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Bibliography

Contributors

Phillip Earenfight is Director and Chief curator of The Trout Gallery—the Art Museum of Dickinson College. He holds a BA from the University of Washington and a PhD in art history from Rutgers University, the State University of New Jersey. He has organized more than a hundred exhibitions, including solo projects on the work of Lalla Essaydi, Sue Coe, Grace Hartigan, and Joyce Kozloff. His scholarly research considers Native American ledger drawings and photographs associated with Fort Marion and the Carlisle Indian School. His catalogue A Kiowa’s Odyssey: A Sketchbook from Fort Marion received the College Arts Association’s Alfred H. Barr Jr. Book Award (2009). He is also a specialist in Gothic Italian art and architecture and was a fellow at the executive leadership programs at the J. Paul Getty Museum (2011) and the Association of Academic Museums and Galleries/Kellogg School of Business (2012).

Jacqueline Fear-Segal is Professor of American and Indigenous Histories at the University of East Anglia, Norwich, England, where she co-founded and co-directs the Native Studies Research Network. As an undergraduate, Fear-Segal studied at the University of East Anglia and as a postgraduate at University College London and Harvard University. Her recent book, White Man’s Club: Schools, Race, and the Struggle for Indian Acculturation, was awarded the American Studies Best Book (2008). She writes extensively on Indian education in the nineteenth century and has published essays in a variety of books, including Indigenous Bodies: Reviewing, Relocating, Reclaiming (2013), and Carlisle Indian Industrial School: Indigenous Histories, Memories, and Reclamations (2016); as well as articles in American Studies International, History of Education Quarterly, Museum Anthropology, The American Historical Review, The Western Historical Quarterly, American Studies, and Great Plains Quarterly.

Suzan Shown Harjo (Cheyenne and Muscogee) is a writer, curator, and policy advocate who has helped Native peoples recover more than one million acres of land and protect Native nations, sovereignty, children, arts, cultures, lands, languages, religious freedom, repatriation, sacred places, and water. Harjo was editor and guest curator of Nation to Nation: Treaties Between the United States and American Indian Nations (National Museum of the American Indian), which won the Overall Award—Excellence in Exhibition from the Alliance of American Museums (2016). She is a National Museum of the American Indian (NMAI) Founding Trustee, and began coalition work in 1967 that led to establishment of the NMAI as well as laws reforming nationwide museum policies. Among her many awards, she has received the Presidential Medal of Freedom (2014), the Native Leadership Award (2015), and two Sovereignty Symposium medals from the Oklahoma Supreme Court (2015 and 2016). Harjo is president of the Morning Star Institute in Washington, DC, and served as executive director to the National Congress for American Indians (1984–89). She is an award-winning columnist for Indian Country Today; lead plaintiff in Harjo et al. v. Pro Football, Inc.; a member of the advisory and campaign strategy committees for Reclaiming Native Truth; and a senior policy advisor to the Multicultural Initiative for Community Advancement Group.