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2002 ANNUAL MEETING

19 October - Morning Session

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New Approaches to Southeastern Indian Social Organization and Power in the Eighteenth Century

Organisatrice/Organizer: Patricia Galloway, University of Texas-Austin

Présidente/Chair: Clara Sue Kidwell, University of Oklahoma

9:00-10:30 Salle/Room Dufour I

9:00 Robbie Ethridge, The Chickasaw Red/White Moiety System and the Struggle for Position in the Colonial Economy

9:20 Greg O’Brien, Creative Energies: The Role of Spiritual Power in Pre-1800 Southeastern Indian Life

9:40 Patricia Galloway, University of Texas-Austin, Eighteenth-Century Choctaw Chiefs, Dual Organization, and the Exploration of Social Design Space

10:00 Commentateur/Discussant: Frederic W. Gleach, Cornell University

 


 

Native American Concepts of Space and Memory

Organisateur/Organizer: Program Committee

Président/Chair: Georges Sioui, Kanatha Publishing, Huron Village (Wendake)

10:30-12:15 Salle/Room Dufour I

10:30 Barbara Belyea, University of Calgary, Fidler, Clark, and Cartographic Acculturation

10:50 Kreg T. Ettenger, Syracuse University, Cree Place Names and Myths as Evidence of Past Use and Occupancy: The Offshore Islands of Eastern James Bay

11:10 Ian Chambers, University of California, Riverside, Spiral History and Bifocal Time

11:30 Georges Sioui, Kanatha Publishing, Huron Village (Wendake), On Amerindian Tradition: the Modern Politics of Autonomy and the Aboriginal Desire of Making a Life Together with the Newcomers

11:50 Commentateur/Discussant: TBD

 


 

Southeastern Native and Ethnic Women: Crafting Objects, Traditions, and Myths

Organisateur/Organizer: Betty J. Duggan, Peabody Museum, Harvard University

Président/Chair: Betty J. Duggan/Peabody Museum, Harvard University

9:00-12:10 Salle/Room Dufour II

9:00 Rowena McClinton, University of Illinois, Edwardsville, Cherokee Women as Cultural Preservationists

9:20 Tiya Miles, University of Michigan, Slavery, Race and Constructions of Womanhood in the 19th-Century Cherokee South

9:40 Heidi Altman, University of California, Davis, Women in Cherokee Fishing

10:00 Betty J. Duggan, Peabody Museum, Harvard University, Weavers of Traditions: Native and Non-Native Women Sustaining the Art and Artistry of Chitimacha Basketry

10:20 Pause/Break (Café-bar l'Emprise)

10:40 Melissa D. Hargrove, University of Tennessee, “Enlightening Gullah and Geechee Chilluns”: Sweetgrass Basketry as a Treasured Legacy

11:00 Elliotte Draegor, University of Connecticut, An Authentic Town: Tourism, Land and the Aquinnah Wampanoag of Martha's Vineyard, 1870-1900

11:20 Kathy M'Closkey, University of Windsor, Double Jeopardy: Navajo Weavers, Reservation Traders and the Spectre of Free Trade

11:40 Commentateur/Discussant: Raymond D. Fogelson, University of Chicago

 


 

European Copper Recontextualized

Organisateurs/Organizers: Laurier Turgeon, Université Laval (Quebec City) and Alexandra Gaba-van Dongen, Boijmans Van Beuningen Museum (Rotterdam)

Président/Chair: Bruce Bourque, Bates College

10:00-12:00 Salle/Room Drapeau

10:00 Alexandra Gaba-van Dongen, Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen, Rotterdam, The Inexhaustible Kettles: Some Social Routes of 17th Century Dutch Copper/Brass Kettles in Holland and North America

10:20 Lisa M. Anselmi, University of Toronto, Analysis of the Copper-based Metal Assemblage from the Wendat/Huron Auger Site, Medonte Township, Simcoe County, Ontario

10:40 Pause/Break (Café-bar l'Empire)

11:00 Jean-François Moreau, Université du Québec à Chicoutimi; Gordon Hancock, University of Toronto, Riveting Copper Based Kettles: The Contribution of Neutron Activation to Ethnohistory

11:20 Kathleen L. Ehrhardt, New York University, A View from the “Frontier”: Protohistoric Illinois Appropriation of European-derived Copper-based Metals

11:40 Commentateur/Discussant: Laurier Turgeon, Université Laval

 


 

Empires coloniaux et nations autochtones, xviie-xixe siècles

Organisateur/Organizer: Alain Beaulieu, Université du Québec à Montréal

Président/Chair: TBD

9:00-11:00 Salle/Room 108

9:00 Denys Delâge, Université Laval, Modèles coloniaux français et anglais en Amérique du Nord

9:20 Gilles Havard, chercheur associé au CNRS (Paris), Empire ou empire du milieu? Les métissages franco-indiens

9:40 Pause/Break (Café-bar l'Empire)

10:00 Jean-Pierre Sawaya, Université du Québec à Montréal, Les Sept-Nations du Canada et leurs revendications territoriales (1765-1774)

10:20 Alain Beaulieu, Université du Québec à Montréal, Le «grand plat» de la discorde: les Sept-Nations et le partage des territoires de chasse (1790-1840)

10:40 Commentateur/Discussant: TBD


 

Writing Indigenous Histories From Colonial Sources

Organisateur/Organizer: Program Committee

Président/Chair: Nancy Shoemaker, University of Connecticut, Storrs

9:00-11:20 Salle/Room 115

9:00 Theresa Schenck, University of Wisconsin, Madison, Using French Records to Illuminate Ojibwa History

9:20 Cath Oberholtzer, Trent University, The Unknown Image Makers of Rupert's Land

9:40 Christianne Stephens, University of Western Ontario, At the Crossroads of Etiology and Etymology: Problematizing Disease Nomenclature in Historic and Ethnohistoric Sources

10:00 Pause/Break (Café-bar l'Emprise)

10:20 Cathy Ann Trotta, Northern Arizona University, Indigenous and Ethnographic Remembrances of the

19thcentury Small Pox and other Viral Epidemics in the Southwest, U.S.

10:40 Bruce J. Bourque, Bates College, Abenakis, Canibas and the Cadillac Memoir

11:00 Commentateur/Discussant: Nancy Shoemaker, University of Connecticut, Storrs

 


 

Video Session

11:20 Donald Jeannotte, Coordonnateur en recherche, Mi’gmawei Mawiomi Secretariat, Mi'gmaq du Gespe'gewa'gi

11:40 Stéphanie Chaffray, Université de Paris IV–Sorbonne, Le Cercle sacré

11:20-12:00 Salle/Room 115