Introduction: Urban American Indian Women's Activism
It Consumes What It Forgets
"It's Just a Social Obligation. You Could Say 'No'!": Cultural and Religious Barriers of American Indian Faculty in the Academy
Jump Kiss: An Indian Legend
Leslie Marmon Silko's Ceremony as a Viable Path of Resistance and Agency
The Low Self-Esteem Indian Stereotype: Positive Self-Regard Among Indigenous Peoples of the United States
"Maybe You Only Look White": Ethnic Authority and Indian Authenticity in Academia
The Meaning of Place at Blackrock: Change and Identity on the Zuni Indian Reservation
Medicine Dream: Contemporary Native Music and Issues of Identity
Mending Baskets: The Process of Using Indigenous Epistemology to Reinterpret Sacagawea
Missionaries and American Indian Languages
Molecular Death and Redface Reincarnation: Indigenous Appropriations in the US and Canada
Speakers discuss the issue of who and what defines Indigenous identity, settler-state's practice of imposing their definitions, the phenomenon of "playing Indian", and broader social interpretations of court decisions such as Daniels.
Duration: 1:59:35. Presentations are part of the conference "Daniels: In and Beyond the Law" held at University of Alberta, Jan. 26-27, 2017.
"Much of the Indian Appears": Adaptation and Persistence in a Creek Community, 1783-1854
Native American Fashion: Inspiration, Appropriation, and Cultural Identity
Native American Identities Among Women Prisoners
Native American Identity: A Review of Twenty-first Century Research
Native Claims: Immigrant Anxieties, American Indians, and American Modernisms
Not Strangers in These Parts: Urban Aboriginal Peoples
Of the Heart: Scoping Review of Indigenous Youth Suicide and Prevention
An Offering: Lakota Elders Contributions to the Future of Food Security
Ohio Is Not without Its Share of Problems
The Ohlone/Costanoan-Esselen Nation of Monterey, California: Dispossession, Federal Neglect, and the Bitter Irony of the Federal Acknowledgment Process
Our Identities as Civic Power
Reports on the results of the Generation Indigenous (Gen-I) Online Roundtable Survey of Native American youth between the ages 18-24. Respondents were asked about their three top priorities, what they are doing to tackle their challenges, and some of the ways they are partnering with their community to build resilience.
Our Stolen Grandmother: The Entanglement of Slavery and Colonization in Anna Lee Walters's Ghost Singer
'Patriarchal Colonialism' and Indigenism: Implications for Native Feminist Spirituality and Native Womanism
Public Perceptions and the Importance of Community: Observations from a California Indian Who Has Lived, Learned, and Taught in Indiana, Oklahoma, and Wyoming
(Re)Inscription: Reclaiming O'odham Identities through Tattoos
Reconciling America's Research Response to Binge Drinking
among American Indians and Alaskan Natives
Reconnoitering "Pueblo" Ethnicity: The 1852 Tesuque Delegation to Washington
Redskins: Insult and Brand
Reimagining Community: Intertribal Relations on the Northern Plains, 1885-1925
Returning the People to the Circle: An Overview on Overcoming the Fracturing of American Indian Communities
"Riel … vivra dans notre histoire": The Response of French Canadians in the United States to Louis Riel's Execution
A Room without a View from within the Ivory Tower
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.