Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
Social and Behavioral Sciences Commons™
Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Discipline
-
- Anthropology (20)
- Arts and Humanities (11)
- Indigenous Studies (8)
- Race, Ethnicity and Post-Colonial Studies (8)
- History (7)
-
- Communication (5)
- United States History (4)
- Education (3)
- Mass Communication (3)
- Sociology (3)
- American Politics (2)
- Archaeological Anthropology (2)
- Educational Administration and Supervision (2)
- Gender, Race, Sexuality, and Ethnicity in Communication (2)
- Higher Education Administration (2)
- Indigenous, Indian, and Aboriginal Law (2)
- International and Intercultural Communication (2)
- Journalism Studies (2)
- Law (2)
- Law and Politics (2)
- Native American Studies (2)
- Political Science (2)
- Public Relations and Advertising (2)
- Race and Ethnicity (2)
- Social and Cultural Anthropology (2)
- Women's History (2)
- American Studies (1)
- Appalachian Studies (1)
- Bilingual, Multilingual, and Multicultural Education (1)
- Institution
- Publication Year
- Publication
-
- Robert K. Thomas (10)
- Faculty Publications (3)
- Masters Theses (2)
- SCIAA Newsletter - Legacy & PastWatch (2)
- US Government Documents related to Indigenous Nations (2)
-
- All Master's Theses (1)
- Archaeology Month Posters (1)
- Chancellor’s Honors Program Projects (1)
- Faculty & Staff Publications (1)
- Graduate Theses and Dissertations (1)
- Great Plains Quarterly (1)
- LSU Master's Theses (1)
- Richard J. Peltz-Steele (1)
- Ronald Bruce Smith (1)
- Ronald D Smith APR (1)
- SCIAA Newsletter - Notebook (1)
- The Bridge (1)
- Publication Type
Articles 1 - 30 of 31
Full-Text Articles in Social and Behavioral Sciences
The Rhythm Of The Land: Women’S Use Of Plants During The Pigeon Phase Of Magic Waters (31jk291) In Cherokee, North Carolina, Kelly Dean Santana
The Rhythm Of The Land: Women’S Use Of Plants During The Pigeon Phase Of Magic Waters (31jk291) In Cherokee, North Carolina, Kelly Dean Santana
Masters Theses
This thesis focuses on the paleoethnobotanical remains of the Pigeon phase village component of the Magic Waters site, 31JK291. The Pigeon phase represented the early Middle Woodland period in the western North Carolina region and spans from approximately 200 BC to AD 200, situated in between the earlier Swannanoa phase (1000 BC to 200 BC) and the later Connestee phase (AD 200 to AD 800; Ward and Davis 1999). The site of Magic Waters is located adjacent to Harrah’s Cherokee Casino and Hotel in Cherokee, Jackson County, North Carolina, among the Blue Ridge ecoregion of the Appalachian Summit. The site …
Promise And Practice: Toward An Expanded, Integrated, Collaborative Narrative On American Indians In Our National Parks, Bethany Hope Henry
Promise And Practice: Toward An Expanded, Integrated, Collaborative Narrative On American Indians In Our National Parks, Bethany Hope Henry
Graduate Theses and Dissertations
Managed by the National Park Service, the Trail of Tears National Historic Trail, established in 1987, was developed to preserve physical segments of land and water routes, but also sites of memory such as unmarked graves and internment camps. Because the foundation of the national trail was the result of successful partnership of Cherokee grassroots efforts and multiple trail and federal advocates, the evolution of that collaboration merits consideration after thirty years to evaluate the application of standards for consultation, co-management, and heritage tourism. While the national trail preserves and marks the various routes, this study examines how three national …
Making Herstory: Cherokee Women's Stickball, Natalie M. Welch, Jessica Siegele, Zachary T. Smith, Robin Hardin
Making Herstory: Cherokee Women's Stickball, Natalie M. Welch, Jessica Siegele, Zachary T. Smith, Robin Hardin
Faculty Publications
Cherokee stickball amongst the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians is a sporting tradition that precedes written records. Historical and academic texts have focused on men’s participation in the sport. However, Cherokee women participated in their own stickball games as recent as a decade ago, and stories exist of women playing stickball in the late nineteenth century. Many in the community believe stickball should not be played by women and doubt evidence of women playing historically. Researchers sought to understand the intersectionality of gender and ethnic identity for female stickball players who took the field to play stickball at the turn …
