Cherokee film as Cherokee storytelling: Randy Redroad’s The Doe Boy (2001) as filmic Deer Woman story

2020 ◽  
Vol 18 (1) ◽  
pp. 3-18
Author(s):  
Laura L. Beadling

Rather than the stereotypical nineteenth-century leathers-and-feathers warriors familiar from countless Hollywood Westerns, many Native filmmakers focus their films on contemporary Native communities. In contrast, Native filmmakers create very different representations of Native life and especially Native masculinity. Along with the foundational Smoke Signals (Eyre 1998), Randy Redroad’s The Doe Boy (2001) was one of the first Native-created films that helped initiate a cluster of Native American films that centre on masculinity and male‐male relationships. Indigenous masculinity is often a site of struggle of rejecting colonialist impositions and finding one’s own identity, and it is in part such a journey that propels Redroad’s film. The Doe Boy responds to not only Hollywood misrepresentations but also Eyre’s earlier film that established masculinity and father‐son relationships as a crucial topic. The Doe Boy focuses on Hunter (James Duval), a mixed-blood Cherokee youth, who must navigate between his White father and Cherokee grandfather and their differing practices of masculinity despite his bodily vulnerability from haemophilia, a strained and sometimes violent relationship with his father and a devastating mistake during an early deer hunt. Not only is Redroad’s film a Cherokee coming-of-age film and period piece (it is set during the AIDS crisis of the 1980s), but it can also be read as a Deer Woman story, albeit a filmic and non-traditional one. Unlike Smoke Signals, which takes the road movie as its genre, The Doe Boy has its foundations in a specific tribal culture. A crucial task in undoing to previous filmic misrepresentations of Hollywood, which lacked any specificity about Native characters, is to take Native filmmakers’ cultural context into careful consideration. Redroad’s film can be seen as a Deer Woman story that depicts Hunter’s struggles as he navigates his way to a mixed-blood manhood.

2018 ◽  
Vol 40 (4) ◽  
pp. 5-9
Author(s):  
Allyson Kelley ◽  
Clayton Small ◽  
Maha Charani Small ◽  
Hawkeye Montileaux ◽  
Shawnee White

Abstract Native American youth are placed at greater risk for suicide than any other age or ethnic population in the United States. Resilience has helped Native Americans overcome adversity. In this paper, authors provide an example of how intergenerational mentoring can moderate or reduce these risk factors. The Intergenerational Connection Project at Native PRIDE (ICP) works with advisory councils in four Native communities in Montana and South Dakota. To better understand resilience, this paper answers two questions: (1) how do communities define cultural resilience, and (2) how can cultural resilience be operationalized in a cultural context? The ICP team worked with community advisory councils to develop a cultural resilience scale that was administered at the beginning of the project and six months later, at the end of the Project. An independent samples t-test demonstrated a significant increase in all scale items from baseline and at six-month follow-up. Results indicate that all community definitions include terms related to adversity and the transfer of cultural knowledge through sharing, participation, and involvement. Community definitions also included conversations about spirituality, language, values, and interactions between elders and youth. Authors conclude with a strong message that strengths-based interventions like the ICP are needed to address suicide risk in Native communities.


1997 ◽  
Vol 17 (4) ◽  
pp. 307-336
Author(s):  
Douglas S. Frink

Contract archaeology accounts for the majority of archaeological studies conducted in Vermont. As these studies serve the development community, the focus of investigation has been to identify and avoid sites, not to research and evaluate the information they contain. Native-American site locational models have limited application because they are based primarily on the landforms' proximity to water. The Archaeology Consulting Team is developing a contextual model based on reconstructing the pre-European settlement environment. Hypotheses comparing expected size and function of Native-American sites in different environments can be posed at the Phase I level of archaeological studies. Furthermore, with Phase I level data, these hypotheses can provide the framework for research designs at Phase II and III levels of archaeological study.


2021 ◽  
pp. 1-18
Author(s):  
Raymond Foxworth ◽  
Laura E. Evans ◽  
Gabriel R. Sanchez ◽  
Cheryl Ellenwood ◽  
Carmela M. Roybal

We draw on new and original data to examine both partisan and systemic inequities that have fueled the spread of COVID-19 in Native America. We show how continued political marginalization of Native Americans has compounded longstanding inequalities and endangered the lives of Native peoples. Native nations have experienced disproportionate effects from prior health epidemics and pandemics, and in 2020, Native communities have seen greater rates of infection, hospitalization, and death from COVID-19. We find that Native nations have more COVID-19 cases if they are located in states with a higher ratio of Trump supporters and reside in states with Republican governors. Where there is longstanding marginalization, measured by lack of clean water on tribal lands and health information in Native languages, we find more COVID-19 cases. Federal law enables non-members to flout tribal health regulations while on tribal lands, and correspondingly, we find that COVID-19 cases rise when non-members travel onto tribal lands. Our findings engage the literatures on Native American politics, health policy within U.S. federalism, and structural health inequalities, and should be of interest to both scholars and practitioners interested in understanding COVID-19 outcomes across Tribes in the United States.


