edited by Leigh J. Kuwanwisiwma, T.J. Ferguson, and Chip Colwell.
Tucson :
The University of Arizona Press,
2018.
1 online resource
Includes bibliographical references.
Intro; Contents; Preface -- T.J. Ferguson and Chip Colwell; 1. The Collaborative Road: A Personal History of the Hopi Cultural Preservation Office -- Leigh J. Kuwanwisiwma; 2. Traditional Cultural Properties and the Hopi Model of Cultural Preservation -- Chip Colwell and Stewart B. Koyiyumptewa; 3. Maintaining Hopi Stewardship of Ã#x96;ngtupqa (the Grand Canyon) -- Michael Yeatts; 4. Tungwniwpi nit Wukwlavayi (Named Places and Oral Traditions): Multivocal Approaches to Hopi Land -- Saul L. Hedquist et al.; 5. Visual Prominence and the Stability of Cultural Landscapes -- Wesley Bernardini.
11. Hopi Footprints: What Really Matters in Cultural Preservation -- Joñlle Clark and George Gumerman IV12. Oral Traditions and the Tyranny of the Documentary Record: The Moquis and Kastiilam Hopi History Project -- Thomas E. Sheridan; 13. Forging New Intellectual Genealogies in Southwest Archaeology -- Gregson Schachner; 14. The Native Shaping of Anthropological Inquiry -- Peter M. Whiteley; Appendix: Primary Research Reports and Publications from Projects Sponsored by the Hopi Cultural Preservation Office; Contributors; Index.
6. The Homolâ#x80;#x99;ovi Research Program: Enriching Hopi History Through Collaboration -- E. Charles Adams7. The Davis Ranch Site: A Kayenta Immigrant Enclave and a Hopi Footprint in Southeastern Arizona -- Patrick D. Lyons; 8. Becoming Hopi: Exploring Hopi Ethnogenesis Through Architecture, Pottery, and Cultural Knowledge -- Kelley HaysÂGilpin and Dennis Gilpin; 9. Pathways to Hopi: Cultural Affiliation and the Archaeological Textile Record -- Laurie D. Webster; 10. The Genetic Diversity of Hopi Corn -- Mark D. Varien et al.
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This book demonstrates how one tribe has significantly advanced knowledge about its past through collaboration with anthropologists and historians--Provided by publisher.