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Index 297 Abler, Thomas S., on tribes, 78–79 adoptees, identity of, 81 adoption, 31–32 African independence, and Indian self-determination, 2 Ahtone, Sam, 257 Ahtone, Tahdo, 257 Akwesasne, 39–40 Council of Hereditary Chiefs, 51 Council of the Tribes, 52–53 elective system, 42, 46, 48, 50–51 evil effect of elective chiefs, 48 governance, 40, 42, 46, 47 hereditary chiefs, 46, 47, 50–51, 56 location, 39 petitions for hereditary chiefs, 48 Akwesasne Notes, 34–35 alterity indigenous, 146 language, 150–51 necessary, 148–50 Alaska Commercial Company, 170 oppose Makah hunting, 179–71 Albers, Patricia, on ethnicity, 82, 89–90, 92, 94 alcohol, prohibition, 27–28 Alfred, Taiaiake, quoted, 115 alliances, fire representing, 114 American Indian Exposition, 254, 260–65 (illus., 273) American Indian history, lack of recognition for, 186 American Indian Movement (AIM), demonstrations, 34–35 American Society for Ethnohistory, 141 Anadarko, Okla. as agency town, 255 tourism and art, 267 Anderson, Benedict, 68, 88, 141, 142, 144 Anderson, Wallace “Mad Bear,” 34 apocalyptic vision of war, 34 Anishinaabe alliance with U.S., 125 alliances, 119, 120, 129, 131, 132 Chippewa and, 131 distinguished from Odaawa, 131 fire in ceremonial practices, 113 fire in concept of nationhood, 113 gathering rights, 219–51 kinship, 119 land tenure, 124–25 nationhood, 120, 126 obtain fire, 112–13 treaty-making record, 114–15, 129, 130 “Anishinaabe Gathering Rights and Market Arts,” 219–40 298 Index Anishinaabek (“original people”), 220 decorative objects made by, 225–26 diet, 225 wage employment, 224 work in lumber industry, 224 work villages, 225 Apologies to the Iroquois, 34 Arapahoe at fairs, 262 kin systems, 90–91 Arbuckle, Jerome, 196, 205–6, 208, 210 on hunting and fishing treaty rights, 208, 211 Armstrong, Louise, on injustice in craft sales, 229 art, Indian, 265–68 marketing, 267 “Articulating a Traditional Future,” 163–84 autonomy, affect of history on, 186 Bad River people, 186, 192 attend Haywad Indian Congress, 195 effect of Great Depression on, 194 hunting and fishing practices, 206–9 Indian New Deal assistance to, 194–95 Bad River WPA project, 197–98, 199 conservation emphasis, 198–99 discussion of treaty rights by, 199 on wild rice harvesting, 202–3 Banks, Dennis, 35 Barcham, Manuhuia, on group identity, 146 Barker, Joanne, on treaties, 117 Barth, Frederick, on ethnic identity, 77–78 baseball, at fairs, 261 basketry and gathering rights, 221 insufficiency of sweet grass for, 232 makers, 230 Potawatomi, 226, 238 prices, 228, 229 sales, 228–29, 230 Southeastern Cherokee, 226–27 Bay Mills Indian Community, 220 Berthrong, Donald, on Cheyenne social organization, 73 Bay of Quinte Reserve, 40, 43 adopt “Life Chief” system, 53–54 assert sovereignty, 53 elective councils, 41–42, 53, 54 governance, 40–42, 44, 53 hereditary chiefs, 44, 46, 53, 54, 57 host Council of the Tribes convention, 55 location, 40 opposition to elective councils, 54 visit of chiefs to Grand River, 44 beadwork designs, 256–57 designs as property, 256 interviews of makers, 257–58 leaf motifs, 257 on buckskins, 258 showing family ties through, 255–60 showing social relationships, 256 showing women’s social roles, 255–56 Bear Butte, 85 Bering Sea, Makah voyages to, 167 berries fees for picking, 231 gathering, 223–24 picking diminished by timbering, 230–31 Berry, Mrs., 258 “Beyond Folklore: Historical Writing and Treaty Rights Activism in the Bad River WPA,” 185–218 bibliography, 275–92 bingo ban, 29, 31 Bissell family, 23 [18.216.94.152] Project MUSE (2024-04-24 07:06 GMT) 299 Index black ash, for craft making, 232, 237 permits for, 238 value to craftsmen, 238 nation-state exercise of, 68 Bohaker, Heidi, on clan system, 118 border-crossing rights, 34 boundaries, 93–94, 147 Anishinaabe, 122 establishing, 121, 124 nationhood and, 120–21, 125, 131–32 tribal, 122–23 warfare and lack of, 121 Brant, Joseph, 33, 44–45 letter on sovereignty, 44–45 Braun, Sebastian F., author, 141–60 (bio, 293) Brehm, Victoria, on Ojibwe lumber dispute, 196 Brooks, Edward, 222 Buffalo Creek land sales, 30 Caddo County Fair, 261 Canadian government, 33 canoes Makah, 165–66 Ojibwa, 209 Cape Flattery, 168, 169, 170 captivity, 94 Cass, Lewis, 125 Chavis, Ben, on Kiowa art, 254 Cherokee identity, 188 nationalism, 188 Cheyenne as a nation-state, 75, 80 as a tribal nation, 72–75 bands, 80 camps, 80 citizenship, 82 exercising sovereignty, 67 government, 73, 75 identity, 80–83, 87 incorporating outsiders, 81 intermarriage, 91, 92 kin systems, 90–91 kinships and sovereignty, 92–95 language...

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