82 results on '"Hosmer A"'
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2. Back Cover
3. Chapter 5: Imagining Un-Imagined Communities: The Politics of Indigenous Nationalism
4. Chapter 9: We Worked and Made Beautiful Things: Kiowa Women, Material Culture, and Peoplehood, 1900–1939
5. Chapter 8: Anishinaabe Gathering Rights and Market Arts: The Contribution of the WPA Indian Handicraft Project in Michigan
6. Contributors
7. Chapter 6: Articulating a Traditional Future: Makah Sealers and Whalers, 1880–1999
8. Chapter 2: ‘To Renew Our Fire’: Political Activism, Nationalism, and Identity in Three Rotinonhsionni Communities
9. Part I: Definitions
10. Part II: Manifestations
11. Chapter 7: Beyond Folklore: Historical Writing and Treaty Rights Activism in the Bad River WPA
12. Chapter 1: Tuscarora Political Domains
13. Chapter 4: Marked by Fire: Anishinaabe Articulations of Nationhood in Treaty-Making with the United States and Canada
14. Cover
15. Introduction
16. Acknowledgments
17. Location of Indian Communities Discussed in this Volume
18. Chapter 3: Kinship as an Assertion of Sovereign Native Nationhood
19. Contents
20. Title Page, Copyright
21. Consolidated Bibliography
22. Chapter Fourteen. Tribal Capitalism and Native Capitalists: Multiple Pathways of Native Economy
23. Index
24. About the Contributors
25. Chapter Twelve. Local Knowledge as Traditional Ecological Knowledge: Definition and Ownership
26. Chapter Thirteen. “Dollar a Day and Glad to Have It': Work Relief on the Wind River Indian Reservation as Memory
27. PART III METHODOLOGY AND THEORETICAL IMPLICATIONS
28. Chapter Fifteen. Conclusion
29. Cover
30. Copyright
31. Foreword
32. Title Page
33. Contents
34. PART ONE: COMMERCE AND INCORPORATION
35. Acknowledgments
36. Chapter Two. Searching for Salvation and Sovereignty Blackfeet Oil Leasing and the Reconstruction of the Tribe
37. Chapter One. Rethinking Modernity and the Discourse of Development in American Indian History, an Introduction
38. Chapter Three. Minding Their Own Business: The Kiowa-Comanche-Apache Business Committee of the Early 1900s
39. Chapter Four. Casino Roots: The Cultural Production of Twentieth-Century Seminole Economic Development
40. Chapter Six. The Devil’s in the Details: Tracing the Fingerprints of Free Trade and Its Effects on Navajo Weavers
41. Chapter Eight. Work and Culture in Southeastern Alaska: Tlingits and the Salmon Fisheries
42. Chapter Five. The Dawn of a New Day? Notes on Indian Gaming in Southern California
43. PART II WAGE WORK
44. Chapter Ten. Land, Labor, and Leadership: The Political Economy of Hualapai Community Building, 1910–1940
45. Chapter Eleven. Working for Identity: Race, Ethnicity, and the Market Economy in Northern California, 1875–1936
46. Chapter Nine. Five Dollars a Week to Be “Regular Indians': Shows, Exhibitions, and the Economics of Indian Dancing, 1880–1930
47. Chapter Seven. “All We Needed Was Our Gardens': Women’s Work and Welfare Reform in the Reservation Economy
48. Muriel Spark’s Early Fiction: Literary Subversion and Experiments with Form by James Bailey (review)
49. Industrial Creativity: The Psychology of the Inventor by Joseph Rossman (review)
50. Oklahoma's Atticus: An Innocent Man and the Lawyer Who Fought for Him by Hunter Howe Cates (review)
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