Legacy - December 2017, South Carolina Institute Of Archaeology And Anthropology--University Of South Carolina
Legacy - December 2017, South Carolina Institute Of Archaeology And Anthropology--University Of South Carolina
SCIAA Newsletter - Legacy & PastWatch
Contents:
Oemler Pottery: A Prehistoric Mystery.....p. 1
Director's Notes.....p. 2
Reconstructing Hawthorne: A New Documentary Film.....p. 3
Tracking Hernando de Soto.....p. 4
The Last Morning of the War: Archaeology on the Appomattox Court House Battlefield.....p. 7
Archaeology in South Carolina: Exploring the Hidden Heritage of the Palmetto State.....p. 9
The First Radiocarbon Dates from 38FA608.....p. 10
Port Royal Sound Stone Fleet Survey...p. 12
Update on Atlantic Offshore Wind Energy Development Project: Ground-Truthing Operations.....p. 15
ART/SCIAA Donors Update August 2016-December 2017.....p. 18 Please Support the New Stanley South Student Archaeological Research Endowment Fund.....p. 20
Immersion Schools And Language Learning: A Review Of Cherokee Lanugage Revitalization Efforts Among The Eastern Band Of Cherokee Indians, Elizabeth Albee
Immersion Schools And Language Learning: A Review Of Cherokee Lanugage Revitalization Efforts Among The Eastern Band Of Cherokee Indians, Elizabeth Albee
Chancellor’s Honors Program Projects
No abstract provided.
My Family, My Identity: An Ethnohistorical Exploration Of A Multiethnic Family, Sarah Oosahwee-Voss
My Family, My Identity: An Ethnohistorical Exploration Of A Multiethnic Family, Sarah Oosahwee-Voss
All Master's Theses
This thesis focuses on family identity in a time when multiethnic couples are increasing in population. How will this populace choose to define who they are? The purpose of this thesis is to focus on a multiethnic family, specifically one with different tribal heritages, and explore how their identity was formed over time and maintained through various times in their history. Multiple ethnographic methods were utilized in tandem to collect the information. A framework was then created to determine the main themes found throughout the history and information compiled in order to define the core values within their family identity. …
Legacy - June 2014, South Carolina Institute Of Archaeology And Anthropology--University Of South Carolina
Legacy - June 2014, South Carolina Institute Of Archaeology And Anthropology--University Of South Carolina
SCIAA Newsletter - Legacy & PastWatch
Contents:
Albert Goodyear is Recognized with "Breakthrough Leadership in Research" Award.....p. 1
Director's Note.....p. 2
Five Officers' Escape from a Columbia Prison, 1864.....p. 3
Volunteer Opportunities Now Available for Working in Topper Lab.....p. 4
Tom Pertierra-Distinguished Archaeologist of the Year.....p. 7
Excavations at Camp Asylum.....p. 8
Archaeology in the 21st Century.....p. 11
The Probate Record of William Wilson, Charleston Merchant.....p. 12
Dating Mound B at the Hollywood Site (9Br1).....p. 16
23rd Annual South Carolina Archaeology Month Poster.....p. 19
Charleston Harbor Stone Fleets Research at the National Archives.....p. 20
Nate Fulmer Joins the Division.....p. 22
Field Training Course-Part I.....p. 23
Historic …
Leadership Bias: The Case Of The Cherokee Freedmen, Kristi Barnett Williams
Leadership Bias: The Case Of The Cherokee Freedmen, Kristi Barnett Williams
LSU Master's Theses
Journalists inform residents living on or near Native American reservations about key policy issues. Since most tribal councils own and operate their news outlets, retaliation towards journalists working for the tribe is a real concern if the leadership does not appreciate the message. In response to the threat of retaliation, some tribes, like the Cherokee Nation, have legal protections for journalists. The Cherokee Nation’s newspaper, the Cherokee Phoenix, operates under the guidelines of the Cherokee Independent Press Act (CIPA) originally passed in 2000 and amended in 2009. CIPA was the first of its kind in Indian Country. This thesis analyzes …
