Title | Date | Reference | Authors | Call # | ISSN | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
In and against the iImage of our ancestors: language, leadership, and sovereignty in the 2014 Navajo Nation Presidential Election controversy | 2021 | American Indian quarterly 45 (1): 1-32 | H6/KUB [AMERICAN-] | 0095-182X | |||
War, wampum, and recognition: Algonquin transborder political activism during the early twentieth century, 1919–193 | 2021 | American Indian quarterly 45 (1): 56-79 | H6/KUB [AMERICAN-] | 0095-182X | |||
In and against the image of our ancestors: language, leadership, and sovereignty in the 2014 Navajo Nation presidential election controversy | 2021 | American Indian quarterly 45 (1): 1-32 | H6/KUB [AMERICAN-] | 0095-182X | |||
Replaying colonialism: indigenous national sovereignty andits limits in strategic videogames | 2021 | American Indian quarterly 45 (1): 33-55 | H6/KUB [AMERICAN-] | 0095-182X | |||
War, wampum, and recognition: Algonquin transborder political activism during the early twentieth century, 1919–1931 | 2021 | American Indian quarterly 45 (1): 56-79 | H6/KUB [AMERICAN-] | 0095-182X | |||
"A very serious and perplexing grippe": the influenza of 1918 at the Haskell Institute | 2020 | American Indian quarterly 44 (1): 1-35 | H6/KUB [AMERICAN-] | 0095-182X | |||
Re-membering Cherokee justice in Ruth Muskrat Bronson's "The Serpent" | 2020 | American Indian quarterly 44 (1): 36-58 | H6/KUB [AMERICAN-] | 0095-182X | |||
NAGPRA's politics of recognition: repatriation struggles of a terminated tribe | 2020 | American Indian quarterly 44 (1): 58-85 | H6/KUB [AMERICAN-] | 0095-182X | |||
Cattle and sovereignty in the work of Sarah Winnemucca Hopkins | 2020 | American Indian quarterly 44 (1): 86-114 | H6/KUB [AMERICAN-] | 0095-182X | |||
Epistemic colonialism: is it possible to decolonize archaeology? | 2020 | American Indian quarterly 44 (2): 127-48 | H6/KUB [AMERICAN-] | 0095-182X | |||
Relationships and the creation of colonial landscapes in the eighteenth century fur trade | 2020 | American Indian quarterly 44 (2): 149-70 | H6/KUB [AMERICAN-] | 0095-182X | |||
Bridging indigenous studies and archaeology through relationality?: Collaborative research on the Chignecto Peninsula, Mi'kma'ki | 2020 | American Indian quarterly 44 (2): 171-95 | H6/KUB [AMERICAN-] | 0095-182X | |||
An indigenous archive: documenting Comanche history through rock art | 2020 | American Indian quarterly 44 (2): 196-220 | H6/KUB [AMERICAN-] | 0095-182X | |||
Refusing settler epistemologies and maintaining an indigenous future for Tolay Lake, Sonoma County, California | 2020 | American Indian quarterly 44 (2): 221-42 | H6/KUB [AMERICAN-] | 0095-182X | |||
Archaeology, historical ruptures, and Ani-Kitu Hwagi memory and knowledge | 2020 | American Indian quarterly 44 (2): 243-68 | H6/KUB [AMERICAN-] | 0095-182X | |||
Indian boarding schools tattooing experiences: resistance, power, and control through personal narratives | 2020 | American Indian quarterly 44 (3): 279-301 | H6/KUB [AMERICAN-] | 0095-182X | |||
Tribal and local government agreements: negotiating mutually beneficial terms for consideration of services | 2020 | American Indian quarterly 44 (3): 302-28 | H6/KUB [AMERICAN-] | 0095-182X | |||
“I would like to have this tribe represented”: Native performance and craft at Chicago's 1933 Century of Progress Exposition | 2020 | American Indian quarterly 44 (3): 329-61 | H6/KUB [AMERICAN-] | 0095-182X | |||
Counting Carlisle's casualties: defining student death at the Carlisle Industrial School, 1879-1918 | 2020 | American Indian quarterly 44 (2): 383-414 | H6/KUB [AMERICAN-] | 0095-182X | |||
Ceh’eČteekuu!—Listen—This is Arapaho Land | 2020 | American Indian quarterly 44 (2): 415-33 | H6/KUB [AMERICAN-] | 0095-182X | |||
“Caring for our affairs ourselves”: Stockbridge Mohican women and Indian education in early America | 2020 | American Indian quarterly 44 (2): 434-76 | H6/KUB [AMERICAN-] | 0095-182X | |||
“We need new stories” trauma, storytelling, and the mapping of environmental injustice in Linda Hogan’s Solar Storms and Standing Rock | 2019 | American Indian quarterly 43 (1): 1-35 | H6/KUB [AMERICAN-] | 0095-182X | |||
“Poetry [Film] = Anger × Imagination”. Intermediality, the synthesis of poetry and film, and cross- cultural belonging in Sherman Alexie’s The Business of Fancydancing | 2019 | American Indian quarterly 43 (1): 36-73 | H6/KUB [AMERICAN-] | 0095-182X | |||
An ethos of responsibility and indigenous women water protectors in the #NoDAPL movement | 2019 | American Indian quarterly 43 (1): 74-100 | H6/KUB [AMERICAN-] | 0095-182X | |||
