Description
Interdisciplinary essays which examine the importance and effects of indigenous perspectives for museums around the world
About the Author
Susan Sleeper-Smith is a professor of history at Michigan State University. She is the author of Indian Women and French Men: Rethinking Cultural Encounter in the Western Great Lakes and the coeditor of New Faces of the Fur Trade: Selected Proceedings of the Seventh North American Fur Trade Conference.
Contributors: Kristina Ackley, Miranda J. Brady, M. Teresa Carlson, Brenda J. Child, Brian Isaac Daniels, Gwyneira Isaac, Hal Langfur, Paul Liffman, Amy Lonetree, Brenda Macdougall, Zine Magubane, Ann McMullen, Ciraj Rassool, Jennifer Shannon, Ray Silverman, Susan Sleeper-Smith, and Jacki Thompson Rand
Reviews
"Regardless of one's ethnicity, affiliation or experience, museum professionals and public historians alike, especially those with little or no experience working with indigenous communities or other stakeholder audiences, will find this volume concerning an emerging aspect of museum practice valuable and worth exploring."-Kym S. Rice, Western American Literature
"Contesting Knowledge will likely remain relevant for many years as the issues the authors present are ongoing and applicable to any tribal-centered exhibition or public museum collaboration."-Charles D. Chamberlain III, Ethnohistory
"These essays demonstrate that Native peoples across North America and Africa are using museums to rectify a legacy of conquest. As such, scholars and educators in the fields of anthropology, American Indian studies, and museum studies will find this collection of essays especially useful."-Jennifer Fish Kashay, Western Historical Quarterly
"This collection is an important part of the conversations taking place in Indigenous studies and beyond."-Elizabeth Archuleta, Studies in American Indian Literatures
"This book is valuable because it contains both external and internal synopses of cultural convictions, public history motivations, and organizational conventions which operate to situate an object in its "best position.""-Alphine W. Jefferson, Public Historian
Book Information
ISBN 9780803219489
Author Susan Sleeper-Smith
Format Paperback
Page Count 374
Imprint University of Nebraska Press
Publisher University of Nebraska Press
Weight(grams) 503g