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Cumulative Index, volumes 22-25 (1998 —2001) COMPILED BY MARY H. BEST SPECIAL TOPIC ISSUES Compiled by Lawrence Abbott. 22(1 & 2): Confounding the Color Line: Indian-Black 95 —103. 1998. Relations in Historical and Anthropological Interview: Sandy Osawa. Lawrence Abbott. Perspectives.” Special Segment. James F. 22(1 & 2): 104-15. 1998 Brooks, Guest Editor. 22(1 & 2): 125-258. Nothing Compares to Comparison: Reflec 19998. tions on the Social Issue of the American In Reviews of Ian Frazier’s On the Rez. 24(2 dian Quarterly Dedicated to “Writing about 279—306. 2000. American Indians.” Michael C. Coleman. Native Voices: An Informal Collection of Pa 22(1 & 2): 116—24. 1998 (Commentary). pers Presented at the AAA Meeting, Novem Confounding the Color Line: Indian-Black ber 2000.” Compiled by June-E] Piper. Relations in Historical and Anthropological 25(1): 1— 45. 2001. Perspective. James F. Brooks. 22(1 & 2): 125 33. 1998 ARTICLES, BY VOLUME Intimacy and Empire: Indian-African Inter 22(1 & 2), Winter/Spring 1998 action in Spanish Colonial New Mexico, Navajo Livestock Reduction in Southwestern 1500-1800. Dedra §. McDonald. 22(1 & 2 Utah, 1933— 46: History Repeats Itself. Rob- 134-56. 1998 ert S. McPherson. 22(1 & 2): 1-18. 1998. The English has now a Mind to make Slaves Che Question of Regional Bands and Sub of them all”: Creeks, Seminoles, and the tribes among the Pre-conquest Pai (Huala- Problem of Slavery. Claudio Saunt. 22(1 & pai and Havasupai) Indians of Northwest 2): 157-380. 1998. ern Arizona. Timothy Braatz. 22(1 & 2): 19 Strategy As Lived: Mixed Communities in the 30. 1998. Age of New Nations. Daniel H. Calhoun. [ranslocations and Transformations: Identity 22(1 & 2): 181-202. 1998. in N. Scott Momaday’s The Ancient Child. “African and Cherokee by Choice”: Race and Susan L. Roberson. 22(1 & 2): 31— 45. 1998. Resistance under Legalized Segregation. Writing the Talking Stick. Laura E. Donald- Laura L. Lovett. 22(1 & 2): 203-29. 1998. son. 22(1 & 2): 46—62. 1998. Blood Politics, Racial Classification, and ‘It Was Their Fault for Being Intractable”: Cherokee National Identity: The Trials and Internalized Racism and Wounded Knee. Tribulations of the Cherokee Freedmen. Julian Rice. 22(1 & 2): 63—82. 1998. Circe Sturm. 22(1 & 2): 230-58. 1998. Culture as Cultural Defense: An American Indian Sacred Site in Court. Bruce Miller. 22(3), Summer 1998 22(1 & 2): 83-97. 1998. “I would rather be with my people, but not Contemporary Native Art II: A Bibliography. to live with them as they live”: Cultural AMERICAN INDIAN QI ARTERLY/ FALL 2002/ VOL. 26, NO.4 67/ 9 Liminality and Double Consciousness in 23(1), Winter 1999 Sarah Winnemucca Hopkins’s Life Among Lisandro Mendez’s “Coyote and Deer”: On the Piutes: Their Wrongs and Claims. Reciprocity, Narrative Structures, and Inter- Noreen Groover Lape. 22(3): 259-79. actions. Anthony Webster. 23(1): 1-24. 1999. 1998. [ricksters, Captives, and Conjurers: The Remembering Chief Seattle: Reversing Cul ‘Roots” of Liminality and Gerald Vizenor’s tural Studies of a Vanishing Native Ameri Bearheart. Zubeda Jalalzai. 23(1): 25-44. can. Crisca Bierwert. 22(3): 280-304. 1999. 1998. Contemporary American Indian Storytelling: Discerning Connections, Revising the Master An Outsider’s Perspective. Scott J. Howard. Narrative, and Interrogating Identity in 23(1): 45-53. 1999. Louis Owens’s The Sharpest Sight. Chris LaLonde. 22(3): 305-25. 1998. 23(2), Spring 1999 “The laying aside of a shield”: Ethnographic What We Want to Be Called: Indigenous Peo- Power Struggles in Oliver La Farge’s Jndian ples’ Perspectives on Racial and Ethnic Fiction. Erik Trump. 22(3): 326-42. 1998. Identity Labels. Michael Yellow Bird. 23(2): Coyote’s Cannon: Sharing Stories with 1—22. 1999. Thomas King. Robin Ridington. 22(3): 343 The 1994 Navajo Presidential Election: Analy- 62. 1998. sis of the Election and Results of an Exit The Nine Lives of Cherum, the Pai Poll. Scott C. Russell and Eric Henderson. Tokumhet. Henry F. Dobyns and Robert C. 23(2): 23-38. 1999. Euler. 22(3): 363—85. 