Spirited Encounters: American Indians Protest Museum Policies and Practices

Spirited Encounters: American Indians Protest Museum Policies and Practices

by Karen Coody Cooper
Spirited Encounters: American Indians Protest Museum Policies and Practices

Spirited Encounters: American Indians Protest Museum Policies and Practices

by Karen Coody Cooper

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Overview

During the twentieth century, dozens of protests, large and small, occurred across North America as American Indians asserted their anger and displayed their disappointment regarding traditional museum behaviors. In response, due to public embarrassment and an awakening of sensitivities, museums began to change their methods and, additionally, laws were enacted in support of American Indian requests for change. The result is that American museums have revised their long-held practices due to American Indian protests. Spirited Encounters provides a foundation for understanding museums and looks at their development to present time, examines how museums collect Native materials, and explores protest as a fully American process of addressing grievances. Now that museums and American Indians are working together in the processes of repatriation, this book can help each side understand the other more fully.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780759113541
Publisher: AltaMira Press
Publication date: 12/07/2007
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 224
File size: 2 MB

About the Author

Karen Coody Cooper was recently the Museum Training Program Coordinator at the National Museum of the American Indian, and was formerly Training Programs Manager at the Smithsonian Center for Education and Museum Studies. She holds a Master of Liberal Studies degree, with a museum and anthropology emphasis, from the University of Oklahoma and is an enrolled member of the Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma.

Table of Contents

Chapter 1 Author's Preface
Chapter 2 Introduction: American Indians, Museums and Protest
Part 3 Part I: Protesting Exhibitions
Chapter 4 Chapter One: Politics and Sponsorship
Chapter 5 Chapter Two: Display of Sacred Objects
Chapter 6 Chapter Three: Display of Human Remains
Chapter 7 Chapter Four: Art Confined to a Reservation of its Own
Part 8 Part II: The Long Road to Repatriation
Chapter 9 Chapter Five: Demands for Return of Material Objects
Chapter 10 Chapter Six: Demands for Return of Human Remains
Part 11 Part III: Whose Heroes and Holidays
Chapter 12 Chapter Seven: No Celebration for Columbus
Chapter 13 Chapter Eight: Thanksgiving Mourned
Chapter 14 Chapter Nine: The Custer Chronicles
Part 15 Part IV: Claiming Our Own Places
Chapter 16 Chapter Ten: Native Cultural Sites
Chapter 17 Chapter Eleven: Transforming Museums
Chapter 18 Conclusion: Achievements Gained by Protests
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