Ohio Valley Native Americans Speak: Indigenous Discourse on the Continuity of Identity

Thesis (PhD) - Indiana University, Anthropology, 2006 Since the 1960's there has been an increase in the assertion of a Native American identity across North America. This identification has been expressed in the Ohio Valley region (Indiana, Ohio, and Kentucky) through performance at powwows, r...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Tamburro, Paul
Other Authors: Thomas, Wesley, Bauman, Richard
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: [Bloomington, Ind.] : Indiana University 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2022/7308
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spelling ftindianaunivir:oai:scholarworks.iu.edu:2022/7308 2023-05-15T17:12:21+02:00 Ohio Valley Native Americans Speak: Indigenous Discourse on the Continuity of Identity Tamburro, Paul Thomas, Wesley Bauman, Richard 2012-05-04T17:34:09Z http://hdl.handle.net/2022/7308 EN eng [Bloomington, Ind.] : Indiana University http://hdl.handle.net/2022/7308 Indigenous Studies American Indian Identity Mixed Race Identity Native Studies Ethnohistory Melungeon Lenape indigenous peoples powwow Native American Ohio Valley metis shawnee Linguistic Anthropology Folklore (0358) Sociology Ethnic and Racial Studies (0631) Anthropology Cultural (0326) Doctoral Dissertation 2012 ftindianaunivir 2022-02-06T21:46:01Z Thesis (PhD) - Indiana University, Anthropology, 2006 Since the 1960's there has been an increase in the assertion of a Native American identity across North America. This identification has been expressed in the Ohio Valley region (Indiana, Ohio, and Kentucky) through performance at powwows, re-enactments and restored ceremonies. For the most part in the United States, acceptance of American Indian identification is founded on government recognition, racial appearance, or language. As no Native American languages are still spoken in the region, the "racial" appearance of Ohio Valley Native people is "mixed" or ambiguous, and government recognition is absent for most groups, the question arises of how an Ohio Valley Native identity has developed and been maintained over time. In pursuit of answers to this question, data were gathered at powwows, historic re-enactments, living history enactments, and other events where Ohio Valley Native people participate. Newsletters of Indian organizations and books influencing the expression of a Native Ohio identity also served as sources of primary data. Ethnohistorical research further illuminated the factors that shaped elements of Native American identity in the Ohio Valley. The analysis of interviews and the other data demonstrate that the claim to Native American identity in the Ohio Valley is not, as some have suggested, a newly emergent construction. Rather, Native American identity has been maintained performatively in some quarters for many generations while remaining submerged in others. This Native identity continues to be constructed and performed drawing from a combination of Ohio Valley "folk" culture, Appalachian rural culture and "Pan-Indian" powwows. Similarities and connections were also found to exist with other mixed North American peoples, such as the Métis of Canada and the northern US, and those asserting an Ohio Valley Native identity. These findings counter widely held conceptions that there are no "real Indians" in the Ohio Valley, call into question the bases on which such claims are made, and provide a basis for new understandings of how claims to identity are negotiated among Indigenous peoples in North America. Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis Metis IUScholarWorks Indiana University Canada Indian
institution Open Polar
collection IUScholarWorks Indiana University
op_collection_id ftindianaunivir
language English
topic Indigenous Studies
American Indian Identity
Mixed Race Identity
Native Studies
Ethnohistory
Melungeon
Lenape
indigenous peoples
powwow
Native American
Ohio Valley
metis
shawnee
Linguistic Anthropology
Folklore (0358)
Sociology
Ethnic and Racial Studies (0631)
Anthropology
Cultural (0326)
spellingShingle Indigenous Studies
American Indian Identity
Mixed Race Identity
Native Studies
Ethnohistory
Melungeon
Lenape
indigenous peoples
powwow
Native American
Ohio Valley
metis
shawnee
Linguistic Anthropology
Folklore (0358)
Sociology
Ethnic and Racial Studies (0631)
Anthropology
Cultural (0326)
Tamburro, Paul
Ohio Valley Native Americans Speak: Indigenous Discourse on the Continuity of Identity
topic_facet Indigenous Studies
American Indian Identity
Mixed Race Identity
Native Studies
Ethnohistory
Melungeon
Lenape
indigenous peoples
powwow
Native American
Ohio Valley
metis
shawnee
Linguistic Anthropology
Folklore (0358)
Sociology
Ethnic and Racial Studies (0631)
Anthropology
Cultural (0326)
description Thesis (PhD) - Indiana University, Anthropology, 2006 Since the 1960's there has been an increase in the assertion of a Native American identity across North America. This identification has been expressed in the Ohio Valley region (Indiana, Ohio, and Kentucky) through performance at powwows, re-enactments and restored ceremonies. For the most part in the United States, acceptance of American Indian identification is founded on government recognition, racial appearance, or language. As no Native American languages are still spoken in the region, the "racial" appearance of Ohio Valley Native people is "mixed" or ambiguous, and government recognition is absent for most groups, the question arises of how an Ohio Valley Native identity has developed and been maintained over time. In pursuit of answers to this question, data were gathered at powwows, historic re-enactments, living history enactments, and other events where Ohio Valley Native people participate. Newsletters of Indian organizations and books influencing the expression of a Native Ohio identity also served as sources of primary data. Ethnohistorical research further illuminated the factors that shaped elements of Native American identity in the Ohio Valley. The analysis of interviews and the other data demonstrate that the claim to Native American identity in the Ohio Valley is not, as some have suggested, a newly emergent construction. Rather, Native American identity has been maintained performatively in some quarters for many generations while remaining submerged in others. This Native identity continues to be constructed and performed drawing from a combination of Ohio Valley "folk" culture, Appalachian rural culture and "Pan-Indian" powwows. Similarities and connections were also found to exist with other mixed North American peoples, such as the Métis of Canada and the northern US, and those asserting an Ohio Valley Native identity. These findings counter widely held conceptions that there are no "real Indians" in the Ohio Valley, call into question the bases on which such claims are made, and provide a basis for new understandings of how claims to identity are negotiated among Indigenous peoples in North America.
author2 Thomas, Wesley
Bauman, Richard
format Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
author Tamburro, Paul
author_facet Tamburro, Paul
author_sort Tamburro, Paul
title Ohio Valley Native Americans Speak: Indigenous Discourse on the Continuity of Identity
title_short Ohio Valley Native Americans Speak: Indigenous Discourse on the Continuity of Identity
title_full Ohio Valley Native Americans Speak: Indigenous Discourse on the Continuity of Identity
title_fullStr Ohio Valley Native Americans Speak: Indigenous Discourse on the Continuity of Identity
title_full_unstemmed Ohio Valley Native Americans Speak: Indigenous Discourse on the Continuity of Identity
title_sort ohio valley native americans speak: indigenous discourse on the continuity of identity
publisher [Bloomington, Ind.] : Indiana University
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/2022/7308
geographic Canada
Indian
geographic_facet Canada
Indian
genre Metis
genre_facet Metis
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/2022/7308
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