Cover; Half Title; Title Page; Copyright Page; Table of Contents; Notes on contributors; Introduction -- Indigenous Studies: An appeal for methodological promiscuity; Part I Emerging from the past; 1 Historical sources and methods in Indigenous Studies: Touching on the past, looking to the future; 2 Reflections on Indigenous literary nationalism: On home grounds, singing hogs, and cranky critics; 3 History, anthropology, Indigenous Studies; 4 Reclaiming the statistical "native": Quantitative historical research beyond the pale; Part II Alternative sources and methodological reorientations.
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12 Placing the city: Crafting urban Indigenous historiesII. All in the family; 13 "I do still have a letter:" Our sea of archives; 14 History with Nana: Family, life, and the spoken source; 15 Elder Brother as theoretical framework; 16 Histories with communities: Struggles, collaborations, transformations; 17 Places and peoples: Sámi feminist technoscience and supradisciplinary research methods; 18 Oral history; III. Feminism, gender, and sexuality; 19 Status, sustainability, and American Indian women in the twentieth century.
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20 Representations of violence: (Re)telling Indigenous women's stories and the politics of knowledge production21 Indigenous interventions and feminist methods; 22 History and masculinity; 23 Indigenous is to queer as & : Queer questions for Indigenous Studies; IV. Indigenous literature and expressive culture; 24 State violence, history, and Maya literature in Guatemala; 25 Pieces left along the trail: Material culture histories and Indigenous Studies; 26 Authoring Indigenous Studies in three dimensions: An approach to museum curation; 27 Future tense: Indigenous film, pedagogy, promise.
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I. Reframing Indigenous Studies5 Recovering, restorying, and returning Nahua writing in Mexico; 6 Mind, heart, hands: Thinking, feeling, and doing in Indigenous history methodology; 7 Relationality: A key presupposition of an Indigenous social research paradigm; 8 Standing with and speaking as faith: A feminist-Indigenous approach to inquiry; 9 Stepping in it: How to smell the fullness of Indigenous histories; 10 Intellectual history and Indigenous methodology; 11 A genealogy of critical Hawaiian studies, late twentieth to early twenty-first century.
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v. Indigenous peoples in and beyond the state28 Stories as law: A method to live by; 29 Métis in the borderlands of the northern Plains in the nineteenth century; 30 Plotting colonization and recentering Indigenous actors: Approaches to and sources for studying the history of Indigenous education; 31 Laws, codes, and informal practices: Building ethical procedures for historical research with Indigenous medical records; 32 Toward a post-Quincentennial approach to the study of genocide; 33 Revealing, reporting, and reflecting: Indigenous Studies research as praxis in reconciliation projects.