Great Plains Ethnohistory

New Interdisciplinary Approaches

Rani-Henrik Andersson editor Thierry Veyrié editor Logan Sutton editor

Format:Hardback

Publisher:University of Nebraska Press

Publishing:1st Dec '24

£82.00

This title is due to be published on 1st December, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

Great Plains Ethnohistory cover

Great Plains Ethnohistory offers a collection of state-of-the-field work in Great Plains ethnohistory, both contemporary and historical, covering the traditional anthropological subfields of ethnography, cultural history, archaeology, and linguistics. As ethnohistory matured into an interdisciplinary endeavor in the 1950s with the formation of the American Society for Ethnohistory, historians and anthropologists developed scholarly methodology for the study of Native American societies from their own points of view. Within this developing framework, Native cultures of the Great Plains represented a foundational research area.

Great Plains Ethnohistory pays intellectual debts to Raymond J. DeMallie and Douglas R. Parks, whose research from the 1970s onward brought ethnohistorical approaches to the study of Native cultures, histories, and languages into the international community of the humanities and social sciences, sciences, and arts. The work of the scholars assembled in this volume advocates for an ethnohistory that continues to decompartmentalize Indigenous knowledge and scholarly methodologies, including some of the constructs, biases, and prejudices perpetuated within traditional scholarly disciplines.

Including essays by Gilles Havard, Joanna Scherer, Sebastian Braun, Brad KuuNUx TeeRIt Kroupa, and DeMallie and Parks themselves, among others, plus an afterword by Philip J. Deloria, this is an essential contribution to the scholarly field and a volume for undergraduate and graduate students and scholars who study Native American and Indigenous cultures.
 

“The authors share interdisciplinary perspectives and methods that were intensely cultivated and applied by the important scholars whose legacies underlie their contributions: Raymond J. DeMallie and Douglas R. Parks. The contributors bring forward diverse studies—some of broad interest, some highly specialized—that build on DeMallie’s and Parks’s insights and priorities, particularly their combining of attention to archival/historical sources and fieldwork with living communities and in-depth studies of Indigenous languages.”—Jennifer S. H. Brown, editor of Ojibwe Stories from the Upper Berens River: A. Irving Hallowell and Adam Bigmouth in Conversation

ISBN: 9781496242099

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

352 pages