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Native American Music from Wounded Knee to the Billboard Charts: A Document Based Exploration
Lesson uses interviews with Pat Vegas and Redbone from the documentary Rumble: The Indians That Rocked the World as a jumping-off point to examine the U.S. government's efforts to control Native American culture by way of music.
Native American Performance and Representation
Native American Studies Collection
Native Artists: Livelihoods, Resources, Space, Gifts
The Native as Image: Art History, Nationalism, and Decolonizing Aesthetics
Native Designers of High Fashion: Expressing Identity, Creativity, and Tradition in Contemporary Customary Clothing Design
Native Noir: Genre and the Politics of Indigenous Representation in Recent American Comics
Native Pop: Bunky Echo-Hawk and Steven Paul Judd Subvert Star Wars
Native Space: Geographic Strategies to Unsettle Settler Colonialism
Never Alone: The Art and the People of the Story
New Insights from the Archives: Historicizing the Political Economy of Navajo Weaving and Wool Growing
The "Noble Savage" in American Music and Literature, 1790-1855
Northwest Coast Indian Art: An Analysis of Form (50th Anniversary Edition)
Not Your Grandfather's Horse: Automobiles Performing the Trickster in Modern and Contemporary Work by Artists from Plains Cultures
Objects of Purpose - Objects of Prayer: Peyote Boxes of the Native American Church
One Little, Two Little, Three Little Stereotypes: A History of Native Culture and Imagery in American Cinematic Cartoons
Opposing Views: The Story Of Custer's Defeat Depends On Who Is Telling It
Page 5 Chatter
Article presents three different news reports: A television series for the Aboriginal People's Television Network (APTN), Native American veterans who were illegally taxed, and the latest proroguing of the federal government causing concerns for registration as status Indians.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.5.
Paper Beadwork Cut-Outs on the Spirit Lake Reservation, North Dakota
The Paradox of Sherman Alexie's Reservation Blues
The People Have Never Stopped Dancing: Native American Modern Dance Histories
The Performance of Body, Space, and Place: Creating Indigenous Performance
[Performing Worlds into Being: Native American Women's Theater]
Plains Cree Bonnets
'Plant-in-Pot' Imagery in Native North American Decorative Art
Plundered Skulls and Stolen Spirits: Inside the Fight to Reclaim Native America's Culture
The Politics of the Camera: Visual Storytelling and Sovereignty in Victor Masayesva's Itam Hakim, Hopiit
Postindian Warrior is in the House: Voicing Survivance in Contemporary Native American Art
Powwow Fashions: Contestants Line up!
Preserving Tradition and Understanding the Past: Papers From the Conference on Iroquois Research, 2001-2005
Pushing the Needle: Collections Based Museum and Source Community Collaborations
Raven Imagery in Northwest Coast Indian Art
(Re)Inscription: Reclaiming O'odham Identities through Tattoos
Re-visualizing a History: First Nations, Children and Costuming - Exhibition
Red: The Eiteljorg Contemporary Art Fellowship
Remembering Smoke Signals: Interviews with Chris Eyre and Sherman Alexie
Repairing the Web: Spiderwoman's Children Staging the New Human Being
Residential Schools and "Reconciliation" in the Media Art of Skeena Reece and Lisa Jackson
Resource Database
[Reviews]
Revival and Community: The History and Practices of a Native American Flute Circle
Rights and Responsibilities: American Indian Collections in Cultural Museums
Rock Art in the Public Trust: Managing Prehistoric Rock Art on Federal Land
Rumble: The Indians Who Rocked the World
Documentary looks at the little-known story of Indigenous influences on and contributions to the evolution of contemporary rock and blues music. Artists profiled include Charley Patton, Mildred Bailey, Link Wray, Jesse Ed Davis, Stevie Salas, Buffy Sainte-Marie, Robbie Robertson, Randy Castillo, Jimi Hendrix, and Taboo.