Indigenous Peoples and Identity in The 21st Century: Remembering, Reclaiming, and Regenerating
Indigenous Peoples and Identity in The 21st Century: Remembering, Reclaiming, and Regenerating
Indigenous Peoples and Identity in The 21st Century: Remembering, Reclaiming, and Regenerating
net/publication/283311600
CITATIONS READS
9 2,939
3 authors, including:
Some of the authors of this publication are also working on these related projects:
Applying Projects in Humanization: Lessons of Critical Listening and Storying View project
All content following this page was uploaded by Sweeney Windchief on 29 October 2015.
Chapter Five
1
As noted by Rifkin (2011), Indigenous peoples and their sovereign nations were absorbed or “incorporated”
into the settler state by force.
2
Burman and Chantler (2005) used the term “minoritized” (as opposed to minority) to highlight that margin-
alized peoples and communities are not designated as such because of some inhabited trait but rather occupy
this social location through sociohistorical processes enacted by the “majority.”
105
Multicultural Perspectives on Race, Ethnicity, and Identity
Thus, he suggests that the central question of Indian identity should not
be who is or is not Native American but rather, “What kinds of Indian identi-
ties are in production during a given historical moment and what is at stake in
their making?” (Lyons, 2010, p. 60).
3
Laws surrounding “federal recognition” require American Indians and Alaska Natives to prove that they
have continued to exist over time as stable, prima facie peoples and “tribes.” Acknowledgment of tribal
existence by the Department of the Interior is highly valued as it theoretically guarantees federal protections,
services, and benefits. Specifically, “federal recognition exempts a tribe from state and local jurisdiction and
laws including laws relating to taxation and gambling, and it sustains the trust relationship between the
federal government and the tribes which allows lands to be held in trust for tribes by the U.S. In addition, the
tribes qualify for funding and services from the Bureau of Indian Affairs, funding which can be channeled
into programs for the benefit of tribal members” (Riley, n.d., p. 4).
106
Indigenous Peoples and Identity in the 21st Century
107
Multicultural Perspectives on Race, Ethnicity, and Identity
2012, p. 133). Therein lies the central organizing principle of settler colonial-
ism: “elimination of the natives” (Wolfe, 2006).
Unlike other forms of colonialism, which eventuate a period of decoloni-
zation followed by “postcolonial” forms of imperial control, settler colonial-
ism is marked by historical continuity with no anticipation of decolonization
(Strakosch & Macoun, 2012). Because “settlers come to stay—the primary
motive for elimination is not race (or religion, ethnicity, grade of civilization
etc.), but access to territory” (Wolfe, 2006, p. 388). To achieve this dubious
end, the state uses a variety of eliminating strategies: genocide, warfare, forced
removal, imposed citizenship, racialization, religious conversion, child abduc-
tion, and resocialization, among other assimilative forces (Wolfe, 2006).
To bring into sharper relief how the “logic of elimination” differs from
schemas of racial domination, consider Wolfe’s (2006) analysis of the ways in
which Native and Black peoples have been “racialized in opposing ways that
reflect their antithetical roles in the formation of U.S. society” (p. 387). That
is, Blacks-as-enslaved peoples augmented settler wealth, they were subject to
an expansive taxonomy—the “one-drop rule,” whereby any amount of African
ancestry made a person “Black” (thus, the more enslaved peoples, the more
wealth). Yet, the opposite is true of Indigenous peoples, who inhibited settler
wealth by obstructing access to land. As such, a calculus of elimination was
devised whereby the more non-Indian blood or ancestry, the less one was iden-
tified as Indian. In other words, “one drop” did not an “Indian” make.
Such strategies of elimination were codified through federal policies orga-
nized around the perceived humanitarian principle of “kill the Indian, save the
man” (Pratt, 1973, p. 261). Arguably among the most pernicious were the Federal
Allotment Act (or the Dawes Act) (1887) and the Indian Citizenship Act (1924).