Girls breaking boundaries: acculturation and self-advocacy at Chemawa Indian School, 1900–1930s | 2019 | American Indian quarterly 43 (1): 101-32 | H6/KUB [AMERICAN-] | 0095-182X | |||
How Grandma Kate lost her Cherokee blood and what this says about race, blood, and belonging in Indian Country | 2019 | American Indian quarterly 43 (2): 136-67 | H6/KUB [AMERICAN-] | 0095-182X | |||
The buffalo, the chickadee, and the eagle: a multispecies textual history of Plenty Coups' multivocal autobiography | 2019 | American Indian quarterly 43 (2): 168-203 | H6/KUB [AMERICAN-] | 0095-182X | |||
"They grow as speakers, as leaders": a case study of experiential leadership in the Miss World Eskimo-Indian olympics pageant | 2019 | American Indian quarterly 43 (2): 204-35 | H6/KUB [AMERICAN-] | 0095-182X | |||
Who lies buried in Satanta's tomb? Co-memorating a Kiowa warrior | 2019 | American Indian quarterly 43 (3): 249-80 | H6/KUB [AMERICAN-] | 0095-182X | |||
Surveying American Indians with opt-in interview surveys | 2019 | American Indian quarterly 43 (3): 281-305 | H6/KUB [AMERICAN-] | 0095-182X | |||
Can capitalism be decolonized? Recentering indigenous peoples, values, and ways of life in the Canadian art market | 2019 | American Indian quarterly 43 (3): 306-38 | H6/KUB [AMERICAN-] | 0095-182X | |||
Ironic confrontation as a mode of resistance: the homeland security T-shirt at the Dakota Access Pipeline protests | 2019 | American Indian quarterly 43 (3): 339-64 | |||||
Settled memories on stolen land: settler mythology at Canada's National Holocaust Monument | 2019 | American Indian quarterly 43 (4): 379-407 | H6/KUB [AMERICAN-] | 0095-182X | |||
Confronting cannabis: legalization on Native nation lands and the impacts of differential federal enforcement | 2019 | American Indian quarterly 43 (4): 408-38 | H6/KUB [AMERICAN-] | 0095-182X | |||
Bound for the fair: Chief Joseph, Quanah Parker, and Geronimo and the 1904 St. Louis World Fair | 2019 | American Indian quarterly 43 (4): 439-70 | H6/KUB [AMERICAN-] | 0095-182X | |||
"Guardians of the Indian image": controlling representations of indigenous cultures in television | 2018 | American Indian quarterly 42 (1): 1-42 | H6/KUB [AMERICAN-] | 0095-182X | |||
The Kootenai War of '74 | 2018 | American Indian quarterly 42 (1): 43-86 | H6/KUB [AMERICAN-] | 0095-182X | |||
Native nation building: the long emergence of the Oneida Nation Judiciary | 2018 | American Indian quarterly 42 (1): 87-116 | H6/KUB [AMERICAN-] | 0095-182X | |||
Monique Verdin's Louisiana love: an interview | 2018 | American Indian quarterly 42 (1): 117-33 | H6/KUB [AMERICAN-] | 0095-182X | |||
Communing with the dead: the "new Métis," Métis identity appropriation, and the displacement of living Métis culture | 2018 | American Indian quarterly 42 (2): 162-90 | H6/KUB [AMERICAN-] | 0095-182X | |||
All my relations: an inquiry into a spirit of a Native American philosophy of business | 2018 | American Indian quarterly 42 (2): 121-214 | H6/KUB [AMERICAN-] | 0095-182X | |||
Craig Carpenter and the neo-Indians of LONAI | 2018 | American Indian quarterly 42 (2): 215-45 | H6/KUB [AMERICAN-] | 0095-182X | |||
Inspiration for museum collections: an exhibit as a case study in building relationships between museums and indigenous artists | 2018 | American Indian quarterly 42 (2): 246-70 | H6/KUB [AMERICAN-] | 0095-182X | |||
Feeding the tribe: the role of soft infrastructure in address the root problems of the Navajo Nation San Juan River irrigation system | 2018 | American Indian quarterly 42 (3): 306-28 | H6/KUB [AMERICAN-] | 0095-182X | |||
Fighting isolation: how four Native women created change at UNC-Chapel Hill | 2018 | American Indian quarterly 42 (3): 344-74 | H6/KUB [AMERICAN-] | 0095-182X | |||
The mentoring of Miss Deloria: poetics, politics, and the test of tradition | 2018 | American Indian quarterly 42 (3): 281-305 | H6/KUB [AMERICAN-] | 0095-182X | |||
The midnight rider: the EPA and tribal self-determination | 2018 | American Indian quarterly 42 (3): 329-43 | H6/KUB [AMERICAN-] | 0095-182X | |||
Toward a Native archive: Chicago's relocation photos, Indian labor, and indigenous public text | 2018 | American Indian quarterly 42 (3): 375-410 | H6/KUB [AMERICAN-] | 0095-182X | |||
Hostile nations: quantifying the destruction of the Sullivan-Clinton genocide of 1779 | 2018 | American Indian quarterly 42 (4): 427-53 | H6/KUB [AMERICAN-] | 0095-182X | |||
A "labyrinth of uncertainties": Penobscot River islands, land assignments, and indigenous women proprietors in nineteenth-century Maine | 2018 | American Indian quarterly 42 (4): 454-87 | H6/KUB [AMERICAN-] | 0095-182X |