1998. Lumbee Kinship, Community, and the Suc- Ritual Knowledge in Hopi Tradition. Maria cess of the Red Banks Mutual Association. Danuta Glowacka. 22(3): 386—92. 1998 Ryan K. Anderson. 23(2): 39-58. 1999. (Commentary). Who Am I? I Am The One Who Sits in the Middle”: A Conversation with Billy Evans 22(4), Fall 1998 Horse, Former Kiowa Tribal Chairman Snoqualmie Ethnicity: Community and Con 1982—1986, 1994-1998). Luke Eric Lassiter. tinuity. Kenneth D. Tollefson and Martin L. 23(2): 59-70. 1999 (Interview). Abbott. 22(4): 415—32. 1998. “We Will Make It Our Own Place”: Agricul 23(3 & 4), Summer/ Fall 1999 ture and Adaptation at the Grand Ronde Disorderly Drinking: Reconsidering Seven- Reservation, 1856-1887. Tracy Neal Leavelle teenth-Century Iroquois Alcohol Use. Maia 22(4): 433-56. 1998. Conrad. 23(3 & 4): 1-12. 1999. Of Metaphors and Learning: Navajo Teach- Inspired Lines: Reading Joy Harjo’s Prose ings for Today’s Youth. Robert S. McPher- Poems. Robert Johnson. 23(3 & 4): 13-23. son. 22(4): 457—68. 1998. 1999. “I Lied All the Time”: Trickster Discourse and rhe Story as It’s Told: Prodigious Revisions in Ethnographic Authority in Crashing Thun Leslie Marmon Silko’s Almanac of the Dead. der. Michelle Burnham. 22(4): 469-84. Adam Sol. 23(3 & 4): 24-48. 1999. 1998. Superficiality and Bias: The (Mis)Treatment Applying Communitas to Kiowa Powwows. of Native Americans in U.S. Government Luke Eric Lassiter and Clyde Ellis. 22(4): Textbooks. Jeffry S. Ashley and Karen Jar- 485—92. 1998 (Commentary). ratt-Ziemski. 23(3 & 4): 49-62. 1999. “Urban Nightmare.” Karenne Wood. 22(4): Captivity and Conversion: William Apess, 493. 1998 (Poetry). Mary Jemison, and Narratives of Racial “Colors.” Karenne Wood. 22(4): 494. 1998 Identity. Hilary E. Wyss. 23(3 & 4): 63—82. (Poetry). 1999. 680 Index The Responses of American Indian Children Approach Andrea Opitz. 24(1): 126-41. and Irish Children to the School, 1850s- 2000. 1920s: A Comparative Study in Cross Americans and Other Aliens in the Navajo Cultural Education. Michael C. Coleman. Historical Imagination in the Nineteenth 23(3 & 4): 83-112. 1999. Century. William H. Lyon. 24(1): 142-61. Untangling the Roots of Dependency: 2000 Choctaw Economics, 1700-1860. Stephen P Van Hoak. 23(3 & 4): 113-28. 1999 (Com 24(2), Spring 2000 mentary Translation and Resistance in Native North Upland Yuman (Yavapai and Pai) Leadership American Literature. Margara Averbach across the Nineteenth Century (Discus- 24(2): 165—81. 2000. sions). Timothy Braatz. 23(3 & 4): 129-47. Native People and the Challenge of Comput 1999 (Commentary ers: Reservation Schools, Individualism, Pai Cultural Change (Response to Braatz and Consumerism. C. A. Bowers, Miguel Henry F. Dobyns and Robert C. Euler Vasquez, Mary Roaf. 24(2): 182—99. 23(3 & 4): 148-58. 1999 (Commentary 2000. Bands of Gardeners: Pai Sociopolitical Struc In the Belly of a Laughing God: Reading Hu ture (Discussions). Henry F. Dobyns and mor and Irony in the Poetry of Joy Harjo. Robert C. Euler. 23(3 & 4): 159-74. 1999 Jennifer Andrews. 24(2): 200-218. 2000. Commentary “All This Water Imagery Must Mean Some Response (Response to Dobyns and Euler thing”: Thomas King’s Revisions of Narra Timothy Braatz. 23(3 & 4): 175-76. 1999 tives of Domination and Conquest in Green Commentary Grass, Running Water. James H. Cox. 24(2) 219 46. 2000 24(1), Winter 2000 Not the Call of the Wild: The Idea of Wilder Empowerment through “Retroactive ness in Louis Owens’s Wolfsong and Mixed Prophecy” in D’Arcy McNickle’s Runner in blood Messages. David Brande. 24(2): 247 the Sun: A Story of Indian Maize, James 63. 2000 Welch’s Fools Crow, and Leslie Marmon Interview with Denise Maloney-Pictou and Silko’s Ceremony. Lori Burlingame. 24(1): 1 Deborah Maloney-Pictou. Devon A. Mihe 6. 2000 suah. 24(2): 264-78. 2000 (Interview). From Bobtail to Brer Rabbit: Native Ameri Am I My Brother's Keeper? Ilze Choi. 24(2): can Influences on Uncle Remus. Jay Hans 279-82. 2000. ford C. Vest. 24(1): 19-43. 2000 Infatuation Is Not Enough: Review of Ian Complementary Power: Men and Women of Frazier’s On the Rez. Devon A. Mihesuah the Lenni Lenape. Margaret M. Caffrey. 