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  • Contributors

joanne barker (Lenape [Delaware Tribe of Indians]) is associate professor of American Indian studies at San Francisco State University. She received her PhD in the History of Consciousness Department from the University of California, Santa Cruz, in 2000. She is the author of Native Acts: Law, Recognition, and Cultural Authenticity (Duke University Press, 2011) and the editor of Sovereignty Matters: Locations of Contestation and Possibility in Indigenous Struggles for Self-Determination (University of Nebraska Press, 2005). She has been the recipient of fellowships from the University of California, the Rockefeller Foundation, and the Ford Foundation.

seonghoon kim received a PhD in English (American Indian literature) from Arizona State University and teaches at South Mountain College. His work has recently appeared in Studies in American Indian Literatures (sail) and is forthcoming in melus: Multi-ethnic Literature of the United States. He is currently working on a book manuscript entitled “Oral Tradition, Activist Journalism, and the Legacy of ‘Red Power’: Indigenous Cosmopolitics in American Indian Poetry” and finishing the translation of Simon J. Ortiz's From Sand Creek into Korean.

nicole st-onge is a professor of history and the director of the Institute of Canadian and Aboriginal Studies at the University of Ottawa (Canada). Her current research interests include nineteenth-century plains bison-hunting Metis brigades; French Canadian employees of the American Fur Company, and nineteenth-century mixed-descent fur trade families in the Upper Mississippi and Missouri river basins. Most recently, in collaboration with Brenda Macdougall and Carolyn Pod-ruchny, she contributed to and edited Contours of a People: Metis Family, Mobility and History (University of Oklahoma Press, 2012). [End Page 346]

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