|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
2004 ANNUAL MEETING 28 October - Afternoon Sessions ‹‹ previous session | schedule | next session ››
Room 1 (additional information TBA) Session Title: Citizenship, Kinship & Belonging in Native America Organizer(s)/Institution(s): ASE Program Committee Chair/Institution: TBA Discussant/Institution: TBA Participants Kenneth Lokensgard, Gettysburg College, “Reciprocity and Personhood in Blackfoot Encounters” Wilhelm Meya, Indiana University, “Early Reservation-Era Tiospaye” Richard Preston, McMaster University, “Band Formation: Persons Across Space/Through Time” Gerald Reid, Sacred Heart University, “Illegal Alien? The Case of Paul K. Diabo” Paula Renaud, Univeristy of Wyoming, “Skunk Oil, Salt Water, and Sure Fire: The Shoshone and Elijah Wilson”
Room 2 (additional information TBA) Session Title: New Perspectives on Removal & Resistance Organizer(s)/Institution(s): ASE Program Committee Chair/Institution: TBA Discussant/Institution: TBA Participants John Bowes, Dartmouth College, “A Different Indian Territory” Chantel Norrgard, University of Minnesota, “Removal, Resistance, and Remembrance: Ojibwe Responses to the Sandy Lake Tragedy” Kristina Ackley, The Evergreen State College, “‘We Are Oneida Yet’: Reframing the Oneida Land Claim”
Room 3 (additional information TBA) Session Title: Colonial Encounters: Central America, Brazil, and the Caribbean Organizer(s)/Institution(s): ASE Program Committee Chair/Institution: TBA Discussant/Institution: TBA Participants Maximilian Forte, University of Cape Breton, “The Carib Presence: Post-Colonial Re-encounters with Trinidad’s Indigenous Peoples” Robert Patch, University of California, Riverside, “Catalans, Castillans, and Ethnic Conflict in 18th Century Guatemala” Jason Yeager, University of Wisconsin, Madison, “The Changing Place of the san Pedro Maya in British Honduras” Rebecca Brienen, University of Miami, “A Savage New World: Early Representations of the Tupinamba of Brazil”
Room 4 (additional information TBA) Session Title: CIC American Indian Studies Consortium, Special Graduate Student Session Organizer(s)/Institution(s): ASE Program Committee Chair/Institution: TBA Discussant/Institution: TBA Participants Christina Gish Berndt, University of Minnesota, “Defining the Northern Cheyenne as a Nation: Responses to the U.S. Imposition of the Nation State” Jill Doerfler, University of Minnesota, “‘No, no there was no mixed bloods’: Twentieth-Century Anishinaabeg Perceptions of Identity” Brad Jarvis, University of Minnesota, “A Tedious Perplexing, and Harassing Dispute: Encounters Over Land and Sovereignty in Michigan Territory, 1820-1834” Heidi Stark, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities, Biindigodaadewin “‘To Enter Each Others’ Lodges’: Ojibwe Spiritual Practice, Political Thought, and Alliance Formation”
Room 5 (additional information TBA) Session Title: Points in Time/Issues of Space: Re-visiting the Archaeology and Ethnohistory of the East Texas and Louisiana “Caddo” Groups Organizer(s)/Institution(s): Mariah Wade, University of Texas at Austin Chair/Institution: Mariah Wade, University of Texas at Austin Discussant/Institution: J. Daniel Rodgers, Smithsonian Institution Participants Mariah Wade PhD, University of Texas, Austin, “Casanas, Hidalgo, and Espinosa: A Spanish Learning Curve” Clay T. Schutz, University of Texas, Austin, “Space and Place: Architectural Space and Caddoan Cultural Practices” George Sabo III PhD, University of Texas, Austin, “The Teran Map and the Seventeenth Century Caddo World” Shawn P. Marceaux, University of Texas, Austin, “Early French and Spanish Policies Among Caddoan Polities” James Brown, PhD, Northwestern University, “Whence the Caddo North of the Red River”
Room 6 (additional information TBA) Session Title: Ethnohistorical Perspectives on Dakota and Lakota Religion Christina Burke, Indiana University, “Drawing Power: Graphic Representations of Lakota Rituals and Visions” Carolyn R. Anderson, St. Olaf College, “Reconstructing Nineteenth-Century Dakota Religious Belief and Practice” Rani-Henrik Andersson, Indiana University, “The Ghost Dance of 1890 and the Traditional Lakota Belief System” Raymond J. DeMallie, Indiana University, “‘There Is Nothing to Pray to but You’: Historical Changes in the Conception of Prayer in Lakota Culture” Dennis Christafferson, Indiana University, “‘You Know How Indians Are’: The Ambivalent Attitudes of Episcopal Missionaries Toward Sioux Clergy”
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| ››› back to top of page ‹‹‹ | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||