24(2): 283-86. 2000. 24(1): 44-63. 2000. Bleakness and Greatness in Ian Frazier’s On Making Medicine against “White Man’s Side the Rez. Larissa Petrillo. 24(2): of Story”: ¢ reorge Bent’s Letters to ¢ seorge 2000 Hyde. Lincoln B. Faller. 24(1): 64-90. Oglala Obscurity: A Review of Ian Frazier’s 2000. On the Rez. Alexandra Witkin-New Holy. Gender and Indian Masquerade in the Life of 24(2): 291-95. 2000. Grey Owl. David Chapin. 24(1): 91-109. Response to Ian Frazier’s On the Rez. James 2000 Stripes. 24(2): 296—98. 2000. Che Universal Hiawatha. Joe Lockard. 24(1): The Number of Tribes . . . Right for Him or 110 —25. 2000. Her: Romancing Imaginary “Indians” in James Welch’s Fools Crow and the Imagina- On the Rez. David Anthony Tyeeme Clark. tion of Precolonial Space: A Translator’s 24(2): 299-306. 2000. AMERICAN INDIAN QUARTERLY/ FALL 2002/ VOL. 26, NO. 4 681 24(3), Summer 2000 We find it a difficult work”: Educating Plastic Shamans and Astroturf Sun Dances: Dakota Children in Missionary Homes, New Age Commercialization of Native 1835-1862. Linda Clemmons. 24(4): 570- American Spirituality. Lisa Aldred. 24(3): 600. 2000. 329-52. 2000. Authoritative Texts, Collaborative Ethnogra Dare to Compare: Americanizing the Holo- phy, and Native American Studies. Luke caust. Lilian Friedberg. 24(3): 253-80. 200% Eric Lassiter. 24(4): 601-14. 2000 (Com “Water We Believed Could Never Belong mentary to Anyone”: The San Luis Rey River and They Say He Was Witched”. Martha Royce the Pala Indians of Southern California. Blaine. 24(4): 615—34. 2000 (Native Voices). Steven M. Karr. 24(3): 381-99. 2000. RRD ez Talk: How Reservation Residents De- The Indian Health Service and the Steriliza scribe Themselves. Faye Lone-Knapp. 24(4): tion of Native American Women. Jane Law 635—40. 2000 (Native Voices). ' rence. 24(3): 400-419. 2000. Allotment Protest and Tribal Discourse: 25(1), Winter 2001 Reading Wynema’s Successes and Short Introductory Remarks. Rena Martin and comings. Siobhan Senier. 24(3): 420-40. June—E] Piper. 25(1): 1— 4. 2001 (“Native 2000. Voices: An Informal Collection of Papers” \ Tapestry of History and Reimagination: Reclaiming Land and Spirit in the Western Women’s Place in James Welch’s Fools Cro Apache Homeland. John R. Welch and Barbara Cook. 24(3): 441-53. 2000. Ramon Riley. 25(1): 5—12. 2001 (“Native “Invisible Indians.” Sarah Littlecrow-Russell Voices: An Informal Collection of 24(3): 454. 2000 (Poetry Papers” “Romantic Savage.” Sarah Littlecrow-Russell. Trust Me, I Work for the Government: Con 24(3): 455. 2000 (Poetry fidentiality and Public Access to Sensitive “Lost Bird.” Sarah Littlecrow-Russell. 24(3 Information. Alexa Roberts. 25(1): 13-17. 455. 2000 (Poetry). 2001 (“Native Voices: An Informal Collec- Speaking of Ella Deloria: Conversations with tion of Papers Joyzelle Gingway Godfrey, 1998 —2000, p tr eservation as Perpetuation. Marcia Pablo. Lower Brule Community College, South 25(1): 18—20. 2001 (“Native Voices: An In- Dakota. Susan Gardner. 24(3): 456—81. formal Collection of Papers”). 2000 (Interview Doo Dilzin Da: Abuse of the Natural World. A Conversation with Mary Brave Bird. Robert Begay. 25(1): 21-27. 2001 (“Native Christopher Wise and R. Todd Wise. Voices: An Informal Collection of Papers”). 24(3): 482-93. 2000 (Interview). Consultation on Grand Staircase—Escalante Reply to Mary Churchill. Charles Hudson. National Monument from Planning to Im- 24(3): 494-502. 2000 (Debate). plementation. Marietta W. Eaton. 25(1): 28- 34. 2001 (“Native Voices: An Informal Col- 24(4), Fall 2000 lection of Papers Andeans and Spaniards in the Contact Zone Native Connection to Place: Policies and Play. A Gendered Collision. Karen Vieira Powers Rena Martin. 25(1): 35— 40. 2001 (“Native 24(4): 511-36. 2000. Voices: An Informal Collection of Papers”). Weaving and the Construction of a Gendet Place-meant.” Joe Watkins. 25(1): 41— 45. Division of Labor in Early Colonial Peru. 2001 (“Native Voices: An Informal Collec Karen B. Graubart. 24(4): 537—61. 