Wicazo Sa Review
Association for American Indian Research
During the past two decades, Native American Studies has emerged as a central arena in which Native American populations in the United States define the cultural, religious, legal, and historical parameters of scholarship and creativity essential for survival in the modern world. Founded in 1985, Wicazo Sa Review is a journal in support of this particular type of scholarship, providing inquiries into the Indian past and its relationship to the vital present. Its aim is to become an interdisciplinary instrument to assist indigenous peoples of the Americas in taking possession of their own intellectual and creative pursuits.
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Volume 27 - Issue 2
Contents
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Table of Contents, Volume 27 - Issue 2
- Articles
- A Healing Journey
- Rerighting The Historical Record: Violence Against Native Women And The South Dakota Coalition Against Domestic Violence And Sexual Assault
- Interdisciplinarity, Native Resilience, and How the Riddles Can Teach Wildlife Law in an Era of Rapid Climate Change
- The Autoethnography of William Whipple Warren
- Culturally Appropriate Evaluation of Tribally-Based Suicide Prevention Programs: A Review of Current Approaches
- The Assassination of Hole in the Day by Anton Treuer
- Plagues, Politics, and Policy: A Chronicle of the Indian Health Service, 1955-2008 by by David H. DeJong
- Reviews
- White Man’s Water: The Politics of Sobriety in a Native American Community by Erica Prussing
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Volume 27 - Issue 1
Contents
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Table of Contents, Volume 27 - Issue 1
- Introduction
- Guest Editor’s Introduction: Curatorial Practice and Native North American Art
- Articles
- Indigenous Curatorial Practices and Methodologies
- This Place Called Home: Curating from an Insider’s Perspective
- Moving Beyond the Expected: Representation and Presence in a Contemporary Native Arts Museum
- Unexpected Parallels: Commonalities between Native American and Outsider Arts
- Sundays with Harry: An Essay on a Contemporary Native Artist of Our Time
- Reading Beneath the Surface: Joe Feddersen’s Parking Lot
- American Indian Art: Teaching and Learning
- No Word for Art in Our Language? Old Questions, New Paradigms
- In the Courts of the Conqueror: The 10 Worst Indian Law Cases Ever Decided by Walter R. Echo-Hawk
- Reviews
- The Death of Raymond Yellow Thunder, and Other True Stories from the Nebraska–Pine Ridge Border Towns by Stew Magnuson
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Volume 26 - Issue 1
Contents
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Table of Contents, Volume 26 - Issue 1
- Articles
- Contesting Scientists’ Narrations of NAGPRA’s Legislative History: Rule 10.11 and the Recovery of “Culturally Unidentifiable” Ancestors
- Tutelo Heights Short-Term “Two Row” Lessons Central to Long-Term Mediation in the Grand River Valley
- “We’re Taking the Genius of Sequoyah into This Century”: The Cherokee Syllabary, Peoplehood, and Perserverance
- The Legacy of Little Wolf: Rewriting and Rerighting Our Leaders Back into History
- Insurgent Research
- The Color of the Land: Race, Nation, and the Politics of Landownership in Oklahoma, 1832-1929 by David Chang
- Unearthing Indian Land: Living with Legacies of Allotment by Kristin T. Ruppel
- Seeking Recognition: The Termination and Restoration of the Coos, Lower Umpqua, and Siuslaw Indians, 1855-1984 by David R. M. Beck
- Navajo Courts and Navajo Common Law: A Tradition of Tribal Self-Governance by Raymond D. Austin
- Reviews
- Lumbee Indians in the Jim Crow South: Race, Identity, and the Making of a Nation by Malinda Maynor Lowery
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Volume 25 - Issue 1
Contents
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Table of Contents, Volume 25 - Issue 1
- Editor’s Commentary
- Editor’s Commentary
- The State of Indigenous America Series
- Ten Indian Health Policy Challenges for the New Administration in 2009
- Articles
- Native Historians Write Back: The Indigenous Paradigm in American Indian Historiography
- Identifying and Understanding Indigenous Cultural and Spiritual Strengths in the Higher Education Experiences of Indigenous Women
