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2007 ANNUAL MEETING
9 November - Morning Session 8:30-10:15
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Session 31: Shifting Identities: Voluntary and Involuntary Constructions and Representations
Organizer: Dawn Marsh Riggs
Chair: Stephen Warren, Augustana College
Discussant: Dr. Dawn Marsh Riggs
From Iroquois Women to English Children: The Lenape and the Attempt to Create a New Diplomatic Identity
Roger M. Carpenter, University of Louisiana, Monroe
Nations, Migration and the Montana Metis, 1900-1950
Delia Hagen, University of California, Berkeley
“Passed From History as a Tribe”: Early Missouri Land Records and Shawnee Indian Migration, 1787-1821
Stephen A. Martin, University of Oklahoma
Finding Quiemuth: The Politics of Memory, Justice and Law in South Puget Sound
Lisa Blee, University of Minnesota
Session 32: Defining “The People:” Creative Approaches to Indigenous Identity
Organizer(s): Ethan A. Schmidt-Texas Tech University and Katrina Jagodinsky-University of
Arizona
Chair: Donald Fixico-Arizona State University
Discussant: K. Tsianina Lomawaima-University of Arizona
Realignment, Relocation, Refuge, and Resistance on the Mid-Atlantic and Southeastern Frontiers, 1676-1768
Ethan A. Schmidt, Texas Tech University
Embodied Citizenship: Tribal Expressions of Citizenship Identity in Early Twentieth-Century Arizona.
Katrina Jagodinsky, University of Arizona
The Monster Within: The Windigo Tradition, Communal Balance and the Ojibwa Concept of the Tripartite Self
Brady DeSanti, University of Nebraska-Omaha
Indian Witches and Native Identity in the Deep South
Dixie Haggard, Valdosta State University
Session 33: Cultural Persistence on the Frontiers of Spanish America
Organizer: Dana Velasco , UCLA
Chairt: Cynthia Radding, University of New Mexico
Discussant: Susan Kellogg, University of Houston
Ethnogenesis in Northern New Spain: San Esteban de la Nueva Tlaxcala, 1770-1810
Patricia Martinez, St. Mary’s University
Recreating Ethnic Identity in the Silver Mining District: Zacatecas, 1566-1600
Dana Velasco Murillo, University of California at Los Angeles
Historical Memory and the Invention of Tradition: Creating Cora costumbre
Rick Warner, Wabash College
Model Citizens?: An Inquiry into Understanding of Indigenous Participation in the State-Making Process in Late Nineteenth-Century Chiapas, Mexico
Autumn Quezada-Grant, University of Mississippi
From Passive Resistance to Armed Conflict: The Impact of Sandinista Policies on Nicaragua’s Miskito Coast, 1980-1990
John-Paul Wilson, St. John’s University
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