Results for 'Native Americans'

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  1.  13
    Native American Dis/possessions: Postcolonial Trauma in Hitchcock’s Vertigo.Stefan Ecks - 2023 - Theory, Culture and Society 40 (7-8):141-156.
    The Ohlone, the original settlers of the San Francisco region, were violently dispossessed by successive colonial regimes, first Spanish, then US American. The colonial trauma was written out of history, and by the 20th century anthropologists pronounced the Ohlone to be ‘extinct’. In this article, I explore how the dispossession of the Ohlone haunt one of the greatest movies of all time: Alfred Hitchcock’s Vertigo (1958). Although Vertigo is one of the most-analysed films ever, no one has noticed that Carlotta (...)
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  2. A Native American Relational Ethic: An Indigenous Perspective on Teaching Human Responsibility.Amy Klemm Verbos & Maria Humphries - 2014 - Journal of Business Ethics 123 (1):1-9.
    Our exemplar of a Native American relational ethic is depicted through the Seven Grandfather Teachings, an ancient sacred story of Potawatomi and Ojibwe peoples. These teachings state that human beings are responsible to act with wisdom, respect, love, honesty, humility, bravery, and truth toward each other and all creation. We illustrate the possible uses of this ethic through exercises wherein students reflect on the values and learn lessons related to ethics, leadership, teamwork, and relationships, or create stories using (...) American story form. (shrink)
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  3. Homo sapiens 41; 102 Human rights 70, 72 Human variability 21, 94 Hypothesis 37, 42 Ideal vs. real culture 11.Native Americans - 2008 - In Philip Carl Salzman & Patricia C. Rice (eds.), Thinking anthropologically: a practical guide for students. Upper Saddle River, N.J.: Pearson Prentice Hall. pp. 45--120.
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  4.  38
    Native American land ethics: Implications for natural resource management.Patricia M. Jostad, Leo H. McAvoy & Daniel McDonald - 1996 - Society and Natural Resources 9 (6):565-581.
    Native American land ethics are not well understood by many governmental natural resource managers. This article presents the results of interviews with selected tribal elders, tribal land managers, and tribal content experts concerning traditional beliefs and values forming a land ethic and how these influence tribal land management practices. The Native American land ethic that emerged from this study includes four belief areas: “All Is Sacred”; ; “Right Action”; ; “All Is Interrelated”; ; and “Mother Earth”;. Traditional (...) American beliefs concerning the environment appear to spring from a spiritual context rather than the scientific‐utilitarian context more prevalent in the dominant Euro‐American culture. (shrink)
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  5.  80
    Memory in Native American Land Claims.Burke A. Hendrix - 2005 - Political Theory 33 (6):763-785.
    While claims for the return of expropriated land by Native Americans and other indigenous peoples are often evaluated using legal frameworks, such approaches fail to engage the fundamental moral questions involved. This essay outlines three justifications for Native Americans to pursue land claims: to regain properties where original ownership has not been superseded, to aid the long-term survival of their endangered cultures, and to challenge and revise the historical misremembering of mainstream American society. The third justification (...)
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  6. Native American “Absences”: Cherokee Culture and the Poetry of Philosophy.Joshua M. Hall - forthcoming - Global Conversations.
    In this essay, after a brief decolonial analysis of the concept of “poetry” in Indigenous communities, I will investigate the poetic-philosophical implications of Cherokee culture, more specifically the poetic essence of the Cherokee language, the poetic aspects of Cherokee myth (pre-history) and post-myth (history), and the poetic-philosophical powers of Cherokee ritual. My first section analyzes the poetic essence, structure, special features, and historical context of the Cherokee language, drawing on Ruth Holmes and Betty Sharp Smith’s language textbook, Beginning Cherokee. My (...)
     
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  7.  35
    Native American Literature and the Canon.Arnold Krupat - 1983 - Critical Inquiry 10 (1):145-171.