- Humor and Healing in the Non-Fiction Works of Jim Northrup
- Hopi Sovereignty as Epistemological Limit
- Ruling Pine Ridge: Oglala Lakota Politics from the IRA to Wounded Knee by Akim D. Reinhardt
- Rance Hood: Mystic Painter by James J. Hester and Rance Hood
- How It Is: The Native American Philosophy of V. F. Cordova edited by Kathleen Dean Moore, Kurt Peters, Ted Jojola, and Amber Lacey, with a foreword by Linda Hogan
- The Sioux in South Dakota History edited by Richmond L. Clow
- Patterns of Exchange: Navajo Weavers and Traders by Teresa Wilkins
- Race and the Cherokee Nation: Sovereignty in the Nineteenth Century by Fay A. Yarbrough
- Reviews
- Opening Archaeology: Repatriation’s Impact on Contemporary Research and Practice edited by Thomas Killion
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Volume 24 - Issue 2
Contents
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Table of Contents, Volume 24 - Issue 2
- Editor’s Commentary
- Editor’s Commentary
- Guest Editors’ Introduction
- Guest Editors’ Introduction
- Articles
- Navigating Our Own “Sea of Islands:” Remapping a Theoretical Space for Hawaiian Women
- From the “F” Word to Indigenous/Feminisms
- Felt Theory: An Indigenous Feminist Approach to Affect and History
- Henry Roe Cloud: A Granddaughter’s Native Feminist Biographical Account
- Captivating Eunice: Membership, Colonialism, and Gendered Citizenships of Grief
- Securing the Navajo National Boundaries: War, Patriotism, Tradition, and the Diné Marriage Act of 2005
- Decolonizing Rape Law: A Native Feminist Synthesis of Safety and Sovereignty
- Notes Toward a Native Feminism’s Spatial Practice
- What Does Justice Look Like? The Struggle for Liberation in Dakota Homeland by Waziyatawin
- Native Hubs: Culture, Community, and Belonging in Silicon Valley and Beyond by Reyna K. Ramirez
- Tribal Theory in Native American Literature: Dakota and Haudenosaunee Writing and Indigenous Worldviews by Penelope Myrtle Kelsey
- Writing Home: Indigenous Narratives of Resistance by Michael Wilson
- Reviews
- American Indian Politics and the American Political System, 2nd Edition by David E. Wilkins
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Volume 24 - Issue 1
Contents
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Table of Contents, Volume 24 - Issue 1
- Editor’s Commentary
- Editor’s Commentary
- The State of Indigenous America Series
- Ten Indian Health Policy Challenges for the New Administration in 2009
- Articles
- Native Historians Write Back: The Indigenous Paradigm in American Indian Historiography
- Identifying and Understanding Indigenous Cultural and Spiritual Strengths in the Higher Education Experiences of Indigenous Women
- Humor and Healing in the Non-Fiction Works of Jim Northrup
- Hopi Sovereignty as Epistemological Limit
- Ruling Pine Ridge: Oglala Lakota Politics from the IRA to Wounded Knee by Akim D. Reinhardt
- Rance Hood: Mystic Painter by James J. Hester and Rance Hood
- How It Is: The Native American Philosophy of V. F. Cordova edited by Kathleen Dean Moore, Kurt Peters, Ted Jojola, and Amber Lacey, with a foreword by Linda Hogan
- The Sioux in South Dakota History edited by Richmond L. Clow
- Patterns of Exchange: Navajo Weavers and Traders by Teresa Wilkins
- Race and the Cherokee Nation: Sovereignty in the Nineteenth Century by Fay A. Yarbrough
- Reviews
- Opening Archaeology: Repatriation’s Impact on Contemporary Research and Practice edited by Thomas Killion
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Volume 23 - Issue 2
Contents
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Table of Contents, Volume 23 - Issue 2
- Editor’s Commentary
- Editor’s Commentary
- Articles
- Native America Writes Back: The Origin of the Indigenous Paradigm in Historiography
- Looking After Gdoo-naaganinaa: Precolonial Nishnaabeg Diplomatic and Treaty Relationships
- Culture as Prevention: Assisting High-Risk Youth in the Omaha Nation
- Is American Indian Studies for Real?
- The Future of American Indian Studies in the Time of Global Warming
- American Indian Studies Association–Student Association
- The People Have Never Stopped Dancing: Native American Modern Dance Histories by Jacqueline Shea Murphy
- The World We Used to Live In: Remembering the Powers of the Medicine Men by Vine Deloria Jr.