By the mid-nineteenth century, ownership of private property was viewed
as the primary agent of “civilization,” turning the Indians “from a savage,
primitive, tribal way of life to a settled, agrarian, and civilized one” (Royster,
1995). After the Civil War, settler anxieties about racial classification and
segregation peaked along with increased desire for land and westward expan-
sion. Indian lands, “though seemingly protected by treaties negotiated in the
1840s and 1850s[,] were increasingly subject to invasion” (Washburn, 1976, pp.
17–18). The Federal Allotment Act (1887) was proposed as the solution to the
“Indian problem,” permitting the federal government to break up communally
held reservation land into individual parcels or allotments. In accordance with
the act, individual tribal members (specifically male heads of household deter-
mined by the government as “eligible”) would each receive a parcel of land to
108
Indigenous Peoples and Identity in the 21st Century
farm, with “surplus” lands opened for sale to White settlers. Though primarily
viewed as the central mechanism for land dispossession, the Dawes Act also
more broadly affected tribal organization, family and kinship structures, gen-
der relations, spiritual practices, and the legal status of individual Indians.
Specifically, although private property was perceived as the gateway for
fostering individualism and economic self-interest, reformers also viewed it as
a means of disrupting or eliminating tribal kinship and matrilineal systems
perceived to undermine the social order (Stremlau, 2005). As noted by Chang
(2011), prior to the Dawes Act, tribal membership “allowed for the entry of new
members into the community through ways not figured by genetic descent,”
often absorbing not only new individuals but also new bands and villages (p.
113). Although kinship systems varied among tribes, it was typical for Native
families to live in multiracial, intertribal, multigenerational, multifamily (and
often matrilineal) households. One of the express aims of the Dawes Act was
to “fracture these extended indigenous families into male-dominated, nuclear
families, modeled after middle-class Anglo-American households” (Stremlau,
2005, p. 265). Moreover, although Dawes did not use blood quantum as the
exclusive criterion for tribal membership, it did inhere use of 19th-century
racial classification systems, creating segregated rolls that identified (1) Indians
by blood,4 (2) intermarried Whites, and (3) freedmen.5
In the final accounting, the impact of Dawes was profound. Specifically,
it (1) reduced the aggregate Indian land base from approximately 138 million
to 48 million acres; (2) legally preempted the sovereign right of Indians to
define themselves; (3) introduced the specious notion of blood quantum as a
legitimate criterion for defining Indians; (4) institutionalized divisions between
full-bloods and mixed-blood, Black and White Indians; and (5) disrupted gen-
der and kinship structures of tribal organization.
Nevertheless, Dawes did not prove to be the “final solution” to the Indian
problem as anticipated. So in 1924 the federal government passed the Indian
Citizenship Act (ICA) as a cleanup measure, extending citizenship to all Indi-
ans not previously designated and born within the territorial United States.
Theoretically, the ICA represents a dual citizenship wherein Native peoples
do not lose civil rights because of their status as tribal members, and indi-
vidual tribal members are not denied tribal rights because of their American
4
Individuals were also forced to choose only one tribal affiliation, even in instances where one had direct
lineage to more than one tribe.
5
The creation of racially segregated tribal rolls and denial of allotments to black freedmen situates allotment
“at the center of present-day political and legal struggles over the question of the citizenship of people of
African descent in American Indian nations” (Chang, 2011, p. 110).
109
Multicultural Perspectives on Race, Ethnicity, and Identity
citizenship (Deloria & Lytle, 1984). However, because Indigenous peoples did
not generally desire citizenship (further incorporation into the state), the ICA
was viewed more as a violation of sovereignty than as an emancipatory act,
creating a class of “ambivalent Americans” who existed neither fully inside
nor fully outside the political, legal, and cultural boundaries of the United
States (Bruyneel, 2004).
As a result of and despite the struggles, Indigenous peoples remain.