Entropy ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 23 (3) ◽  
pp. 378
Author(s):  
Taeyong Kwon ◽  
Seongsim Yoon ◽  
Sanghoo Yoon

Uncertainty in the rainfall network can lead to mistakes in dam operation. Sudden increases in dam water levels due to rainfall uncertainty are a high disaster risk. In order to prevent these losses, it is necessary to configure an appropriate rainfall network that can effectively reflect the characteristics of the watershed. In this study, conditional entropy was used to calculate the uncertainty of the watershed using rainfall and radar data observed from 2018 to 2019 in the Goesan Dam and Hwacheon Dam watersheds. The results identified radar data suitable for the characteristics of the watershed and proposed a site for an additional rainfall gauge. It is also necessary to select the location of the additional rainfall gauged by limiting the points where smooth movement and installation, for example crossing national borders, are difficult. The proposed site emphasized accessibility and usability by leveraging road information and selecting a radar grid near the road. As a practice result, the uncertainty of precipitation in the Goesan and Hwacheon Dam watersheds could be decreased by 70.0% and 67.9%, respectively, when four and three additional gauge sites were installed without any restriction. When these were installed near to the road, with five and four additional gauge sites, the uncertainty in the Goesan Dam and Hwacheon Dam watersheds were reduced by up to 71.1%. Therefore, due to the high degree of uncertainty, it is necessary to measure precipitation. The operation of the rainfall gauge can provide a smooth site and configure an appropriate monitoring network.


2011 ◽  
Vol 1 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Li Ping Chang ◽  
En Yin Chou ◽  
Yi Hua Yang

Author(s):  
Christine M. DeLucia

This chapter examines how King Philip’s War gave rise to a significant but often ignored or misperceived history of bondage, enslavement, and diaspora that took Native Americans far from their northeast homelands, and subjected them to a range of brutal conditions across an Atlantic World. It focuses on Algonquians’ transits into captivity as a consequence of the war, and historicizes this process within longer trajectories of European subjugation of Indigenous populations for labor. The chapter examines how Algonquian individuals and families were forcibly placed into New England colonial as well as Native communities at the war’s conclusion, and how others were transported out of the region for sale across the Atlantic World. The case of King Philip’s wife and son is especially complex, and the chapter considers how traditions around their purported sale into slavery in Bermuda interact with challenging racial politics and archival traces. Modern-day “reconnection” events have linked St. David’s Island community members in Bermuda to Native American tribes in New England. The chapter also reflects on wider dimensions of this Algonquian diaspora, which likely brought Natives to the Caribbean, Azores, and Tangier in North Africa, and propelled Native migrants/refugees into Wabanaki homelands.


2011 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 179-189 ◽  
Author(s):  
Karina L. Walters ◽  
Selina A. Mohammed ◽  
Teresa Evans-Campbell ◽  
Ramona E. Beltrán ◽  
David H. Chae ◽  
...  

AbstractIncreasingly, understanding how the role of historical events and context affect present-day health inequities has become a dominant narrative among Native American communities. Historical trauma, which consists of traumatic events targeting a community (e.g., forced relocation) that cause catastrophic upheaval, has been posited by Native communities and some researchers to have pernicious effects that persist across generations through a myriad of mechanisms from biological to behavioral. Consistent with contemporary societal determinants of health approaches, the impact of historical trauma calls upon researchers to explicitly examine theoretically and empirically how historical processes and contexts become embodied. Scholarship that theoretically engages how historically traumatic events become embodied and affect the magnitude and distribution of health inequities is clearly needed. However, the scholarship on historical trauma is limited. Some scholars have focused on these events as etiological agents to social and psychological distress; others have focused on events as an outcome (e.g., historical trauma response); others still have focused on these events as mechanisms or pathways by which historical trauma is transmitted; and others have focused on historical trauma-related factors (e.g., collective loss) that interact with proximal stressors. These varied conceptualizations of historical trauma have hindered the ability to cogently theorize it and its impact on Native health. The purpose of this article is to explicate the link between historical trauma and the concept of embodiment. After an interdisciplinary review of the “state of the discipline,” we utilize ecosocial theory and the indigenist stress-coping model to argue that contemporary physical health reflects, in part, the embodiment of historical trauma. Future research directions are discussed.


2015 ◽  
Vol 156 ◽  
pp. e206
Author(s):  
Anne Helene Skinstad ◽  
R. Dale Walker ◽  
Jenny Gringer Richards ◽  
Sean A. Bear

Leadership ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 13 (5) ◽  
pp. 549-570 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniel Stewart ◽  
Amy Klemm Verbos ◽  
Carolyn Birmingham ◽  
Stephanie L Black ◽  
Joseph Scott Gladstone

Tribally owned American Indian enterprises provide a unique cross-cultural setting for emerging Native American business leaders. This article examines the manner in which American Indian leaders negotiate the boundaries between their indigenous organizations and the nonindigenous communities in which they do business. Through a series of qualitative interviews, we find that American Indian business leaders fall back on a strong sense of “self,” which allows them to maintain effective leadership across boundaries. This is highly consistent with theories of authentic leadership. Furthermore, we find that leaders define self through their collective identity, which is heavily influenced by tribal affiliation and tribal culture. We add to the literature on authentic leadership by showing the role that culture and collective identity have in creating leader authenticity within the indigenous community.


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