    Although not exactly continuous, the Native American challenge to the canon, as I have tried to show, has been of comparatively long standing. Nonetheless, inasmuch as Native American literary production and Euramerican writing influenced by it have only barely begun to enter the courses in and the anthologies of general American literature, that challenge cannot be said to have been effective as yet. No doubt it will take more time for poets and teachers to recognize what Native (...)
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  8. Native American Postcolonial Psychology.Eduardo Duran & Bonnie Duran - 1995 - SUNY Press.
    "This book presents a theoretical discussion of problems and issues encountered in the Native American community from a perspective that accepts Native knowledge as legitimate. Native American cosmology and metaphor are used extensively in order to deal with specific problems such as alcoholism, suicide, family, and community problems. The authors discuss what it means to present material from the perspective of a people who have legitimate ways of knowing and conceptualizing reality and show that it is imperative (...)
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  9. Native American Worldview and the Discourse on Disability.Lavonna Lovern - 2008 - Essays in Philosophy 9 (1):113-120.
    This paper argues that discussions of disability must include the same diversity in worldview as is reflected in the client population. Speaking from the perspective of Native American ontology and epistemology, the author argues that those who are considered by the dominant society as disabled might well find themselves subjugated and oppressed by that definition. The differences between a Native American worldview and that of the dominant culture is addressed. The case is made that if diversity in worldview (...)
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  10.  68
    Between Native American and Continental Philosophy: A comparative approach to narrative and the emergence of responsible selves.Troy Richardson - 2012 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 44 (6):663-674.
    This essay explores some of the affinities between current theories of North American Indigenous trickster narratives and continental philosophy where they are both concerned with the question of responsibility in subject formations. Taking up the work of Judith Butler, Franz Kafka and Gerald Vizenor, the author works to show how both continental and Indigenous intellectual traditions work against any assumed stability for the ‘I’ in the narration of the self, yet toward responsible relationality. Such affinities, however, emerge from differing socio‐cultural (...)
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  11.  7
    Defining Native American.Edward Schiappa - 2024 - Topoi 43 (5):1649-1660.
    This paper explores the question of who is defined as a Native American within the jurisdictions of the United States. Determining individual status can be seen as a two-step process: Is a given individual recognized by a specific tribe as a member? Then, is that specific tribe acknowledged by a relevant governmental unit? Though both seem simple questions, this paper illustrates that the question “Is Person X a Native American?” sometimes can be quite fraught, and manifests what I (...)
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  12. The Native American Tribe as a Client: An Ethical Analysis, 10 Geo. J.N. Zlock Tracy - 1996 - Legal Ethics 159:175-76.
  13.  20
    The Archive, the Native American, and Jefferson's Convulsions.Jonathan Elmer - 1998 - Diacritics 28 (4):5-24.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:The Archive, The Native American, and Jefferson’s ConvulsionsJonathan Elmer (bio)1 Saxa loquunturTrauma theory proposes that there are inscriptions that befuddle any clean divide between present and past, records that have been neither selected nor destroyed by evolutionary veto but remain in some kind of limbo, “in abeyance,” as Jacques Lacan phrases it, “awaiting attention.” In a typical maneuver, Lacan emphasizes a double meaning in the French—the “reality” awaiting (...)
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  14.  29
    A Native American view of the mind as seen in the lexicon of cognition in East Cree.Marie-Odile Junker - 2003 - Cognitive Linguistics 14 (2-3).
  15.  6
    Native Americans and Nuclear Power.Dorothy Nelkin - 1981 - Science, Technology and Human Values 6 (2):2-13.
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  16.  34
    Native American Worldviews: An Introduction.Jerry H. Gill - 2002 - Humanities Press.
    In this excellent survey of Native American worldviews, philosopher of religion Jerry H. Gill emphasizes the value of tracing the overarching themes and broad contours of Native American belief systems. He presents an integrated view to serve as an introduction to ways of life and perspectives on the world far different from those of the dominant Euro-American culture. Drawing on the scholarship of anthropologists and specialists in American Indian Studies, Gill brings together much original research in broad, accessible (...)
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  17.  28
    Native American Mathematics. Michael P. Closs.Clara Kidwell - 1987 - Isis 78 (3):487-488.
