Search
Filters
A New Force of Indian Country.
In 1969, my father gave voice to an activist generation of Native Americans. By Philip J. Deloria
How Nature Enabled Freedom for Groundbreaking American Women
From Harriet Tubman to Louisa May Alcott, the natural world was a catalyst to slipping their bonds
What exactly is a republic anyway?
Government professor looks at long history, evolution of form of governance in class that’s drawing high interest in current moment
Many in Native communities applaud U.S. apology over boarding schools
Deloria, Gone say action over decades long initiative to forcibly assimilate children overdue, necessary
Christopher Pexa
Christopher Pexa is an Associate Professor of English. His research interests include: Očhéti Šakówiŋ Language and Literature, Native American and Indigenous Literatures, Native American and Indigenous Studies, Global Anglophone Indigenous Literatures...
Stephanie Mach
Stephanie Mach is Curator of North American Ethnographic Collections at the Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology at Harvard University, and a member of the Navajo Nation. Mach’s research interests include museum care and stewardship, museum...
Meredith Vasta
Meredith Vasta is a Collections Steward at the Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology at Harvard University, and an enrolled member of the Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa Indians. Currently, as a Collections Steward she focuses on the museum’s...
Meet the Author Who Reimagines History Through the Eyes of the Silenced
Tiya Miles, acclaimed historian and author of 'All That She Carried,' reimagines American history through the voices of the silenced. Her work brings emotional depth and scholarly rigour to the overlooked lives that shaped the past and still shape us...
Davíd Carrasco
Davíd Carrasco is a Mexican American historian of religions with particular interest in native Mesoamerican cities as symbols, and the ways Mexican-Americans draw on indigenous histories and myths to survive and thrive in the “borderlands” of culture...