University of Nebraska Press
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cheryl a. wells is an associate professor of history at the University of Wyoming. The University of Georgia Press published her first book, Civil War Time: Temporality and Identity in America, 1861–1865, in 2005. She is also the editor of the 2008 work Francis M. Wafer: A Surgeon in the Army of the Potomac, published by McGill-Queen’s University Press. Her current monograph, under contract with the University of Georgia Press, continues the exploration of temporalities, race, authenticity, power, and identity begun in this article.

david martínez (Gila River Pima) is an associate professor of American Indian studies at Arizona State University. He is also the author of Dakota Philosopher: Charles Eastman and American Indian Thought (Minnesota Historical Society Press, 2009) and the editor of The American Indian Intellectual Tradition: An Anthology of Writings from 1772 to 1972.

mark van de logt is an assistant professor of history at Texas A & M University at Qatar. He specializes in Plains Indian history, culture, and warfare. He is the author of War Party in Blue: Pawnee Indian Scouts in the U.S. Army (Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 2010), as well as several articles and book chapters on American Indian history. He is currently completing two works on Pawnee and Arikara history. The first is an ethnohistory of the Arikara Indians titled “Today We Remember Them . . . the Good Ways That Were Ours.” The other is a study of Caddoan-white contact in Caddoan oral traditions titled “Monsters of Contact: Traumatic Encounters with Europeans as Told in Caddoan Indian Stories.” [End Page 109]

bryan gallagher is a doctoral candidate at sfu’s Beedie School of Business, an instructor in the Executive mba Program in Aboriginal Business and Leadership at sfu, and a scholar at the cma Center for Innovation. Before returning to school, Bryan was a facilitator for an Aboriginal Leadership Initiative with several Nuu-chah-nulth First Nations on Vancouver Island, where he helped to develop community projects and businesses.

mark selman is the director of the Executive mba Program in Aboriginal Business and Leadership at sfu. He is also responsible for directing other customized versions of the Executive mba, including a long-running program with Teck Resources. Mark began his professional life as an entrepreneur involved in both construction and manufacturing. In his midthirties, he returned to university to complete his undergraduate degree and doctorate, both at the University of British Columbia. [End Page 110]

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