2000. tion of Papers Clan and Court: Another Look at the Early Open Containers: Sherman Alexie’s Drunken Cherokee Republic. Theda Perdue. 24(4): Indians. Stephen F. Evans. 25(1): 46-72. 562-69. 2000. 2001. 682 Index Negotiating an Identity: Métis Political Orga dian Chronicles: Felipe Guaman Poma de ations, the Canadian Government, and Ayala’s History of the “New” World. Ralph Competing Conceptso f Aboriginality. Joe Bauer. 25(2): 274—312. 2001 sawchuk. 25(1): 73-92. 2001. e Native Roots of Modern Art: Rereading 25(3), Summer 2001 Paintings of Leon Polk Smith. Randolph America’s Histories” Revisited: The Case of Lewis. 25(1): 93—113. 2001 | Them They Lie. Susan Kalter. 25(3 Visdom of the Peo : Potentia! and Pitfalls Efforts by the Comanches to Recreate hey honor our Lord among themselves in iditional Ways of Building Consensus their own way”: Colonial Christianity and 1Donna Harris, Stephen M. Sachs, and the Illinois Indians. Christopher Bilodeau Benjamin J. Broome. 25(1): 114-34. 2001 a5 77, 2001 Commentary Searching for Justice on the Maine Frontier emembering the Miami Indian Village Legal Concepts, Treaties, and the 1749 Schoolhouse. Larry Nesper. 25(1): 135-52. t Incident. David L. Ghere and Commentary Alvin H. Morrison. 25(3): 378-99. 2001 Annotated Chiricahua Apache Bibliogra lraditional Iroquois Socials: Maintaining Selected Books. H. Henrietta Stockel Identity in the City. Susan Applegate 3—76. 2001 (Bibliographic Review Krouse. 25(3): 400— 408. 2001 n the Woods: Tsimshian Resource 25(2), Spring 2001 Workers and the Forest Industry of British fferent by Degree”: Ella Cara Deloria, Columbia. Charles R. Menzieansd Caroline Neale Hurston, and Franz Boas Con F. Butler. 25(3 109—30. 2001. rl ] nd with Race and Ethnicity. Roseanne lhe Grizzly Gave Them the Song: James Teit Hoefel. 25(2 161—202. 2001 ind Franz Boas Interpret Twin Ritual in feller and the Tale: History and the Oral Aboriginal British Columbia, 1897—1920 dition in Elizabeth Cook-Lynn’s Aurelia Wendy Wickwire. 25(3): 431-52. 2001 ww Creek Trilogy. Page Rozelle. 25(2 Beneath the Underdog: Race, Religion, and 2001 the Trail of Tea s. Patrick Minges. 25(3 Critical Mass and Other Crucial Factors in a ’eveloping American Indian Studies Pro gram. Susan Applegate Krouse. 25(2): 216 25(4), Fall 2001 The Havana Connection: Buffalo Tiger, Fidel Racial Formation of American Indians: Castro, and the Origin of Miccosukee Tribal Negotiating Legitimate Identities within Sovereignty, 1959-1962. Harry A. Kersey Jr. ribal and Federal Law. Eva Marie Gar 25(4): 491-507. 2001. yutte. 25( 2): 224-39. 2001 Chief”: The American Indian Integration of ligenous Identity: What Is It and Who Re Baseball, 1897-1945. Jeffrey Powers-Beck ally Has It? Hilary N. Weaver. 25(2): 240 25(4): 508—38. 2001. 55. 2001 The Lemhi Shoshoni: Ethnogenesis, Sociolog Ve’re Not There Yet, Kemo Sabe: Positing a ical Transformations, and the Construction Future for American Indian Literary Stud of a Tribal Nation. Gregory R. Campbell. ies. Daniel Heath Justice. 25(2): 256-69. 25( 4): 539-758. 2001 01 Francis LaFlesche and the World of Letters Subverting the Captor’s Language: Teaching Sherry L. Smith. 25(4): 579-603. 2001 Native Science to Students of Western Sci Indian for a While”: Charles Eastman’s In ence. Jefferson Faye. 25(2): 270-73. 2001 dian Boyhood and the Discourse of Allot EnCountering” Colonial Latin American In ment. David J. Carlson. 25(4): 604 2001 AMERIC AN INDIAN QUARTERLY/ FALL 2002/ VOL. 26,NO.4 683 Placing the Ancestors: Postmodernism, “Re- Witched”. 24(4): 615—34. 2000 (Native alism,” and American Indian Identity in Voices). James Welch’s Winter in the Blood. Sean Bowers, C. A., Miguel Vasquez, and Mary Teuton. 25(4): 626—50. 2001. Roaf. Native People and the Challenge of Recent Dissertations. Compiled by Jonathan Computers: Reservation Schools, Individu- Erlen and Jay Toth. 25(4): 651-53. 2001. alism, and Consumerism. 24(2): 182—99. Response to Theodore Binnema. George 2000. Sioui. 25(4): 654—55. 