Plant Remains From The Smokemont Site In The Appalachian Mountains Of North Carolina, Gabrielle Casio Purcell
Plant Remains From The Smokemont Site In The Appalachian Mountains Of North Carolina, Gabrielle Casio Purcell
Masters Theses
Smokemont (31Sw393) is a multicomponent site consisting of deposits from Archaic, Woodland, Mississippian, Cherokee, and Euro-American occupations. Located in Swain County in the Smoky Mountains in western North Carolina, two structures have been identified at Smokemont, one as a Mississippian Pisgah phase house, and the other a Contact period Qualla phase house. Beneath the Pisgah house are several Connestee period pit features. Archaeobotanical remains have been collected from Woodland, Mississippian, and Cherokee contexts. Floral analysis of Middle Woodland features indicate some horticultural activity, with wild plants remaining important but supplementary to maize agriculture during the Mississippian and Cherokee occupations. This …
"Fourth World" Values In A Spanish-Language Newspaper Serving An Immigrant Community, Richard J. Peltz-Steele
"Fourth World" Values In A Spanish-Language Newspaper Serving An Immigrant Community, Richard J. Peltz-Steele
Richard J. Peltz-Steele
This study operationalized the Four Worlds model for mass media values in a new context — that of a foreign-language newspaper serving a recent-immigrant community within a First World society, namely a Hispanic community in central Arkansas, in the United States. The study established baseline representations of previously described “First World” and “Fourth World” values in a mainstream central Arkansas newspaper, and in Cherokee and Koori newspapers. The study speculated that the central Arkansas Hispanic community exists with a measure of physical and cultural separation from mainstream society — arising from informal barriers such as socioecomomic status, residential neighborhoods, language, …
"Fourth World" Values In A Spanish-Language Newspaper Serving An Immigrant Community, Richard J. Peltz-Steele
"Fourth World" Values In A Spanish-Language Newspaper Serving An Immigrant Community, Richard J. Peltz-Steele
Faculty Publications
This study operationalized the Four Worlds model for mass media values in a new context — that of a foreign-language newspaper serving a recent-immigrant community within a First World society, namely a Hispanic community in central Arkansas, in the United States. The study established baseline representations of previously described “First World” and “Fourth World” values in a mainstream central Arkansas newspaper, and in Cherokee and Koori newspapers. The study speculated that the central Arkansas Hispanic community exists with a measure of physical and cultural separation from mainstream society — arising from informal barriers such as socioecomomic status, residential neighborhoods, language, …
Native American Archaeology: Working Backward, Moving Forward - 2008, South Carolina Institute Of Archaeology And Anthropology--University Of South Carolina
Native American Archaeology: Working Backward, Moving Forward - 2008, South Carolina Institute Of Archaeology And Anthropology--University Of South Carolina
Archaeology Month Posters
This poster was released in conjunction with South Carolina Archaeology Month, October 2008.
The Cherokee-Freedmen Story: What The Media Saw, Ronald Smith
The Cherokee-Freedmen Story: What The Media Saw, Ronald Smith
Ronald D Smith APR
National media and international journalists watched in March 2007, as voters in the Cherokee Nation decided issues of citizenship. Reporters looked at the same situation and often talked with the same people, but they didn’t always see the same story.
Some journalists saw the Cherokee-Freedmen story as one about race and civil rights; some saw it as being about Cherokee sovereignty and Indian identity. This content analysis investigates media reporting on the issue.
The Cherokee-Freedmen Story: What The Media Saw, Ronald D. Smith
The Cherokee-Freedmen Story: What The Media Saw, Ronald D. Smith
Ronald Bruce Smith
National media and international journalists watched in March 2007, as voters in the Cherokee Nation decided issues of citizenship. Reporters looked at the same situation and often talked with the same people, but they didn’t always see the same story.
