Soon after its inception the camera became the primary vehicle for producing images of Native Americans. Without question, late nineteenth and early twentieth-century images of Native Americans have been integral in forming the stereotypical ideal of Indian. For many imaginations, these images have frozen North America\u27s indigenous people, not only in a timeless past but, in essence, outside time. This essay examines photographic images that illustrate this phenomenon and some that dismantle it. The fact that indigenous people picked up the camera long ago to commission and produce their own images, although long overlooked, is a topic that has received much attention over the last few decades and is now widely acknowledged. This is du...
This essay derives from the simple fact that the Navajo seldom have had much input into their imagin...
This essay foregrounds Indigenous critical perspectives on the history of photography in the U. S. W...
The original face-to-face encounter of American Indians in portraits and pictorial field studies rei...
Soon after its inception the camera became the primary vehicle for producing images of Native Americ...
This dissertation examines how Native art makes critical interventions that are aesthetically and in...
This essay examines the work of Native photographers and artists and the ways their work addresses t...
This thought-provoking book is designed to accompany an exhibition which, unfortunately, I have not ...
At the turn of the twentieth century, photographers like Edward Curtis were creating romanticized im...
This essay examines the work of Native photographers and artists and the ways their work addresses t...
This thought-provoking book is designed to accompany an exhibition which, unfortunately, I have not ...
Photographs of Native Americans taken by Frank A. Rinehart at the Trans-Mississippi and Internationa...
Together, the articles in this special issue of the American Indian Culture and Research Journal off...
Photographs, and work with photograph collections, are among the delights of archival research. We a...
Photographs of Native Americans taken by Frank A. Rinehart at the Trans-Mississippi and Internationa...
Photographs of Native Americans taken by Frank A. Rinehart at the Trans-Mississippi and Internationa...
This essay derives from the simple fact that the Navajo seldom have had much input into their imagin...
This essay foregrounds Indigenous critical perspectives on the history of photography in the U. S. W...
The original face-to-face encounter of American Indians in portraits and pictorial field studies rei...
Soon after its inception the camera became the primary vehicle for producing images of Native Americ...
This dissertation examines how Native art makes critical interventions that are aesthetically and in...
This essay examines the work of Native photographers and artists and the ways their work addresses t...
This thought-provoking book is designed to accompany an exhibition which, unfortunately, I have not ...
At the turn of the twentieth century, photographers like Edward Curtis were creating romanticized im...
This essay examines the work of Native photographers and artists and the ways their work addresses t...
This thought-provoking book is designed to accompany an exhibition which, unfortunately, I have not ...
Photographs of Native Americans taken by Frank A. Rinehart at the Trans-Mississippi and Internationa...
Together, the articles in this special issue of the American Indian Culture and Research Journal off...
Photographs, and work with photograph collections, are among the delights of archival research. We a...
Photographs of Native Americans taken by Frank A. Rinehart at the Trans-Mississippi and Internationa...
Photographs of Native Americans taken by Frank A. Rinehart at the Trans-Mississippi and Internationa...
This essay derives from the simple fact that the Navajo seldom have had much input into their imagin...
This essay foregrounds Indigenous critical perspectives on the history of photography in the U. S. W...
The original face-to-face encounter of American Indians in portraits and pictorial field studies rei...