According to the last census, 4 million self-identified as Native American,
comprising 1.4 percent of the population.6 There are 566 tribal entities cur-
rently recognized and eligible for funding and services by the Bureau of Indian
Affairs. Compared with the non-Hispanic White population, Native peoples
are younger (median age of 31.9 years as compared with 40.1 years), more
economically distressed (median income of $31,600, about $17,000 less), and
less educated (about 75 percent are high school graduates vs. 90 percent; Gone,
2004; U.S. Census Bureau, 2007). Moreover, according to recent reports from
the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, there are significant
health disparities between American Indian/Alaska Natives (AIAN) and other
racial–ethnic groups. Specifically, diabetes, suicide, drug and alcohol abuse,
heart disease, tuberculosis, and posttraumatic stress, among other health dis-
orders, all occur at higher rates within the AIAN population compared with
other groups, contributing to overall poorer health and lower life expectancy
(Barnes, Powell-Griner, & Adams, 2005).
But what do these statistics really tell us? Erased by and within these
numbers is their historical production, which is to say the ways in which they
serve as containers for dominant understandings of Indigenous peoples as
defined by settler colonialism. As noted by Gone and Trimble (2012), it is
“historical fact” that the onset of community epidemics emerged after the rel-
egation of Indigenous peoples to “reservation captivity” and lives of “forced
sedentarization” (p. 151). This, then, begs the question, who or what is served
6
The U.S. Census relies on a process of “self-identification” and does not require proof of tribal citizenship.
Therefore, there is often a discrepancy between Census data and that generated by the Bureau of Indian Af-
fairs. Consider, for example, that although 4 million people self-identified as American Indians/Alaska Native
(AIAN) in the last U.S. Census (U.S. Census Bureau, 2007), only 1.9 million AIAN peoples met federal eligi-
bility requirements to receive services through the Bureau of Indian affairs. The discrepancy can be explained,
in part, by the continued existence of nonfederally recognized peoples, including “over 200 state-recognized
tribes; Black-Indian descendants of mixed-blood freedmen who were historically disenfranchised by their own
(formerly slave-holding) tribal communities; and, the multitribal offspring of tribal citizens who would not
qualify for enrollment in any single tribe due to blood quantum requirements” (Gone, 2004, p. 11). The rest
can likely be attributed to the problematics of “self-identification” and prevalence of ethnic fraud.
110
Indigenous Peoples and Identity in the 21st Century
by these statistics? And how are Native communities adversely affected when
definitions of health and well-being are tied to settler narratives?
In the following sections, we shift the discussion away from what material
or essentialist traits define Indianness and toward how Indigeneity is enacted.
As G. Smith (2003) notes, Indigenous identities must be “won on at least two
broad fronts; a confrontation with the colonizer and a confrontation with
‘ourselves’” (p. 2). Whereas the first section of the chapter accounted for some
of the major confrontations with the colonizer, the following section under-
takes confrontation with self.
111
Multicultural Perspectives on Race, Ethnicity, and Identity
112
Indigenous Peoples and Identity in the 21st Century
about the relationship between culture and (mental) health, assessing beyond
traditional models of well-being to include the views of the community with
which they are working. Such a model requires practitioners to (1) learn from
and with whom they are working; (2) connect the trajectory of past occurrences
to current situations; and (3) incorporate local knowledge and cultures as
important frames of reference. Together, such practices help to engage, build,
and sustain relationships, which are “at the heart of what it means to be Indig-
enous” (S. Wilson, 2008).
Toward this end, San Pedro (2013) suggested the dialogic spiral as a tool
for developing effective social relations through listening to and learning from
others:
F irst, Anna asks Nisha what tribes she’s from. Nisha replies saying
she’s full blooded Native American, but half Zuni and half Apache.
Anna then lists the five tribes that she’s part of. Another student Cree
says, “She’s a mutt!” Nisha says, “So am I!” Nisha and Anna stand
up and give each other a high five. As they sit back down, Cree says,
“My great Grandmother had blue eyes. I wish I had blue eyes.” Eileen
chimes in that she’s half Navajo and half Black. Cree says she is too.
113
Multicultural Perspectives on Race, Ethnicity, and Identity
Eileen tells Cree that if they cut themselves in half and then stitched
the Black and Navajo halves back together, they would have two com-
plete people—one full blood African American, the other full blooded
Navajo. Anna then says to the group, “Vince is Mexican and Pima.