2001 (Debate). Braatz, Timothy. The Question of Regional Bands and Subtribes among the Pre- ARTICLES, BY AUTHOR conquest Pai (Hualapai and Havasupai) Abbott, Lawrence, comp. Contemporary Na Indians of Northwestern Arizona. 22 tive Art II: A Bibliography. 22(1 & 2): 98- 1 & 2): 19-30. 1998. 103. 1998. ———. Response (Response to Dobyns and 4+———. Interview: Sandy Osawa. 22(1 & 2): Euler). 23(3 & 4): 175-76. 1999 (Commen- 104-15. 1998. tary Aldred, Lisa. Plastic Shamans and Astroturf ——. Upland Yuman (Yavapai and Pai) Sun Dances: New Age Commercialization Leadership across the Nineteenth Century of Native American Spirituality. 24(3): 329- Discussions). 23(3 & 4): 129-47. 1999 52. 2000. Commentary Anderson, Ryan K. Lumbee Kinship, Com- Brande, David. Not the Call of the Wild: The munity, and the Success of the Red Banks Idea of Wilderness in Louis Owens’s Wolf- Mutual Association. 23(2): 39-58. 1999. song and Mixedblood Messages. 24(2): 247- Andrews, Jennifer. In the Belly of a Laugh 63. 2000. ing God: Reading Humor and Irony in Brooks, James F. Confounding the Color the Poetry of Joy Harjo. 24(2): 200-218. Line: Indian-Black Relations in Historical 2000. and Anthropological Perspective. 22(1 & 2): Ashley, Jeffry S., and Karen Jarratt-Ziemski. 125-33. 1998. Superficiality and Bias: The (Mis)Treatment Burlingame, Lori. Empowerment through of Native Americans in U.S. Government ‘Retroactive Prophecy” in D’Arcy Mc- Textbooks. 23(3 & 4): 49-62. 1999. Nickle’s Runner in the Sun: A Story of Indian Averbach, Margara. Translation and Resis Maize, James Welch’s Fools Crow, and Leslie tance in Native North American Literature. Marmon Silko’s Ceremony. 24(1): 1-18. 24(2): 165-81. 2000. 2000. Bauer, Ralph. “EnCountering” Colonial Latin Burnham, Michelle. “I Lied All the Time”: American Indian Chronicles: Felipe Gua- [rickster Discourse and Ethnographic Au- man Poma de Ayala’s History of the “New” thority in Crashing Thunder. 22(4): 469-84. World. 25(2): 274-312. 2001. 199d. Begay, Robert. Doo Dilzin Da: Abuse of the Caffrey, Margaret M. Complementary Power: Natural World. 25(1): 21-27. 2001 (“Native Men and Women of the Lenni Lenape. Voices: An Informal Collection of Papers” 24(1): 44-63. 2000. Bierwert, Crisca. Remembering Chief Seattle: Calhoun, Daniel H. Strategy as Lived: Mixed Reversing Cultural Studies of a Vanishing Communities in the Age of New Nations. Native American. 22(3): 280-304. 1998. 22(1 & 2): 181—202. 1998. Bilodeau, Christopher. “They honor our Lord Campbell, Gregory R. The Lemhi Shoshoni: among themselves in their own way”: Colo- Ethnogenesis, Sociological Transformations nial Christianity and the Illinois Indians. and the Construction of a Tribal Nation. 25(3): 352-77. 2001. 25(4): §39—78. 2001. Blaine, Martha Royce. “They Say He Was Chapin, David. Gender and Indian Masquer- 684 Index ade in the Life of Grey Owl. 24(1): 91-109. Eaton, Marietta W. Consultation on Grand 2000. Staircase —Escalante National Monument arlson, David J. “Indian for a While”: from Planning to Implementation. 25(1): Charles Eastman’s Indian Boyhood and the 28 —34. 2001 (“ Native Voices: An Informal Discourse of Allotment. 25(4): 604 —25. Collection of Papers”). 2001. Erlen, Jonathan, and Jay Toth, comps. Recent hoi, Ilze. Am I My Brother’s Keeper? 24(2): Dissertations. 25(4): 651-53. 2001. 279-82. 2000. Evans, Stephen F. Open Containers: Sherman lark, David Anthony Tyeeme. The Number Alexie’s Drunken Indians. 25(1): 46-72. of Tribes . .. Right for Him or Her: Ro- 2001. mancing Imaginary “Indians” in On the Faller, Lincoln B. Making Medicine against Rez. 24(2): 299-306. 2000. “White Mans Side of Story”: George Bent’s lemmons, Linda. “We find it a difficult Letters to George Hyde. 24(1): 64-90. 2000. work”: Educating Dakota Children in Mis- Faye, Jefferson. Subverting the Captor’s Lan- sionary Homes, 1835-1862. 24(4): 570-600. guage: Teaching Native Science to Students 2000. of Western Science. 25(2): 270-73. 2001. oleman, Michael C. Nothing Compares to Friedberg, Lilian. Dare to Compare: Ameri- Comparison: Reflections on the Social Issue canizing the Holocaust. 