- Architect of Justice: Felix S. Cohen and the Founding of American Legal Pluralism by Dalia Tsuk Mitchell
- Matter, Magic, and Spirit: Representing Indian and African American Belief by David Murray
- Sacred Claims: Repatriation and Living Tradition by Greg Johnson
- Apocalypto directed by Mel Gibson
- Selected Papers from the Ninth Annual American Indian Studies Association Conference
- Presidential Address: American Indian Studies: Our Challenges
- Reviews
- New Indians, Old Wars by Elizabeth Cook-Lynn
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Volume 23 - Issue 1
Contents
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Table of Contents, Volume 23 - Issue 1
- Editor’s Commentary
- Editor’s Commentary
- Articles
- One-Sided Interest Convergence: Indian Sovereignty in Organizing and Litigation
- Thief, Slave Trader, Murderer: Christopher Columbus and Caribbean Population Decline
- The Peoplehood Matrix: A New Theory for American Indian Literature
- The Searchers and Navajos: John Ford’s Retake on the Hollywood Indian
- Not Just the Peace Pipe but also the Lance: Exploring Different Possibilities for Indigenous Control over Criminal Justice
- Teaching Smoke Signals: Fatherhood, Forgiveness, and “Freedom”
- Drinking and Sobriety among the Lakota Sioux by Beatrice Medicine
- Deadliest Enemies: Law and the Making of Race Relations on and off Rosebud Reservation by Thomas Biolsi and Not Without Our Consent: Lakota Resistance to Termination, 1950–59 by Edward Charles Valandra
- Buffalo Nation: American Indian Efforts to Restore the Bison by Ken Zontek
- Poem
- To the Disappearance:
- Reviews
- Wisconsin Indian Literature: Anthology of Native Voices by Kathleen Tigerman
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Volume 22 - Issue 2
Contents
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Table of Contents, Volume 22 - Issue 2
- Editor’s Commentary
- Editor’s Commentary
- Articles
- Speaking Sovereignty: Indigenous Languages and Self-Determination
- Reflections on Historical and Contemporary Indigenist Approaches to Environmental Ethics in a Comparative Context
- “The Sword of Damocles?” The Gila River Indian Community Water Settlement Act of 2004 in Historical Perspective
- “No Place to Go”: The Thomas Indian School and the “Forgotten” Indian Children of New York
- Watching Navajos Watch Themselves
- For Indigenous Eyes Only: A Decolonization Handbook edited by Waziyatawin Angela Wilson and Michael Yellow Bird
- Reviews
- Native American Voices on Identity, Art, and Culture: Objects of Everlasting Esteem edited by Lucy Fowler Williams, William S. Wierzbowski, and Robert W. Preucel
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Volume 22 - Issue 1
Contents
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Table of Contents, Volume 22 - Issue 1
- Guest Editor's Commentary
- Guest Editor's Commentary
- Articles
- "If They Want Navajo to Be Learned, Then They Should Require It in All Schools": Navajo Teenagers’ Experiences, Choices, and Demands Regarding Navajo Language
- Native Teacher Understanding of Culture as a Concept for Curricular Inclusion
- The Future of Navajo Nationalism
- Contemporary Navajo Writers’ Relevance to Navajo Society
- Hwéeldi Bééhániih: Remembering the Long Walk
- On the Justice of Charging Buffalo: “Who Stole American Indians Studies?” Redux
- Remember This! Dakota Decolonization and the Eli Taylor Narratives by Waziyatawin Angela Wilson In the Footsteps of Our Ancestors, edited by Waziyatawin Angela Wilson The People and the Word: Reading Native Nonfiction by Robert Warrior
- History Is in the Land: Multivocal Tribal Traditions in Arizona’s San Pedro Valley by T. J. Freguson and Chip Colwell-Chanthaphonh
- Writing the Cross Culture: Native Fiction on the White Man’s Religion, edited by James Treat
- Justice as Healing: Indigenous Ways, edited by Wanda D. McCaslin
- Wasáse: Indigenous Pathways of Action and Freedom by Taiaiake Alfred
- Special Discussion: Competing Viewpoints about Ward Churchill and American Indian Studies
- Scandal
- Reviews
- Decolonization Matters: Featured Review Essay
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Volume 21 - Issue 1
Contents
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Table of Contents, Volume 21 - Issue 1