  18.  24
    Native American AstronomyAnthony F. Aveni.Stephen Mccluskey - 1978 - Isis 69 (4):615-616.
  19.  42
    Body Fragmentation: Native American Community Members’ Views on Specimen Disposition in Biomedical/Genetics Research.Puneet Chawla Sahota - 2014 - AJOB Empirical Bioethics 5 (3):19-30.
    Background: Genetics research is controversial in Native American communities, and the disposition and ownership of biological specimens are central issues. Within Native communities, there is considerable variety in tribal members’ views. This article reports the results from an ethnographic study conducted with a Native American community in the southwestern United States. The purpose of this study was to examine the relationship (past and present) between the tribe and biomedical/genetics research. Methods: Qualitative interviews were conducted with 53 members (...)
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  20. Introduction: Special issue on "native american women, feminism, and indigenism".Anne Waters - 2003 - Hypatia 18 (2):ix-xx.
    Anticipate that this volume will nourish discussions in Native American, Indigenous, and Women's Studies, as well as in interdisciplinary courses. In respecting all of our relations, we present this journal in the spirit of healing the earth.The second theme is the incredible violence committed against Native women in the name of a continuing manifest destiny. Internalized oppression, violence turned against oneself, is devastating our communities as elders and youth stand by and watch generations of our people get lost (...)
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  21.  7
    The Native American Image Ethic.Alastair Beattie - 2002 - Philosophy, Culture, and Traditions 1:121-133.
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  22.  28
    Native American crop diversity, genetic resource conservation, and the policy of neglect.Gary P. Nabhan - 1985 - Agriculture and Human Values 2 (3):14-17.
  23.  39
    An Approach to Native American Texts.Arnold Krupat - 1982 - Critical Inquiry 9 (2):323-338.
    Recent developments in post-structuralist hermeneutical theory, whatever their effect on the reading of Western literature, have had an enormously salutary effect on the reading of Native American literature. With the reexamination of such concepts of voice, text, and performance, and of the ontological and epistemological status of the sign, has come a variety of effective means for specifying and demonstrating the complexity and richness of Native American narrative. The movement away from structuralism’s binary method necessarily rejected Claude Lévi-Strauss’ (...)
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  24.  37
    Native American music and curriculum: Controversies and cultural issues.Andrea Boyea - forthcoming - Philosophy of Music Education Review.
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  25.  38
    Human and horse medicine among some Native American groups.Elizabeth Atwood Lawrence - 1998 - Agriculture and Human Values 15 (2):133-138.
    Because Plains Indians, as well as some other groups of Native Americans, generally perceived people and animals as closely related, medical therapies and preventive regimes in human and veterinary medical practice often overlapped. The sense of partnership that mounted people shared with their horses dictated that it was appropriate for certain equine remedies to be similar to those used for themselves. Horses, as well as people, could possess useful knowledge in the realm of curing. Reciprocity between humankind and (...)
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  26.  17
    Confrontation and reconcilement in contemporary native american theater.Sidoní López Pérez - 2022 - Human Review. International Humanities Review / Revista Internacional de Humanidades 11 (6):1-10.
    Contemporary Native American theater consists of a long list of plays which normally include indigenous and mixed-blood characters who often find themselves living between two worlds, that is, Native culture and white American society. Therefore, it is common to find a significant confrontation and conflict between the two cultures, which is usually solved at the end of the plays with the characters’ reconcilement or synthesis between their Native heritage and the white domineering society. In this way, (...) Americans can ensure their Native cultural existence and survival whilst simultaneously adapting to the changes and customs required by white American society. (shrink)
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  27.  36
    Native Americans and the Burden of History.Kerwin Lee Klein - 2005 - Modern Intellectual History 2 (3):409-417.
  28.  54
    Teaching Native American music with story for multicultural ends.Andrea Boyea - forthcoming - Philosophy of Music Education Review.
  29.  39
    Contemporary Native American Women Artists: Visual Expressions of Feminism, the Environment, and Identity.Phoebe Farris - 2005 - Feminist Studies 31 (1):95-109.