24(3): 253-80. of the American Indian Quarterly Dedicated 2000. to “Writing about American Indians.” Gardner, Susan. Speaking of Ella Deloria: 22(1 & 2): 116-24. 1998 (Commentary). Conversations with Joyzelle Gingway God- The Responses of American Indian frey, 1998-2000, Lower Brule Community Children and Irish Children to the School, College, South Dakota. 24(3): 456-81. 2000 1850s—1920s: A (¢ somparativ e Study in Interview Cross-Cultural Education. 23(3 & 4): 83— Garroutte, Eva Marie. The Racial Formation 112. 1999. of American Indians: Negotiating Legiti- onrad, Maia. Disorderly Drinking: Recon- mate Identities within Tribal and Federal sidering Seventeenth-Century Iroquois Al- Law. 25(2): 224-39. 2001. cohol Use. 23(3 & 4): 1-12. 1999. Ghere, David L., and Alvin H. Morrison. ook, Barbara. A Tapestry of History and Searching for Justice on the Maine Frontier: Reimagination: Women’s Place in James Legal Concepts, Treaties, and the 1749 Wis- Welch’s Fools Crow. 24(3): 441-53. 2000. casset Incident. 25(3): 378-99. 2001. Cox, James H. “All This Water Imagery Must Glowacka, Maria Danuta. Ritual Knowledge Mean Something”: Thomas King’s Revi- in Hopi Tradition. 22(3): 386—92. 1998 sions of Narratives of Domination and (Commentary). Conquest in Green Grass, Running Water. Graubart, Karen B. Weaving and the Con 24(2): 219— 46. 2000 struction of a Gender Division of Labor in Dobyns, Henry F., and Robert C. Euler. The Early Colonial Peru. 24(4): 537—6:. 2000. Nine Lives of Cherum, the Pai Tokumhet. Harris, LaDonna, Stephen M. Sachs, and 22(3): 363—85. 1998. Benjamin J. Broome. Wisdom of the People: —. Pai Cultural Change (Response Potential and Pitfalls in Efforts by the Co- to Braatz). 23(3 & 4): 148-58. 1999 manches to Recreate Traditional Ways of Commentary). Building Consensus. 25(1): 114-34. 2001 —. Pai Sociopolitical Structure (Dis- (Commentary). cussions). 23(3 & 4): 159-74. 1999 Hudson, Charles. Reply to Mary Churchill. Commentary). 24(3): 494-502. 2000 (Debate). Donaldson, Laura E. Writing the Talking Hoefel, Roseanne. “Different by Degree”: Ella Stick. 22(1 & 2): 46-62. 1998. Cara Deloria, Zora Neale Hurston, and AMERICAN INDIAN QUARTERLY/ FALL 2002/ VOL. 26,NO.4 685 Franz Boas Contend with Race and Ethnic Sits in the Middle”: A Conversation with ity. 25(2): 181-202. 2001. Billy Evans Horse, Former Kiowa Tribal Howard, Scott J. Contemporary American Chairman (1982—1986, 1994-1998). 23 >): Indian Storytelling: An Outsider’s Perspec 59-70. 1999 (Interview). tive. 23(1): 45—53. 1999. ~, and Clyde Ellis. Applying Communi- Jalalzai, Zubeda. Tricksters, Captives, and tas to Kiowa Powwows., 22(4): 485—92. 1998 Conjurers: The “Roots” of Liminality and Commentary Gerald Vizenor’s Bearheart. 23(1 Lawrence, Jane Che Indian Health Service 1999. and the Sterilization of Native American Johnson, Robert. Inspired Lines: Reading Jo Women. 24(3): 400— 419. 2000. Harjo’s Prose Poems. 23(3 & 4): 13—23. 1999 Leavelle, Tracy Neal. “We Will Make It Our Justice, Daniel Heath. We’re Not There Yet, Own Place”: Agriculture and Adaptation at Kemo Sabe: Positing a Future for American the Grand Ronde Reservation, 1856-1887 , Indian Literary Studies. 25(2): 256—69. 2001 4 133—56. 19908 Kalter, Susan. “America’s Histories” Revis Lewis, Randolph. The Native Roots of Mod ited: The Case of Tell Them They Lie. 25(3 rn Art: Rereading the Paintings of Leon 329-51. 2001. Polk Smith. 25(1): 93-113. 2001. Karr, Steven M. “Water We Believed Could ttlecrow-Russell, Sarah. “Invisible Indians.’ Never Belong to Anyone”: The San Luis Re} 24(3): 454. 2000 (Poetry River and the Pala Indians of Southern “Lost Bird.” 24(3 : 455. 2000 California. 24(3): 381 99. 2000. Kersey, Harry A., Jr. The Havana Connection Romantic Savage.” 24(3): 455. 2000 Buffalo Tiger, Fidel Castro, and the Origin of Miccosukee Tribal Sov ereignty, 1959 Universal Hiawatha. 24(1 1962. 25(4): 491—507. 2001. Krouse, Susan Applegate. Critical Mass and Lone-Knapp, Faye. Rez Talk: How Reserva Other Crucial Factors in a Developing tion Residents Describe Themselves. 24(4 American Indian Studies Program. 25(2): 635—40. 2000 (Native Voices). 216 —23. 