He looks Mexican though.” She then laughs with the girls around her
and Vince slumps in his desk a little more.7 (personal communication,
October 12, 2011)
This short exchange not only illustrates the ways in which Indigenous
youth process, make sense of, and construct their identities in relation to one
another but is also very revealing of the legacy of settler discourses: of blood;
Change to
of whole, half, and mixed; and ultimately of whiteness as desirable. While it is “storying”
crucially important to listen to and validate the voices of students like Nisha, (No hyphen)
Change
Citation to
Anna, Cree, Eileen, and Vince as they are “story-ing” their identities (Kin-
the year loch & San Pedro, 2013), it is just as important to coax a dialogue that helps
2014
to push, guide, and educate them about the broader context in which they
are situated. The hope is that the emergent dialogue would not only disrupt
and complicate their perceptions of themselves as “mutts,” “half,” and “full
blooded” Indians but also bring forth a consciousness of themselves as whole
(and sovereign) peoples, deeply connected to history and defined by agency,
resistance, and survivance.8
When work is grounded in dialogue—in the words, emotions, and under-
standings of those we are working with as well as our own words, emotions,
and understandings—the conversation and experience can be powerful. In this
sense, telling, listening to, and sharing stories can be powerful healing acts,
particularly when practitioners share their own stories and speak with knowl-
edge and understanding about the communities in which they work. In other
words, the dialogic spiral grows when individuals take risks and develop trust
and when participants are aware and conscious of the systemic oppression
that works to invalidate, ignore, and silence stories.
This level of awareness or self-confrontation requires not only a solid
foundation of historical knowledge but also a critical consciousness of how
this history structures contemporary contexts. It requires an ability to see and
7
This story came from San Pedro’s (2013) dissertation research—a three-year, longitudinal ethnography in an
urban high school classroom in the Southwest United States.
8
The term survivance was developed by Annishinaabe scholar Gerald Vizenor to describe an Indigenous state
of being beyond mere survival. He writes, “survivance . . . is more than survival, more than endurance or mere
response. . . . [It] is an active presence . . . an active repudiation of dominance, tragedy, and victimry” (Vizenor,
1999, p. 15).
114
Indigenous Peoples and Identity in the 21st Century
work with Native peoples beyond the familiarized frame of “tragic victimry”
and support efforts of resistance and reclamation. The following section
focuses on Indigenous families and communities as a principal site where such
efforts unfold.
115
Multicultural Perspectives on Race, Ethnicity, and Identity
116
Indigenous Peoples and Identity in the 21st Century
Remembrance
Traditional knowledge and the lessons it embodies persist, not because it is
written down but because it is held, shared, and remembered collectively by
communities. Such knowledge is embedded in ways of being and passed on
through story (Barnhardt, 2005). Within Indigenous communities, storytellers
are carefully chosen and cultivated, explicitly taught how to share the stories that
give their people direction. Stories serve to contextualize the learner or listener
and are told and retold multiple times over the course of one’s life at particularly
relevant moments. Although this may be seen as repetitive and monotonous, in
the context of Indigenous remembering, stories are shared when we need to hear
them. Their lessons are intended to bring attention to one’s blind spots and thus
come with the expectation that they will be contemplated and applied to one’s life.
When and if appropriate, practitioners can build on the power of story by
working it into their own practices. In so doing, it is important to understand
that stories are typically told in a way that does not judge the listener but
rather are accepted with “unconditional positive regard” (Rogers, 1957) while
at the same time communicating care and concern for the individual to live
better, in a good way.
Regeneration
Regeneration is the act of maintaining Indigenous philosophies—ways of
knowing, being, and doing through sustaining the cultural values and shared
experiences that make communities unique. It is imperative, in this definition
117
Multicultural Perspectives on Race, Ethnicity, and Identity
Reclamation
Reclamation is the act of taking back not just in the literal sense but in a
way that (re)connects Indigenous peoples to space, place, and philosophy.