  30. Native American cultures along the Atlantic littoral of South America, 1499-1650.Neil L. Whitehead - 1993 - In Whitehead Neil L. (ed.), The Meeting of Two Worlds: Europe and the Americas 1492–1650. pp. 197-231.
     
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  31. Native american religion versus archaeological science: A pernicious dichotomy revisited.K. Anne Pyburn - 1999 - Science and Engineering Ethics 5 (3):355-366.
    Adversarial relations between science and religion have recurred throughout Western History. Archaeologists figure prominently in a recent incarnation of this debate as members of a hegemonic scientific elite. Postmodern debates situate disagreements in cosmological differences between innocent, traditional, native peoples and insensitive, career-mad, colonialist scientists. This simplistic dichotomy patronizes both First Peoples and archaeologists, pitting two economically marginal groups in a political struggle that neither can win. Although a few scholars have discussed the tyrannical nature of anthropological models of (...)
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  32.  4
    Listening to Native Americans.John Barry Ryan - 1996 - Listening 31 (1):24-36.
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  33. Ties that Bind: Native American Beliefs as a Foundation for Environmental Consciousness.Harvey L. Jacobs - 1990 - Environmental Ethics 12 (1):27-43.
    In this article we examine the specific contributions Native American thought can make to the ongoing search for a Western ecological consciousness. We begin with a review of the influence of Native American beliefs on the different branches of the modem environmental movement and some initial comparisons of Western and Native American ways of seeing. We then review Native American thought on the natural world, highlighting beliefs in the need for reciprocity and balance, the world as (...)
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  34. Sexuality and gender in Native American tribes: Th e case of crossgender females.Evelyn Blackwood - 1994 - In Anne Herrmann & Abigail J. Stewart (eds.), Theorizing feminism: parallel trends in the humanities and social sciences. Boulder: Westview Press. pp. 301--315.
  35.  94
    Native American Feminism, Sovereignty, and Social Change.Andrea Smith - 2005 - Feminist Studies 31 (1):116-132.
  36. On the Particular Racism of Native American Mascots.Erin C. Tarver - 2016 - Critical Philosophy of Race 4 (1):95-126.
    An account of the specific ill of Native American mascots—that is, the particular racism of using Native Americans as mascots, as distinct from other racist portrayals of Native Americans—requires a fuller account of the function of mascots as such than has previously been offered. By analyzing the history of mascots in the United States, this article argues that mascots function as symbols that draw into an artificial unity 1) a variety of teams existing over a (...)
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  37.  40
    Cartographic Encounters: Perspectives on Native American Mapmaking and Map Use. G. Malcolm Lewis.Jeremy Black - 1999 - Isis 90 (3):576-576.
  38.  69
    Cultural Challenges to Biotechnology: Native American Genetic Resources and the Concept of Cultural Harm.Rebecca Tsosie - 2007 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 35 (3):396-411.
    Our society currently faces many complex and perplexing issues related to biotechnology, including the need to define the outer boundaries of genetic research on human beings and the need to protect individual and group rights to human tissue and the knowledge gained from the study of that tissue. Scientists have increasingly become interested in studying so-called “population isolates” to discover the nature and location of genes that are unique to particular groups. Indigenous peoples are often targeted by scientists because “the (...)
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  39. Critical Indigenous Philosophy: Disciplinary Challenges Posed by African and Native American Epistemologies.Jennifer Lisa Vest - 2000 - Dissertation, University of California, Berkeley
    In this thesis, I examine recent proposals for the creation of African and Native American forms of Indigenous philosophy and show how the discussions and debates in these fields challenge the disciplinary boundaries of modern Academic Western philosophy. With regard to African philosophy, I critique the debates in the Anglophone literature, teasing out those aspects of the debates which pose substantial epistemological challenges to mainstream [Western] philosophy, focusing, in particular, on assumptions about the intersections between philosophy, culture, science, and (...)
     
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  40.  26
    On the Translation of Native American Literatures (review).Anna Carew-Miller - 1994 - Philosophy and Literature 18 (1):163-165.
