OLAC Record
oai:indigenousguide.amphilsoc.org:9767

Metadata
Title:Efflorescence and identity in Iroquois arts
Contributor:Hanks, Christina Johannsen, 1950-
Date:1984
Description: This dissertation was submitted to the anthropology department of Brown University by Christina Barbara Johannsen (later Hanks) in 1984. The author was also the founding director (and later on the Board of Directors) of the Schoharie Museum of the Iroquois Indian and a trustee of the Mohawk Caughnawaga Museum. The dissertation is based on fieldwork with Haudenosaunee artists and craftspeople and in museum collections. The author attempted to draw from Haudenosaunee communities through the United States and Canada to show how modern Haudenosaunee art has become "a means of maintaining and expressing a sense of Iroquois identity in a non-Iroquois world," and that the 1970s were in particular a moment of efflorescence as the People of the Longhouse asserted their identity through political activism and art.
Extent:292 pages
Identifier:https://indigenousguide.amphilsoc.org/entry/9767
Language:English
Language (ISO639):eng
Subject:Haudenosaunee
Mohawk
Seneca
Tuscarora
Onondaga
Oneida
Cayuga
Anthropology
Ethnography
Art
Indian artists
Politics and government
History
Type:Dissertations
Type (DCMI):Text

OLAC Info

Archive:  Indigenous Materials at the American Philosophical Society
Description:  http://www.language-archives.org/archive/indigenousguide.amphilsoc.org
GetRecord:  OAI-PMH request for OLAC format
GetRecord:  Pre-generated XML file

OAI Info

OaiIdentifier:  oai:indigenousguide.amphilsoc.org:9767
DateStamp:  2020-03-02
GetRecord:  OAI-PMH request for simple DC format

Search Info

Citation: Hanks, Christina Johannsen, 1950-. 1984. Indigenous Materials at the American Philosophical Society.
Terms: area_Europe country_GB dcmi_Text iso639_eng


http://www.language-archives.org/item.php/oai:indigenousguide.amphilsoc.org:9767
Up-to-date as of: Fri Mar 3 4:00:06 EST 2023