For example, Indigenous languages are place based, often explaining the sig-
nificance of specific sites and locations to the community. Insofar as settler
colonialism “destroys to replace” (Wolfe, 2006, p. 388), the names of many
places and peoples were replaced with colonial terms. Reclamation thus can
take the form of restoring original (Indigenous) names (L. T. Smith, 1999).
Some examples include Native nations that have reclaimed their own names
for themselves: Ho-Chunk instead of Winnebago; Diné instead of Navajo.
Reclaiming can also take the form of acknowledging places that fall
outside the boundaries of current reservation lands. For instance, as a result
of removal and assimilation-era policies, many peoples have had to (re)
construct “home” in places that are not their traditional territories. In the
period of Indian removal (approximately 1830–1880s), eastern peoples were
forcibly moved westward, away from their homelands to what was designated
as “Indian Territory” (the current states of Oklahoma and parts of Kansas).
Over the centuries, the removed tribes have (re)cultivated and reclaimed their
collective identities by (re)making homes in new territories. Similarly, as a
9
For examples of Indigenous reclamation, see Garcia and Shirley (2012); Lomawaima and McCarty (2006);
Romero-Little (2010); C. Smith (2005); Battiste (2011); Johnson and Murton (2007); A. C. Wilson (2005); and
McCarty, Romero, and Zepeda (2006).
118
Indigenous Peoples and Identity in the 21st Century
Concluding Thoughts
In this chapter, we aimed to recenter Indigenous conceptualizations of self,
community, and well-being in the history and contemporary experiences of
Indigenous peoples. The hope is that those working and walking with Indig-
enous peoples develop a critical consciousness regarding their own social
location and the ways in which it interfaces with community understandings.
In so doing, we advocate the use of methodological tools that help to build
and co-construct relationships with others, such as the dialogic spiral, which
enables stories to be told, heard, and shared.
By reframing identity as something people do, rather than a set of charac-
teristics one embodies, we also affirm an understanding of Indigenous identity
as socially constructed. It is in the process of being made and remade in local
and global spaces and thus not something that exists in the past or forever
lost. While refocusing the shift toward the deliberate actions of survivance in
Indigenous communities, we also validate Indigenous voices and ideas as legit-
imate sources of knowledge, shared through stories as well as acts of trust and
10
By allocating tribal resources through a single per capita payment to current tribal membership, the goal of
termination-era policy was to close tribal rolls and end the protected trust status of all Indian-owned lands.
Congress supported the Bureau of Indian Affairs in implementing the relocation program, which assisted
Indians moving away from rural communities and reservations to metropolitan areas (Fixico, 1980).
11
“Borders” pertains to Canadian reserves, Alaska Native corporations, and U.S. reservations, pueblos, and
rancherías.
119
Multicultural Perspectives on Race, Ethnicity, and Identity
References
Ball, J., & Janyst, P. (2008). Enacting research ethics in partnerships with indigenous
communities in Canada: “Do it in a good way.” Journal of Empirical Research on
Human Research Ethics: An International Journal, 3(2), 33–51.
Barnes, P. M., Powell-Griner, E., & Adams, P. F. (2005). Health characteristics of the
American Indian and Alaska Native adult population, United States, 1999–2003.
Atlanta: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention, National Center for Health Statistics.
Barnhardt, R. (2005). Indigenous knowledge systems and Alaska Native ways of
knowing. Anthropology & Education Quarterly, 36, 8–32.
Battiste, M. (2011). Reclaiming indigenous voice and vision. Vancouver, British Colum-
bia, Canada: UBC Press.
Bird, C. P., Lee, T. S, & Lopez, N. (2013). Leadership and accountability in American
Indian education: Voices from New Mexico. American Journal of Education, 119,
539–564.
Brayboy, B. (2005a). Toward a tribal critical race theory in education. Urban Review,
37, 425–446.
Brayboy, B. (2005b). Transformational resistance and social justice: American Indians
in Ivy League universities. Anthropology & Education Quarterly, 36, 193–211.
Bruyneel, K. (2004). Challenging American boundaries: Indigenous people and the
“gift” of U.S. citizenship. Studies in American Political Development, 18, 30–43.