- Editor's Commentary
- Editor's Commentary
- Articles
- Chairmen, Presidents, and Princesses: The Navajo Nation, Gender, and the Politics of Tradition
- The Web of Justice: Restorative Justice Has Presented Only Part of the Story
- Almost Invisible: The Brotherhood of North American Indians (1911) and the League of North American Indians (1935)
- Making Peace with Crow Dog's Ghost: Racialized Prosecution in Federal Indian Law
- Indigenous Bodies in Colonial Courts: Anthropoligcal Science and the (Physical) Laws of the Remaining Human
- "Never Again": Kevin Gover's Apology for the Bureau of Indian Affairs
- "Indigenizing the Academy": Keynote Talk at the Sixth Annual American Indian Studies Consortium Conference, Arizona State University, February 10–11, 2005
- To Show What an Indian Can Do: Sports at Native American Boarding Schools by John Bloom
- Reviews
- Coacoochee's Bones: A Seminole Saga by Susan A. Miller
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Volume 20 - Issue 2
Contents
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Table of Contents, Volume 20 - Issue 2
- Editor's Commentary
- Editor's Commentary
- Reflecting on Twenty Years of the Wicazo Sa Review
- An Origin Story
- From Sovereignty to Minority: As American as Apple Pie
- Sovereign Decisions: A Plan for Defeating Federal Review of Tribal Law Applications
- "White Man Has No Right to Take Any of It": Secwepemc Water-Rights Struggles in British Columbia
- The As-Told-To Native [Auto]biography: Whose Voice Is Speaking?
- Teaching American Indian Studies to Reflect American Indian Ways of Knowing and to Interrupt Cycles of Genocide
- The Missing directed by Ron Howard
- Articles
- The Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (1990): Where the Native Voice Is Missing
- Reviews
- Battle for the BIA: G. E. E. Lindquist and the Missionary Crusade against John Collier by David W. Daily
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Volume 19 - Issue 1
Contents
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Table of Contents, Volume 19 - Issue 1
- Editor's Commentary
- Editor's Commentary
- Articles
- The Beginning and the End: Lewis and Clark among the Upper Missouri River People
- The Lewis and Clark Story, the Captive Narrative, and the Pitfalls of Indian History
- Wahtohtana héda Ñyut^achi Mahín Xánje Akípa: The Year the Otoe and Missouria Meet the Americans
- Lewis and Clark among the Tetons: Smoking Out What Really Happened
- Now I Will Speak (Nawah Ti Waako’): A Sahnish Perspective on What the Lewis and Clark Expedition and Others Missed
- Voyage of Domination, “Purchase” as Conquest, Sakakawea for Savagery: Distorted Icons from Misrepresentations of the Lewis and Clark Expedition
- Medical Diplomacy and the American Indian: Thomas Jefferson, the Lewis and Clark Expedition, and the Subsequent Effects on American Indian Health and Public Policy
- Indians Want Their Side Told during Lewis and Clark Bicentennial
- Special Features
- Lewis and Clark Journey: The Renaming of a Nation
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Volume 18 - Issue 2
Contents
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Table of Contents, Volume 18 - Issue 2
- Editor's Commentary
- Editor's Commentary
- Articles
- Lewis Cass and the Politics of Disease: The Indian Vaccination Act of 1832
- The Problem of The “White Indians” of the United States
- The Ohlone/Costanoan–Esselen Nation of Monterey, California: Dispossession, Federal Neglect, and the Bitter Irony of the Federal Acknowledgement Process
- Unacknowledged Tribes, Dangerous Knowledge: The Muwekma Ohlone and How Indian Identities are “Known”
- “What It Must Have Been Like!”: Critical Considerations of Pre-Contact Ohlone Cosmology as Interpreted Through Central California Ethnohistory
- Cultural Sovereignty and Native American Hermeneutics in the Interpretation of the Sacred Stories of the Anishinaabe
- Justice, Law, and the Lens of Culture
- One Vote Is Worth More Than a Thousand Words: Ethnic Identity and Political Change in Huehuetla, Puebla
- Review Essay
- In the Bear’s House and The Indolent Boys: N. Scott Momaday on Old Bears and American Indian Boarding Schools
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Volume 18 - Issue 1
