2005
DOI: 10.1146/annurev.anthro.34.081804.120446
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Recent Ethnographic Research on North American Indigenous Peoples

Abstract: This review article addresses the following question: Given the transformed social, political, and intellectual conditions for ethnographic research among indigenous peoples in North America, what forms has such research come to take at the turn of the twenty-first century? The review considers significant trends and innovations in research sites and topics, research methodologies, theoretical orientations, and forms of representation. It also assesses the distinctive strengths and limitations posed by ethnogr… Show more

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Cited by 19 publications
(8 citation statements)
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“…Fogelson, 1998;Brody, 2000;Strong, 2005;Thornton, 2008). This literature also stresses the importance on the positive dimensions of preserving ties to the land and the negative outcomes of losing those ties.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Fogelson, 1998;Brody, 2000;Strong, 2005;Thornton, 2008). This literature also stresses the importance on the positive dimensions of preserving ties to the land and the negative outcomes of losing those ties.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Lurie's theory of the articulatory movement provides an early attempt to give voice to a vision of Indigenous culture rooted in the sovereignty of Indigenous communities, reflecting their contemporaneity and acknowledging their interdependency—all core commitments of work on Indigeneity in Native North America today (Cattelino ; Lambert ; Nadasdy ; Powell ; Simpson 2014; Strong ). It is an attempt to theorize Indigeneity as a contemporary intellectual, political, ethical, and social commitment, not merely a predicament, envisioning forms of development that realize Indigenous values under contemporary conditions.…”
Section: The Insights Of Activismmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Lurie's theory of the articulatory movement provides an early attempt to give voice to a vision of Indigenous culture rooted in the sovereignty of Indigenous communities, reflecting their contemporaneity and acknowledging their interdependency-all core commitments of work on Indigeneity in Native North America today (Cattelino 2008;Lambert 2006;Nadasdy 2017;Powell 2018;Simpson 2014;Strong 2005). It is an attempt to theorize Indigeneity as a contemporary intellectual, political, ethical, and social commitment, not merely a predicament, envisioning forms of development that realize Indigenous values under contemporary conditions.…”
Section: The Insights Of Activismmentioning
confidence: 99%