Notes on Contributors
Introduction
Chris Andersen and Jean M. O'Brien
PART ONE: EMERGING FROM THE PAST
Chapter One: Historical Sources and Methods in Indigenous Studies: Touching on the Past, Looking to the Future
Jean M. O'Brien
Chapter Two: Literary Reflections on Indigenous Literary Nationalism: On Home Grounds, Singing Hogs, and Cranky Critics
Daniel Heath Justice
Chapter Three: History, Anthropology, Indigenous Studies
Pauline Turner Strong
Chapter Four: Reclaiming the Statistical Native: Quantitative Historical Research Beyond the Pale
Chris Andersen and Tahu Kukutai
PART TWO: ALTERNATIVE SOURCES AND METHODOLOGICAL REORIENTATIONS
I. Reframing Indigenous Studies
Chapter Five: Recovering, Restorying, and Returning Nahua Writing in Mexico
Kelly McDonough
Chapter Six: Mind, Heart, Hands: Thinking, Feeling, and Doing in Indigenous History Methodology
K. Tsianina Lomawaima
Chapter Seven: Relationality: A Key Presupposition of an Indigenous Social Research Paradigm
Aileen Moreton-Robinson
Chapter Eight: Standing With and Speaking as Faith: A Feminist-Indigenous Approach to Inquiry
Kim TallBear
Chapter Nine: Stepping In It: How to Smell the Fullness of Indigenous Histories
Vicente Diaz
Chapter Ten: Intellectual History and Indigenous Methodology
Robert Warrior
Chapter Eleven: A Genealogy of Critical Hawaiian Studies, Late 20th to
21st Century
Noenoe K. Silva
Chapter Twelve: Placing the City: Crafting Urban Indigenous Histories
Coll Thrush
II. All in the Family
Chapter Thirteen: I do still have a letter: Our Sea of Archives
Alice Te Punga Somerville
Chapter Fourteen: History with Nana: Family, Life, and the Spoken Source
Aroha Harris
Chapter Fifteen: Elder Brother as Theoretical Framework
Robert Innes
Chapter Sixteen: Histories with Communities: Struggles, Collaborations, Transformations
Amy E. Den Ouden
Chapter Seventeen: Places and Peoples: Sami Feminist Technoscience and Supradisciplinary Research Methods
May-Britt Ohman, Uppsala University
Chapter Eighteen: Oral History
William Bauer, Jr.
III. Feminism, Gender, and Sexuality
Chapter Nineteen: Status, Sustainability, and American Indian Women in the Twentieth Century
Jacki Thompson Rand
Chapter Twenty: Representations of Violence: (Re)Telling Indigenous Women's Stories and the Politics of Knowledge Production
Shannon Speed
Chapter Twenty-One: Feminism and History, Sources and Methods in Indigenous History
Mishuana Goeman
Chapter Twenty-Two: History and Masculinity
Brendan Hokowhitu
Chapter Twenty-Three: Indigenous is to Queer as . . . : Queer questions for Indigenous Studies
Mark Rifkin
IV. Indigenous Literature and Expressive Culture
Chapter Twenty-Four: State Violence, History, and Maya Literature in Guatemala
Emilio de valle Escalante
Chapter Twenty-Five: Pieces Left Along the Trail: Material Culture Histories and Indigenous Studies
Sherry Farrell Racette, in conversation with Alan Corbiere and Crystal Migwans
Chapter Twenty-Six: Authoring Indigenous Studies in Three Dimensions: An Approach to Museum Curation
Gabrielle Tayac
Chapter Twenty-Seven: Future Tense: Indigenous Film, Pedagogy, Promise
Michelle Raheja
V. Indigenous Peoples In and Beyond the State
Chapter Twenty-Eight: Stories as Law: A Method to Live by
Heidi Kiiwetinepinesiik Stark
Chapter Twenty-Nine: Metis in the Borderlands of the Northern Plains in the Nineteenth Century
Brenda Macdougall and Nicole St-Onge
Chapter Thirty: Plotting Colonization and Recentering Indigenous Actors: Approaches to and Sources for Studying the History of Indigenous Education
Margaret D. Jacobs
Chapter Thirty-One: Laws, Codes, and Informal Practices: Building Ethical Procedures for Historical Research with Indigenous Medical Records
Mary Jane Logan McCallum
Chapter Thirty-Two: Toward a Post-Quincentennial Approach to the Study of Genocide
Jeffrey Ostler
Chapter Thirty-Three: Revealing, Reporting, and Reflecting: Indigenous Studies Research as Praxis in Reconciliation Projects
Sheryl Lightfoot