2001. yvett, Laura L. “African and Cherokee ——. Traditional Iroquois Socials: Main xy Choice”: Race and Resistance under taining Identity in the City. 25(3): 400-408 Legalized Segragation. 22(1 & 2): 203-29. 2001. 95 aLonde, Chris. Discerning Connections, Re Lyon, William H. Americans and Other vising the Master Narrative, and Interrogat \liens in the Navajo Historical Imagination ing Identity in Louis Owens’s The Sharpest in the Nineteenth Century. 24(1): 142-61. Sight. 22(3): 305-25. 1998. 2000. ape, Noreen Groover. “I would rather be \ Martin, Rena. Native Connection to Place with my people, but not to live with them Policies and Play. 25(1): 35—40. 2001 (“Na as they live”: Cultural Liminality and tive Voices: An Informal Collection of Double Consciousness in Sarah Win Papers” nemucca Hopkins’s Life Among the Piutes , and June—El Piper. Introductory Re Their Wrongs and Claims. 22(3): 259-79 marks. 25(1): 1— 4. 2001 (‘ Native Voices: An 1998. Informal Collection of Papers”). Lassiter, Luke Eric. Authoritative Texts, McDonald, Dedra S. Intimacy and Empire: Collaborative Ethnography, and Native Indian-African Interaction in Spanish Colo- American Studies. 24(4): 601-14. 2000 nial New Mexico, 1500—1800. 22(1 & 2): (Commentary 134—56. 19938. ——. “Who Am I? I Am The One Who {cPherson, Robert S. Navajo Livestock Re 686 Index duction in Southwestern Utah, 1933-46: Roberson, Susan L. Transloecatioannsd Trans History Repeats Itself. 22(1 & 2): 1-18. 1998 formations: Identity in N. Scott Momaday’s . Of Metaphors and Learning: Navajo The Ancient Child. 22(1 & 2): 31—45. 1998 Teachings for Today’s Youth. 22(4): 457-68. Roberts, Alexa. Trust Me, | Work for the 1998. Government: Confidentiality and Public Menzies, Charles R. and Caroline F. Butler Access to Sensitive Information. 25(1): 13 Working in the Woods: Tsimshian Resource 101 (“Native Voices: An Informal Col Workers and the Forest Industry of British lection of Papers Columbia. 25(3): 409-30. 2001. Rozelle, Page. The Teller and the Tale: His VMihesuah, Devon A. Infatuation Is Not tory and the Oral Tradition in Elizabeth Enough: Review of Ian Frazier’s On the Rez Cook-Lynn’s Aurelia: A Crow Creek Trilog 24\2 283-56. 2000. 25(2): 203—15. 2001. Interview with Denise Maloney- Russell, Scott C., and Eric Henderson. The ctou and Deborah Maloney-Pictou. 24(2 1994 Navajo Presidential Election: Analysis 94-78. 2000 (Interview of the Election and Results of an Exit Poll Miller, Bruce. Culture as Cultural Defense: 23\ 2 23—38. 1999 An American Indian Sacred Site in Court Saunt, Claudio. “The I nglish has now a Mind 1 & 2): 83-97. 1998. to make Slaves of them all”: Creeks, Semi es, Patrick. Beneath the | nderdog: Race, noles, and the Problem of Slavery. 22(1 & 2 Religion, and the Trail of Tears. 25(3): 453 157—80. 1998 9. 2001 Sawchuk, Joe. Negotiatinga n Identity: Métis Nesper, Larry. Remembering the Miami In Political Organizations, the Canadian Gov lian Village Schoolhouse. 25(1): 135-52. ernment, and Competing Conceptso f Abo Commentary riginatity 5(1): 73-92. 2001 Opitz, Andrea. James Welch’s Fools Crow and Senier, Siobhan. Allotment Protest and Tribal the Imagination of Precolonial Space: A Discourse: Reading Wynema’s Successes and ranslator's Approach. 24(1): 126-41. 2000. Shortcomings. 24(3): 420-40. 2000. ’ablo, Marcia. Preservation as Perpetuation Sioul George. Response to Theodore Bin 18—20. 2001 (“Native Voices: An In nema. 25(4): 654—55. 2001 (Debate rmal Collection of Papers Smith, Sherry L. Francis LaFlesche and the rdue, Theda. Clan and Court: Another World of Letters. 25( 4): 579-603. 2001 ook at the Early Cherokee Republic. 24(4 Sol, Adam. The Story as It’s Told: Prodigious 5602-609. 2000 Revisions in Leslie Marmon Silko’s Almanac trillo, Larissa. Bleakness and Greatness in f the Dead. 23(3 & 4): 24-48. 1999. lan Frazier’s On the Rez. 24(2): 287-90. Stockel, H. Henrietta. An Annotated Chiric 00 ahua Apache Bibliography— Selected Powers, Karen Vieira. Andeans and Spaniards Books. 25(1): 153-76. 2001 (Bibliographic the Contact Zone: A Gendered Collision Review 24( 4): 511-36. 