In his recent collection of essays, associate curator at the National Museum of the American Indian Paul Chaat Smith argues for a reorientation of knowledge about Indian peoples. The essays, all previously published, are sometimes autobiographical, sometimes humorous, and range in topic from Ishi to the Alcatraz occupation. In The Big Movie, for example, Smith takes on films that feature Indians, from the first moving picture made by Thomas Edison in 1894, Sioux Ghost Dance, to The Searchers, Last of the Mohicans, and Dances with Wolves. Indians, Smith writes, have become a kind of national mascot. These films, particularly Westerns, are a part of the American master narrative-and, well, they never tell the real story. Smith often foc...
Essay in a catalogue of an exhibition held at Gallery 44, Toronto, May 6-June 5, 2004. Exhibition de...
Mark Monroe\u27s autobiography, edited from his tape-recorded memories by Carolyn Reyer, joins a siz...
Can non-Indians write ”Indian history”? Professor Roy W. Meyer, Director of American Studies at Mank...
In his recent collection of essays, associate curator at the National Museum of the American Indian ...
This collection of essays, a number of which first appeared in a special issue of the journal Film a...
Without Indians-or, rather, their imaginings of them-white Americans would hardly know how to define...
Hollywood inherited conflicting myths of Native Americans: barbaric savages or Noble Savage. Influ...
Scholars of the American Indian experience should read this book. These three authors discuss more i...
Raymond William Stedman approaches the pervasive stereotyping of American Indians with the awe of th...
Smith, Paul Chaat. 2009. Everything You Know About Indians Is Wrong. Minneapolis: University of Minn...
Review of: Wild West Shows and the Images of American Indians, 1883-1933. Moses, L. G
Readers will no doubt react favorably to the descriptions of eight unusual people, classified genera...
In a region as well mapped and paved as Kansas Indian studies, anyone promising better roads to impr...
In his first book, Playing Indian (1998), Philip Deloria examined the ways that non-Indians used Ame...
Review of: The Modern Sioux: Social Systems and Reservation Culture. Nurge, Ethel, ed
Essay in a catalogue of an exhibition held at Gallery 44, Toronto, May 6-June 5, 2004. Exhibition de...
Mark Monroe\u27s autobiography, edited from his tape-recorded memories by Carolyn Reyer, joins a siz...
Can non-Indians write ”Indian history”? Professor Roy W. Meyer, Director of American Studies at Mank...
In his recent collection of essays, associate curator at the National Museum of the American Indian ...
This collection of essays, a number of which first appeared in a special issue of the journal Film a...
Without Indians-or, rather, their imaginings of them-white Americans would hardly know how to define...
Hollywood inherited conflicting myths of Native Americans: barbaric savages or Noble Savage. Influ...
Scholars of the American Indian experience should read this book. These three authors discuss more i...
Raymond William Stedman approaches the pervasive stereotyping of American Indians with the awe of th...
Smith, Paul Chaat. 2009. Everything You Know About Indians Is Wrong. Minneapolis: University of Minn...
Review of: Wild West Shows and the Images of American Indians, 1883-1933. Moses, L. G
Readers will no doubt react favorably to the descriptions of eight unusual people, classified genera...
In a region as well mapped and paved as Kansas Indian studies, anyone promising better roads to impr...
In his first book, Playing Indian (1998), Philip Deloria examined the ways that non-Indians used Ame...
Review of: The Modern Sioux: Social Systems and Reservation Culture. Nurge, Ethel, ed
Essay in a catalogue of an exhibition held at Gallery 44, Toronto, May 6-June 5, 2004. Exhibition de...
Mark Monroe\u27s autobiography, edited from his tape-recorded memories by Carolyn Reyer, joins a siz...
Can non-Indians write ”Indian history”? Professor Roy W. Meyer, Director of American Studies at Mank...