Contents
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Table of Contents, Volume 18 - Issue 1
- Editor's Commentary
- Editor's Commentary
- Articles
- Peoplehood: A Model for the Extension of Sovereignty in American Indian Studies
- Indian ™ USA
- DNA, Blood, and Racializing the Tribe
- The Politics of Scientific Objections to Repatriation
- She Bathes in a Sacred Place: Rites of Reciprocity, Power, and Prestige in Alta California
- Rohonas and Spotted Lions: The Historical and Cultural Occurrence of the Jaguar, Panthera onca, Among the Native Tribes of the American Southwest
- Madonna Of The Maquiladora, by Gregory Frost
- Kinaalda: A Navajo Rite of Passage, a film by Lena Carr
- Film and Book Reviews
- Democracia Indigenia: Municipal Elections in Huehuelta, Puebla, Mexico, a video by Pacho Lane and Albert Wahrhaftig
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Volume 17 - Issue 2
Contents
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Table of Contents, Volume 17 - Issue 2
- Articles
- Editor's Commentary
- Rhetoric and American Indians
- Numipu Among the White Settlers
- An Ideographic Analysis of American Indian Sovereignty in the State of Utah: Enabling Denotative Dissonance and Constructing Irreconcilable Conflict
- Nunavut: The Construction of a Regional Collective Identity in the Canadian Arctic
- The Monacan Indian Nation: Asserting Tribal Sovereignty in the Absence of Federal Recognition
- Developing a Voice: The Evolution of Self Determination in an Urban Indian Community
- Without Treaty, without Conquest: Indigenous Sovereignty in Post-Delgamuukw British Columbia
- From Clan to Kwáan to Corporation: The Continuing Complex Evolution of Tlingit Political Organization
- Give Me My Father's Body: The Life of Minik, the New York Eskimo by Kenn Harper; The Riddle of the Bones: Politics, Science, Race, and the Story of Kennewick Man by Roger Downey; Skulls Wars: Kennewick Man, Archaeology, and the Battle for Native American Identity by David Hurst Thomas; The Settlement of the Americas: A New Prehistory by Thomas D. Dillehay
- Without Reservation by Jeff Benedict
- Book Reviews
- A Story as Sharp as a Knife: The Classical Haida Mythtellers and Their World by Robert Bringhurst; Nine Visits to the Mythworld by Ghandl of the Qayahl Llaanas, translated by Robert Bringhurst
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Volume 17 - Issue 1
Contents
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Table of Contents, Volume 17 - Issue 1
- Editor's Commentary
- Editor's Commentary
- Articles
- Rhetoric and American Indians
- Annoted Bibliograpy of the Basic Literature Needed for an Understanding of Tribal Governance
- The Great Sioux Supreme Court
- United States v. Yellow Sun et al. (The Pawnee People): A Case Study of Institutional and Societal Racism and U.S. Justice in Nebraska from the 1850s to 1870s
- Numipu among The White Settlers
- Governance Within the Dine Nation: Have Democratic Traditions Taken Hold?
- Ramona Redeemed: The Rise of Tribal Political Power in California
- Welfare Reform On Rosebud Reservation: Implications For Tribal Policy
- The Border Crossed Us: Border Crossing Issues of the Indigenous Peoples of the Americas
- An Ideographic Analysis of American Indian Sovereignty in the State of Utah: Enabling Denotative Dissonance and Constructing Irreconcilable Conflict
- Aboriginal Land Claims and Self-Government in Canada's North
- The Political Participation of Inuit Women in the Government of Nunavut
- Without Treaty, Without Conquest: The Reassertion of Sovereignty in Post-Delgamuukw British Columbia
- Developing a Voice: The Evolution of Self-Determination in an Urban Indian Community
- Monacan Indian Nation
- From Clan to Kwan to Corporation: The Continuing Complex Evolution of Tlingit Political Organization
- Tribes, Treaties, and Constitutional Tribulations, by Vine Deloria Jr. and David E. Wilkins
- Book Reviews
- All Our Relations: Native Struggles for Land and Life, by Winona LaDuke
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Volume 16 - Issue 2
Contents
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Table of Contents, Volume 16 - Issue 2
- Guest Editors' Introduction
- Guest Editors' Introduction
- Articles
- Indian Summer