2000. Stripes, James. Response to Ian Frazier’s On Powers-Beck, Jeffrey. “Chief”: The American the Rez. 24(2): 296—98. 2000. Indian Integration of Baseball, 1897-1945. Sturm, Circe. Blood Politics, Racial Classifica 25( 4): 508—38. 2001. tion, and Cherokee National Identity: The Rice, Julian. “It Was Their Fault for Being In [rials and Tribulations of the Cherokee tractable”: Internalized Racism and Freedmen. 22(1 & 2): 230—58. 1998. Wounded Knee. 22(1 & 2): 63-82. 1998. feuton, Sean. Placing the Ancestors: Post Ridington, Robin. Coyote’s Cannon: Sharing modernism, “Realism,” and American In Stories with Thomas King. 22{3): 343-62. dian Identity in James Welch’s Winter in the 995. Blood. 25(4): 626—50. 2001. AMERICAN INDIAN QUARTERLY/ FALL 2002/ VOL, 26, NO. 4 687 Tollefson, Kenneth D., and Martin L. Abbott. Racial and Ethnic Identity Labels. 23(2): 1- Snoqualmie Ethnicity: Community and 22. 1999. Continuity. 22(4): 415—32. 1998. Trump, Erik. “The laying aside of a shield’ BOOKS REVIEWED, BY AUTHOR Ethnographic Power Struggles in Oliver Bahr, Paul, and Joseph. Ants and Orioles: La Farge’s Indian Fiction. 22(3): 326-42. Showing the Art of Pima Poetry. (Karenne 1998. Wood) 23(3 & 4): 207. 1999. Van Hoak, Stephen P. Untangling the Roots Bailey. The Osage and the Invisible World from of Dependency: Choctaw Economics, the Works of Francis La Flesche. (Willard 1700-1860. 23(3 & 4): 113-28. 1999 Hughes Rollings) 24(2): 309. 2000. (Commentary). Bettelyoun and Waggoner. With My Own Vest, Jay Hansford C. From Bobtail to Brer Eyes: A Lakota Woman Tells Her People’s Rabbit: Native American Influences on History. (Theda Perdue) 23(2): 85. 1999. , Uncle Remus. 24(1): 19— 43. 2000. Bilharz. The Allegany Senecas and Kinzua Watkins, Joe. “Place-meant.” 25(1): 41-45. Dam: Forced Relocation through Two 2001 (“Native Voices: An Informal Collec- Generations. (Thomas A. Britten) 23(1): tion of Papers”). 67. 1999. Weaver, Hilary N. Indigenous Identity: What Biolsi and Zimmerman, eds. Indians and An- Is It and Who Really Has It? 25(2): 240-55. thropologists: Vine Deloria Jr. and the Cri- 2001. tique of Anthropology. (Luke Eric Lassiter) Webster, Anthony. Lisandro Mendez’s “Coy 23(1): 60. 1999. ote and Deer”: On Reciprocity, Narrative Black. Bella Bella: A Season of Heiltsuk Art. Structures, and Interactions. 23(1): 1-24. Karen Duffek) 23(3 & 4): 198. 1999. 1999. Boehme et al. Powerful Images: Portrayals of Welch, John R., and Ramon Riley. Reclaiming Native America. (Erik Trump) 23(1): 68. Land and Spirit in the Western Apache 1999. Homeland. 25(1): 5—12. 2001 (“Native Brandao. Your Fyre Shall Burn No More”: Voices: An Informal Collection of Papers Iroquois Policy toward New France and Its Wickwire, Wendy. The Grizzly Gave Them Native Allies to 1701. (Peter C. Mancall) the Song: James Teit and Franz Boas Inter 330 4): 180. 1999. pret Twin Ritual in Aboriginal British Co- Britten. American Indians in World War I. lumbia, 1897—1920. 25(3): 431-52. 2001. (Joseph C. Porter) 22(4): 538. 1998. Wise, Christopher, and R. Todd Wise. A Con Bucko. The Lakota Ritual of the Sweat Lodge: versation with Mary Brave Bird. 24(3): 482 History and Contemporary Practice. (Kath- 93. 2000 (Interview). leen Pickering) 23(3 & 4): 185. 1999. Witkin-New Holy, Alexandra. Oglala Obscu- Burch. The Ifiupiag Eskimo Nations of North- rity: A Review of Ian Frazier’s On the Rez. west Alaska. (Andrew H. Fisher) 23(1): 70. 24(2): 291-95. 2000. 1999. Wood, Karenne. “Colors.” 22( 4): 494. 1998 Calloway. The American Revolution in Indian (Poetry). Country: Crisis and Diversity in Native . “Urban Nightmare.” 22(4): 493. 1998 American Communities. (Alice Nash) 22(3): (Poetry). 401. 1998. Wyss, Hilary E. Captivity and Conversion: ——. New Worlds for All: Indians, Euro- William Apess, Mary Jemison, and Narra- peans, and the Remaking of Early America. tives of Racial Identity. 23(3 & 4): 63—82. Brian Hosmer) 23(1): 62. 1999. 1999. Chalfant. Cheyennes at Dark Water Creek. Yellow Bird, Michael. What We Want to Be (William S. Reeder Jr.) 22(3): 399. 1998. 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