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You are viewing titles for THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA AT CHAPEL HILL in the Native American studies available through the UMI Dissertations & Thesis Gradwoorks site
 
An oral health survey of the Lumbee tribe in southeastern North Carolina
Family and nation: Cherokee orphan care, 1835--1903
 
Savage foes, noble warriors, and frail remnants: Florida Seminoles in the white imagination, 1865--1934
Feather 'tis nobler in the mind: A case study in featherwork, indigeneity, and the West at the Nasher Art Museum
 
Captives of the dark and bloody ground: Identity, race, and power in the contested American South
Friends like these: The United States' Indian allies in the Black Hawk War, 1832
 
'We worry about survival': American Indian women, sovereignty, and the right to bear and raise children in the 1970s
An investigation of the impact of speaking the Lumbee Dialect on the academic achievement and identity development of Native American college students
 
Cherokee households and communities in the English Contact period, A.D. 1670--1740
A struggle for Cherokee community: Excavating identity in post-removal North Carolina
 
Navigating Mi'kmaq fishing after the Marshall decision: The cultural production of identities and local economies in Atlantic Canada
Staging "the drama": The continuing importance of cultural tourism in the gaming era
 
Landscapes of power: An ethnography of energy development on the Navajo Nation
Domestic Activities and Household Variation at Catawba New Town ca. 1790--1820
 
A Nation's Charge: Cherokee Social Services, 1835--1907
Remove, return, remember: Making Ute land religion in the American West
 
Four generations of Poarch Creek history
A Historical Archaeology of Catawba Itinerancy
 
Prehistoric Subsistence on the Coast of North Carolina: An Archaeobotanical Study
Re-casting the Hollywood Indian: Technology integration at Sequoyah Schools