Some journalists saw the Cherokee-Freedmen story as one about race and civil rights; some saw it as being about Cherokee sovereignty and Indian identity. This content analysis investigates media reporting on the issue.
Fortification Search At Ninety Six National Historic Site, Stanley South
Fortification Search At Ninety Six National Historic Site, Stanley South
Faculty & Staff Publications
No abstract provided.
Battlefield Research Continues At Sciaa, Steven D. Smith
Battlefield Research Continues At Sciaa, Steven D. Smith
Faculty Publications
This is a multi-volume issue, containing vol. 7/no. 2 (Dec 2002) AND vol. 8/no. 1 (July 2003).
At The Head Of The Aboriginal Remnant: Cherokee Construction Of A "Civilized" Indian Identity During The Lakota Crisis Of 1876, Paul Kelton
Great Plains Quarterly
In 1876 the bilingual Cherokee diplomat and lawyer William Penn Adair expressed great pride in the level of "civilization" that his nation had achieved. Defining civilization as commercial agriculture, literacy, Christianity, and republican government, Adair believed that his society had reached a sophistication that equaled and in certain areas surpassed that of the United States. Speaking before the U.S. House of Representatives Committee on Territories, the diplomat claimed that his people produced surpluses of "every agricultural product that is raised in the neighboring States of Arkansas, Missouri, Kansas, and Texas." Schools in the Indian Territory, he added, produced a vast …
Notebook - July-December 1985, South Carolina Institute Of Archaeology And Anthropology--University Of South Carolina
Notebook - July-December 1985, South Carolina Institute Of Archaeology And Anthropology--University Of South Carolina
SCIAA Newsletter - Notebook
Contents:
Table of Contents.....p. i
SCIAA Staff - 1985.....p. ii
A Preliminary Study of Bifurcated Stemmed Points in Kershaw and Lancaster Counties, South Carolina.....p. 1
Archaeology in the Museum Setting.....p. 19
1985 Archaeological Field School: Mulberry Site (38KE12).....p. 31
Adamson Site (38KE11).....p. 37
Cherokee Archaeological Collections in North Carolina, Tennessee, Georgia, and South Carolina.....p. 39
"Our Mission To The Indians": An Account Of A Danish Immigrant Church's Mission To The Cherokee Indians In 1892, John Mark Nielsen
"Our Mission To The Indians": An Account Of A Danish Immigrant Church's Mission To The Cherokee Indians In 1892, John Mark Nielsen
The Bridge
On April 1, 1892, a letter by Detlev Leerskov appeared in Kirkebladet, the church newspaper of the Danish Evangelical Lutheran Church Association in America, otherwise known to Danish immigrants as the Blair Church. Leerskov, who had emigrated from Denmark ten years earlier, married a Cherokee woman, and settled among the Cherokee in what was then Indian Territory, wrote to tell the readers of Kirkebladet how he had received a copy of their paper from his brother in Hutchinson, Minnesota, and that this had been "the first Christian reading in the Danish language" that he had seen in ten years. Moreover, …
A History Of The True People - The Cherokee Indians - Chapter 4-5, Robert K. Thomas
A History Of The True People - The Cherokee Indians - Chapter 4-5, Robert K. Thomas
Robert K. Thomas
Written under the pseudonym of G.P. Horsefly, Robert Thomas wrote this volume for Indian kids in Michigan and whites who are 'acquainted with' Indians. The book pulls together Cherokee oral histories that Thomas heard. Chapter 4 and 5 are 'The Captivity' and 'The Staunch Handful'.