Bruyneel, K. (2007). The third space of sovereignty: The postcolonial politics of U.S.–
indigenous relations. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.
Burman, E., & Chantler, K. (2005). Domestic violence and minoritisation: Legal and
policy barriers facing minoritized women leaving violent relationships. Interna-
tional Journal of Law and Psychiatry, 28, 59–74.
Chang, D. A. (2011). Enclosures of land and sovereignty: The allotment of American
Indian lands. Radical History Review, 109, 108–119.
Deloria, V., & Lytle, C. M. (1984). The nations within: The past and future of American
Indian sovereignty. Austin: University of Texas Press.
Deyhle, D. (1995). Navajo youth and Anglo racism: Cultural integrity and resistance.
Harvard Educational Review, 65, 403–445.
120
Indigenous Peoples and Identity in the 21st Century
121
San Pedro, T. (2014). Internal and Environmental Safety Zones: Navigating Expansions and Contractions of Identity Between Indigenous and Colonial
Paradigms, Pedagogies and Classrooms. Journal of American Indian Education, 53, (3).
Rifkin, M. (2011). Settler states of feeling: National belonging and the erasure of
Native American presence. In C. F. Levander & R. S. Levine (Eds.), A companion
to American literary studies (pp. 342–355). Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell.
Riley, L. (n.d.). Federal recognition for Indian tribes. University of Arizona, Native
Net. Retrieved from http://www.uanativenet.com/sites/default/files/Federal%20
Recognition_0.pdf
Rogers, C. R. (1957). The necessary and sufficient conditions of therapeutic person-
ality change. Journal of Consulting Psychology, 21, 95–103.
Romero-Little, M. E. (2010). Best practices for Native American language learners.
In G. Li & P. A. Edwards (Eds.), Best practices in ELL instruction (pp. 273–298).
New York: Guilford Press.
Royster, J. (1995). The legacy of allotment. Arizona State Law Journal, 27, 1–78.
San Pedro, T. (2013). Understanding youth cultures, stories, and resistances in the urban
Southwest: Innovations and implications of a Native American literature classroom.
Available from ProQuest Dissertations and Theses database (UMI No. 3558673)
Smith, C. (2005). Decolonising the museum: The National Museum of the American
Indian in Washington, DC. Antiquity, 79, 424–439.
Smith, G. (2003). Indigenous struggles for the transformation of education and schooling.
Retrieved from http://ankn.uaf.edu/curriculum/Articles/GrahamSmith/index.html
Smith, L. T. (1999). Decolonizing methodologies: Research and indigenous peoples.
London: Zed Books.
Strakosch, E., & Macoun, A. (2012). The vanishing endpoint of settler colonialism.
Arena Journal, 37/38, 40–62.
Stremlau, R. (2005). “To domesticate and civilize wild Indians”: Allotment and the
campaign to reform Indian families, 1875–1887. Journal of Family History, 30,
265–286.
Tierney, W. G. (1999). Models of minority college-going and retention: Cultural
integrity versus cultural suicide. Journal of Negro Education, 68, 80–91.
U.S. Census Bureau. (2007, May). The American community—American Indians and
Alaska Natives: 2004 (American Community Survey Reports, ACS-07). Retrieved
from https://www.census.gov/prod/2007pubs/acs-07.pdf
Vizenor, G. R. (1999). Manifest manners: Narratives on postindian survivance. Lincoln:
University of Nebraska Press.
Washburn, W. E. (1976). The historical context of American Indian legal problems.
Law and Contemporary Problems, 40, 12–24.
Wilson, A. C. (2005). Reclaiming our humanity: Decolonization and the recovery of
Indigenous knowledge. In P. French & J. Short (Eds.), War and border crossings:
Ethics when cultures clash (pp. 255–263). Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield.
Wilson, S. (2008). Research is ceremony: Indigenous research methods. Black Point,
Nova Scotia, Canada: Fernwood.
Wolfe, P. (2006). Settler colonialism and the elimination of the Native. Journal of
Genocide Research, 8, 387–409.
122
View publication stats