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Book Categories |
Acknowledgments | ||
Introduction | ||
Pt. I | Staging the Indian | |
1 | The "Shy" Cocopa Go to the Fair | 3 |
2 | Command Performances: Staging Native Americans at Tillicum Village | 44 |
3 | Savage Desires: The Gendered Construction of the American Indian in Popular Media | 62 |
4 | "Beyond Feathers and Beads": Interlocking Narratives in the Music and Dance of Tokeya Inajin (Kevin Locke) | 99 |
Pt. II | Marketing the Indian | |
5 | "The Idea of Help": White Women Reformers and the Commercialization of Native American Women's Arts | 159 |
6 | Saving the Pueblos: Commercialism and Indian Reform in the 1920s | 190 |
7 | Marketing Traditions: Cherokee Basketry and Tourist Economies | 212 |
8 | Crafts, Tourism, and Traditional Life in Chiapas, Mexico: A Tale Related by a Pillowcase | 236 |
About the Contributors | 271 | |
Index | 275 |
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Add Selling the Indian: Commercializing and Appropriating American Indian Cultures, For more than a hundred years, outsiders enamored of the perceived strengths of American Indian cultures have appropriated and distorted elements of them for their own purposes—more often than not ignoring the impact of the process on the Indians t, Selling the Indian: Commercializing and Appropriating American Indian Cultures to the inventory that you are selling on WonderClubX
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Add Selling the Indian: Commercializing and Appropriating American Indian Cultures, For more than a hundred years, outsiders enamored of the perceived strengths of American Indian cultures have appropriated and distorted elements of them for their own purposes—more often than not ignoring the impact of the process on the Indians t, Selling the Indian: Commercializing and Appropriating American Indian Cultures to your collection on WonderClub |