A History Of The True People - The Cherokee Indians - Chapter 1, Robert K. Thomas
A History Of The True People - The Cherokee Indians - Chapter 1, Robert K. Thomas
Robert K. Thomas
Written under the pseudonym of G.P. Horsefly, Robert Thomas wrote this volume for Indian kids in Michigan and whites who are 'acquainted with' Indians. The book pulls together Cherokee oral histories that Thomas heard. Chapter 1 is 'In the Olden Days'
A History Of The True People - The Cherokee Indians - Chapter 3, Robert K. Thomas
A History Of The True People - The Cherokee Indians - Chapter 3, Robert K. Thomas
Robert K. Thomas
Written under the pseudonym of G.P. Horsefly, Robert Thomas wrote this volume for Indian kids in Michigan and whites who are 'acquainted with' Indians. The book pulls together Cherokee oral histories that Thomas heard. Chapter 3 is 'At the Edge of the Prairie'
A History Of The True People - The Cherokee Indians - Chapter 2, Robert K. Thomas
A History Of The True People - The Cherokee Indians - Chapter 2, Robert K. Thomas
Robert K. Thomas
Written under the pseudonym of G.P. Horsefly, Robert Thomas wrote this volume for Indian kids in Michigan and whites who are 'acquainted with' Indians. The book pulls together Cherokee oral histories that Thomas heard. Chapter 2 is 'Living With Strangers'
Cherokee Communities Of The South, Robert K. Thomas
Cherokee Communities Of The South, Robert K. Thomas
Robert K. Thomas
Cherokee Communities of the South was written by Mr. Thomas in the mid-70's. It includes a hand drawn map at the end and appears to be a result of some of Mr. Thomas' survey work in the southeastern United States during the summer of 1978 (?). It was submitted to the Consortium of American Indian Title IV Programs of Southeastern Michigan in 1979
The Redbird Smith Movement, Robert K. Thomas
The Redbird Smith Movement, Robert K. Thomas
Robert K. Thomas
This is a brief synopsis of R.K. Thomas' Master's Thesis. The complete thesis can be found in 'unpublished papers'
The Origin And Development Of The Redbird Smith Movement - Part Ii, Robert K. Thomas
The Origin And Development Of The Redbird Smith Movement - Part Ii, Robert K. Thomas
Robert K. Thomas
Robert K. Thomas' Master Thesis for the Department of Anthropology at the University of Arizona. Part II contains the second chapter , Full-blood Life in the 1890's
The Origin And Development Of The Redbird Smith Movement - Part I, Robert K. Thomas
The Origin And Development Of The Redbird Smith Movement - Part I, Robert K. Thomas
Robert K. Thomas
Robert K. Thomas' Master Thesis for the Department of Anthropology at the University of Arizona. Part I contains the Introduction and Chapter 1, Culture History of the Cherokee
The Origin And Development Of The Redbird Smith Movement - Part Iii, Robert K. Thomas
The Origin And Development Of The Redbird Smith Movement - Part Iii, Robert K. Thomas
Robert K. Thomas
Robert K. Thomas' Master Thesis for the Department of Anthropology at the University of Arizona. Part III contains the third chapter , The redbird Smith Movement
The Origin And Development Of The Redbird Smith Movement - Part Iv, Robert K. Thomas
The Origin And Development Of The Redbird Smith Movement - Part Iv, Robert K. Thomas
Robert K. Thomas
Robert K. Thomas' Master Thesis for the Department of Anthropology at the University of Arizona. Part IV contains the Bibliography and Chapter 4, Analysis of the Redbird Smith Movement and Comparison with The Ghost Dance
An Act To Provide For The Allotment Of Lands In Severalty To Indians On The Various Reservations (Kappler) (Kappler), Charles J. Kappler, Henry L. Dawes
An Act To Provide For The Allotment Of Lands In Severalty To Indians On The Various Reservations (Kappler) (Kappler), Charles J. Kappler, Henry L. Dawes
US Government Documents related to Indigenous Nations
This 1904 transcription of “An Act to Provide for the Allotment of Lands in Severalty to Indians on the Various Reservations," also knows the General Allotment Act or the Dawes Act of 1887 was printed in vol. I of Charles Kappler’s Indian Affairs. Laws and Treaties. Originally passed on February 8, 1887, this act authorized the US government to break up reservations and tribal lands, previously held in common, into individual plots. Aimed at assimilating Indigenous people into white society, this act promoted agriculture and grazing by allotting tribal members or families who registered a portion of reservation land …