Archaeologies of indigenous presence /
Saved in:
Imprint: | Gainesville : University Press of Florida, [2022] |
---|---|
Description: | 322 pages : illustrations, maps ; 24 cm |
Language: | English |
Subject: | |
Format: | Print Book |
URL for this record: | http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/12715841 |
Table of Contents:
- Introduction: Archaeology, Unknowing, and the Recognition of Indigenous
- Presence in Post-1492 North America
- Lee M. Panich and Tsim D. Schneider
- Part I. Historical Legacies: Authenticity and Unknowing
- "I Can Tell It Always": Confronting Expectations of Native
- Disappearance Through Collaborative Research
- Ian Kretzler
- On The Rez, It's All Our History
- Catherine Dickson and Shawn Steinmetz
- Why Am I Ephemeral? Foregrounding Ndee Perceptions of Our Past as Persistence
- Nicholas C. Laluk
- Considering the Long-Term Consequences of Designating Native American
- Sites as European Creations
- Sarah Trabert
- The Struggle to Identify Nineteenth-Century Indigenous Sites in CRM / Matthew A. Beaudoin
- Distrust Thy Neighbor: Seminole Florida Camps from the Aftermath of the Seminole War to the Twentieth Century / Dave W. Scheidecker, Maureen Mahoney, and Paul N. Backhouse
- Part II. Conceptual and Practical Advances
- Recognizing Post-Columbian Indigenous Sites in California's Colonial Hinterlands / Kathleen L. Hull
- Looking at the World Through Rose-Colored Flaked Glass / Hannah Russell
- Home and Homeland in the Land Beyond the Mountains / Laura L. Scheiber
- Seeking Indigenous Trade Networks of the Midcontinent through Glass Beads from La Belle (41 MG 86) / Heather Walder
- Small and Under-Recorded Sites as Evidence for Gayogohó:nǫ' Cayuga) and Onondaga (Seneca) Regional Settlement Expansion, Circa 1640-1690 / Kurt A. Jordan
- Navigating Entanglements and Mitigating Intergenerational Trauma in Two Collaborative Projects: Stewart Indian School and "Our Ancestors" Walk of Sorrow Forced Removal Trail / Sarah E. Cowie and Diane L. Teeman
- Conclusion: Perspectives on Presence from a Sovereign (and Very Much Present) Native American Community / Tsim D. Schneider, Peter A. Nelson, and Nick Tipon