
questions for Indigenous Studies
Mark Rifkin
IV. Indigenous Literature and Expressive Culture
Chapter Twenty-Four: State Violence, History, and Maya
Literature in Guatemala
Emilio de valle Escalante
Chapter Twenty-Five: Pieces Left Along the Trail: Material
Culture Histories and Indigenous Studies
Sherry Farrell Racette, in conversation with Alan Corbiere and
Crystal Migwans
Chapter Twenty-Six: Authoring Indigenous Studies in Three
Dimensions: An Approach to Museum Curation
Gabrielle Tayac
Chapter Twenty-Seven: Future Tense: Indigenous Film, Pedagogy,
Promise
Michelle Raheja
V. Indigenous Peoples In and Beyond the State
Chapter Twenty-Eight: Stories as Law: A Method to Live by
Heidi Kiiwetinepinesiik Stark
Chapter Twenty-Nine: Metis in the Borderlands of the Northern
Plains in the Nineteenth Century
Brenda Macdougall and Nicole St-Onge
Chapter Thirty: Plotting Colonization and Recentering Indigenous
Actors: Approaches to and Sources for Studying the History of
Indigenous Education
Margaret D. Jacobs
Chapter Thirty-One: Laws, Codes, and Informal Practices:
Building Ethical Procedures for Historical Research with Indigenous
Medical Records
Mary Jane Logan McCallum
Chapter Thirty-Two: Toward a Post-Quincentennial Approach to the
Study of Genocide
Jeffrey Ostler
Chapter Thirty-Three: Revealing, Reporting, and Reflecting:
Indigenous Studies Research as Praxis in Reconciliation
Projects
Sheryl Lightfoot
Chris Andersen (Michif) is Professor and Interim Dean of the Faculty of Native Studies at the University of Alberta. He is the author of "Métis": Race, Recognition and the Struggle for Indigenous Peoplehood (2014).
Jean O’Brien (White Earth Ojibwe) is Distinguished McKnight University Professor of History at the University of Minnesota. She has authored five books, including Firsting and Lasting: Writing Indians Out of Existence in New England (2010).
"This book is a valuable collection of essays for anyone teaching or researching any aspect of Indigenous studies. It is an especially useful tool for young scholars who intend to work with indigenous communities, no matter what discipline they represent."Dawn Marsh, Purdue University, USA
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