- Localism and Low Power Television on the Flathead Indian Reservation
- Images of Native People as Seen Through the Eyes of the Blackbird
- Video América Indigena/Video Native America
- Rhetorical Dimensions of Native American Documentary
- Old Cowboys, New Indians: Hollywood Frames the American Indian Movement
- The Best of Both Worlds: Otherness, Appropriation, and Identity in "Thunderheart"
- An Interview with Robert J. Conley
- Smoke or Signals?: American Popular Culture and the Challenge to Hegemonic Images of American Indians in Native American Film
- The Toughest Indian in the World, by Sherman Alexie and Women on the Run, by Janet Campbell Hale
- One Stick Song, by Sherman Alexie
- Your Story Will Be Told, by Roberta Hill
- The Heartsong of Charging Elk, by James Welch
- Teaching Sherman Alexie's Reservation Blues
- Chihuly's Pendletons and Their Influences on His Work, by Dale Chihuly
- Rooted in Barbarous Soil. People, Culture, and Community in Gold Rush California, by Kevin Starr and Richard J. Orsi, editors
- The Last of the Ofos, by Geary Hobson
- Video and Book Reviews
- "Hand Game": The Native North American Game of Power and Chance, a video by Lawrence Johnson
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Volume 16 - Issue 1
Contents
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Table of Contents, Volume 16 - Issue 1
- Editor's Commentary and Acknowledgments
- Editor's Commentary and Acknowledgments
- Articles
- The Diabetic Plague in Indian Country: Legacy of Displacement
- Pain Management and Health Policy in a Western Washington Indian Tribe
- Sociodemographic and Health Care System Factors Influencing Cervical Cancer Screening among Young American Indian Women
- Child Sexual Abuse and HIV/AIDS in Indian Country
- Access and Barriers to Food Items and Food Preparation among Plains Indians
- Improved Health Status for Native Hawaiians: Not Just What the Doctor Ordered
- A Pilot Study to Assess the Health Needs and Statuses among a Segment of the Adult American Indian Population of Los Angeles
- Major Health Issues among Female Alaska Natives
- Conducting Sacred Research: An Indigenous Experience
- Risk and Protective Factors for Depression and Health Outcomes in American Indian and Alaska Native Adolescents
- The Challenges of Medicaid Managed Care for Native Americans
- Drinking, Conduct Disorder, and Social Change: Navajo Experiences, by Stephen J. Kunitz and Jerrold E. Levy
- "A Political History of the Indian Health Service," by Abraham B. Bergman, David C. Grossman, Angela M. Erdrich, John C. Todd, and Ralph Forquera.
- Skull Wars: Kennewick Man, Archaeology, and the Battle for Native American Identity, by David Hurst Thomas.
- Reviews
- Primary Care of Native American Patients: Diagnosis, Therapy, and Epidemiology, edited by James M. Galloway, M.D., Bruce W. Goldberg, M.D., and Joseph S. Alpert, M.D.
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Volume 15 - Issue 2
Contents
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Table of Contents, Volume 15 - Issue 2
- Editor's Commentary
- Editor's Commentary
- Articles
- Anna Lee Walters' Ghost Singer Links Native Diasporas in Time and Space: An Anthropology of Late Capitalism
- Something Wicked This Way Comes: Warnings by Simon Ortiz and Martin Cruz Smith
- Joy Harjo and Her Poetics as Praxis: A "Postcolonial" Political Economy of the Body, Land, Labor, and Language
- The Ecological Politics of Leslie Silko's Almanac of the Dead
- The Real Thing: An Essay on Authenticity
- How Scholarship Defames the Native Voice . . . and Why
- Lady Luck or Mother Earth? Gaming as a Trope in Plains Indian Cultural Traditions
- There is No Word for Feminism in My Language
- For We Are the Children of the Stars
- Old Snake's Beautiful Daughter Has Come Home. Gardens in the Dunes by Leslie Marmon Silko
- On the Rez By Ian Frazier
- Indigenous Aesthetics: Native Art, Media, and Identity, by Steven Leuthold
- Madchild Running, by Keith Egawa
- At the Desert's Green Edge, by Amadeo Rea
- Zolbrod and the Sacred. Review of Reading the Voice, Native American Oral Poetry on the Written Page by Paul Zolbrod
- Books On This Desk: Brief Reviews
- Reviews
- Writing Into the Political Winds. Aurelia: A Crow Creek Trilogy, Elizabeth Cook-Lynn