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  41.  86
    Images of Native Americans in advertising: Some moral issues.Michael K. Green - 1993 - Journal of Business Ethics 12 (4):323-330.
    Images of Native Americans and of aspects of Native American culture are common in advertisements in the United States. Three such images can be distinguished — the Noble Savage, the Civilizable Savage and the Bloodthirsty Savage images. The aim of this paper is to argue that the use of such images is not morally acceptable because these images depend upon an underlying conception of Native Americans that denies that they are human beings. By so doing, (...)
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  42. Ethics and Native American reburials: a philosopher's view of two decades of NAGPRA.Douglas P. Lackey - 2006 - In Chris Scarre & Geoffrey Scarre (eds.), The Ethics of Archaeology: Philosophical Perspectives on Archaeological Practice. Cambridge University Press. pp. 146.
  43.  34
    Callicott on native american attitudes.Frederik Kaufman - 1996 - Environmental Ethics 18 (4):437-438.
  44. How It Is: The Native American Philosophy of V. F. Cordova.Viola Faye Cordova - 2007 - University of Arizona Press.
    Arranges the work of Viola Cordova, presenting her understanding and interpretation of the interactions between people and nature.
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  45. Truth and Native American epistemology.Lee Hester & Jim Cheney - 2001 - Social Epistemology 15 (4):319-334.
  46.  34
    In Search of Native American Aesthetics.Leroy N. Meyer - 2001 - The Journal of Aesthetic Education 35 (4):25.
  47.  33
    The Cognitive Unconscious in Native American Embodied Knowing.Shay Welch - 2019 - Philosophy in the Contemporary World 25 (1):84-106.
    In this paper, I address only one small parallel between one subsection of Western epistemology and cognitive theory and Native American epistemology. I draw the connection between the recent theories of embodied cognition and distinctive Native modes of embodied implicit procedural knowing, such as blood memory, vision questions, and non-binary logical systems. My reason for doing so is twofold. First, I show how these distinctive ways of knowing within Native worldviews are not mere mystical claims that can (...)
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  48.  63
    Restorative Justice Practices of Native American Practitioners of the Southwestern United States.Laura Mirsky - 2009 - Journal for Peace and Justice Studies 18 (1/2):95-107.
    This article about restorative justice practices of Native American Restorative Justice of the southwestern United States is not intended to be all-inclusive, but rather a broad thematic overview. It includes interviews with three justice practitioners of the southwestern United States: The Honorable Robert Yazzie, chief justice emeritus of the Navajo Nation Supreme Court and director of the Dine’é Policy Institute of the Dine’é College at Tsaile, Arizona, a college chartered by the Navajo Nation; Judge Joseph Flies-Away of the Hualapai (...)
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  49.  45
    Racialized Disgust and the Depiction of Native Americans in the Ranown Cycle Westerns.Dan Flory - 2024 - Film and Philosophy 28:39-69.
    This article explores mainstream audience reactions concerning race and how they intersect with late 1950s Westerns known as the Ranown cycle. Synthesizing ideas from critical philosophy of race, philosophy of film, cognitive film theory, and philosophy of emotion, I analyze how these films elicit racialized reactions of sociomoral disgust toward Native American characters. Because such responses are not ordinarily processed through higher-level forms of cognition, I argue that these embodied, affective, implicit reactions are key to understanding how films like (...)
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  50.  20
    Genomic Justice for Native Americans: Impact of the Havasupai Case on Genetic Research.Nanibaa' A. Garrison - 2013 - Science, Technology, and Human Values 38 (2):201-223.
    In 2004, the Havasupai Tribe filed a lawsuit against the Arizona Board of Regents and Arizona State University researchers upon discovering their DNA samples, initially collected for genetic studies on type 2 diabetes, had been used in several other genetic studies. The lawsuit reached a settlement in April 2010 that included monetary compensation and return of DNA samples to the Havasupai but left no legal precedent for researchers. Through semistructured interviews, institutional review board chairs and human genetics researchers at US (...)
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