Kai Pyle
Kai Pyle holds a PhD in American Studies from the University of Minnesota - Twin Cities. Their current project draws on methods from linguistics, history, literary studies, and visual studies to examine the ways that queer, trans, and Two-Spirit Anishinaabe people have memorialized their history through the maintenance of kinship relations across time and space. They have additional research interests in Métis history, transnational Indigenous feminism, Indigenous language revitalization (especially of Michif and Anishinaabemowin), transgender studies, and Black and Native relationality in North America.
Angela (Sonquo) Tapia
Angela (Sonquo) Tapia was born and raised in the Andean Altiplano region, which is also the geographic area of her research. She holds a PhD in Latin American Studies from the University of Texas at Austin, where she also received portfolios in Native and Indigenous Studies as well as Women and Gender Studies. Her research on contemporary mujeres de polleras (women of/from polleras) focuses on how the relationship between Indigenous women and their clothing differs radically from the subject/object relationship often assumed between people and their clothes. In her methodology, besides conducting interviews and participant observation Tapia dresses in and tailors polleras.
Juliet Larkin-Gilmore
Juliet Larkin-Gilmore holds a Ph.D. in History from Vanderbilt University. Her research and teaching interests are American Indian history, medicine and health, and mobility. Her book manuscript, Mobile Medicine: Public Health and Indigenous Lives on the Lower Colorado River, 1880-1940, examines Mohave, Chemehuevi, Quechan, and Cocopah mobility, health landscapes of the Lower Colorado River, and the contradictions between public health policies and federal attempts to annihilate Native cultures in the United States in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.
Lindsay Marshall
Lindsay Marshall holds a Ph.D. in History from the University of Oklahoma and an M.A. in Liberal Arts from Stanford University. She is currently working on a book manuscript that explores the intersection between changing narratives of the Plains Wars of the late 19th century, secondary U.S. history textbook narratives, and public memory. She also researches the environmental history of human-equine interaction in Indigenous communities with an emphasis on interdisciplinary and decolonial methodologies.
Courtney Cottrell
Courtney Cottrell earned her PhD in Anthropology from the University of Michigan, where she also received a certificate in Museum Studies. Her dissertation analyzes common museological practices ethnographic museums employ in the representation of American Indians. Though the practices she identifies appear to be liberal and transformative from the museums’ origins as a colonial institution, they reinscribe dominant Euro-American ideologies of superiority and misrecognize tribal sovereignty. She is currently working on a project that explores the political upheaval NAGPRA creates between related tribal nations who are attempting to repatriate a single artifact. Her analysis of the strained relationship between her own tribe (Brothertown Indian Nation) and a cousin nation points to the clandestine identity politics federal legislation creates and maintains that circumvent self-determination efforts.
Silvia Soto
Silvia Soto earned her Ph.D. from the University of California, Davis in Native American Studies, her M.A. from the University of New Mexico in Latin American Studies, and her B.A. from the University of California, Davis is in Sociology and Spanish Literature. She is currently working on turning her dissertation, Unstoppable Clamor: The Reconstruction of a Mayan World in Chiapas, into a book length manuscript. Her work engages in a post 1994 analysis of the Mayan world in Chiapas through a dialogue with and between Zapatismo and knowledge systems of Indigenous Mayan peoples.
Brianna Theobald
Brianna Theobald earned her PhD in History at Arizona State University, where she also completed a certificate in Gender Studies and a secondary field in global studies of gender and comparative colonialism. Her research and teaching interests include Indigenous Studies, gender, health and medicine, and the U.S. West. She is currently working on a book manuscript entitled "Reproduction on the Reservation: Federal Indian Policy and Reproductive Politics in the Twentieth Century," which explores the complicated relationship between Indigenous women's biological reproduction and the struggle between Indigenous communities and white Americans over land in the twentieth century.
Korinta Maldonado
Korinta Maldonado holds a Ph.D. in Anthropology from the University of Texas in Austin. Her research centers on indigenous movements, human rights and racial formations in Mexico and Latin America. She specifically concentrates in the Totonac region of the state of Puebla. There she examines the construction of indigeneity in the context of a rapacious neoliberal multiculturalist regime. She has done long-term research in Puebla as well as in Chiapas, a result of years of engagement and collaborative work with indigenous organizations within these states.
Among other works, she has published along with anthropologist Adriana Terven, a monograph in Spanish The Indigenous Courts of Cuetzalan and Huehuetla: The Force and Reproduction of Normative Systems of the Peoples of the Highlands of Puebla.
Kevin Whalen, 2014-2015
Kevin Whalen holds a Ph.D. in History from the University of California, Riverside, and his research and teaching interests include Indigenous studies, labor, migration, and the United States West. His book manuscript, "Beyond School Walls: Labor, Migration, and Indian Education in Southern California, 1900-1945" explores how Indigenous communities used Sherman Institute, a federal Indian boarding school in Riverside, California, to access wage labor markets and develop intertribal social networks in Los Angeles well before the federal relocation programs of the post-war era. His publications have appeared in American Indian Culture and Research Journal, American Behavioral Scientist, and in edited volumes.
Marisa Elena Duarte, 2013-2015
Marisa Elena Duarte (Pascua Yaqui) was born and raised between southern New Mexico and southern Arizona. She received her doctorate in information science from the University of Washington Information School, where she focused on the social and political implications of U.S. tribal command of local broadband Internet infrastructures. Her current project, "Seamless Technologies: Weaving Information Systems into Indian Country," is an investigation into the changes that seamless technologies -- smart homes, wearable sensors, and other forms of surveillance technologies -- may initiate as they ripple throughout Indian Country.
Kate Williams, 2012-2014
Kate Williams was born and raised in Wales, and completed a Ph.D. in History at the University of Minnesota. Her project, "Cyd-Safiad (Standing Together): The Politics of Alliance of Welsh and American Indian Rights' Movements, 1960s-Present," explores how the American Indian Movement and Welsh nationalists formed transnational political alliances with each other and related groups worldwide, from Australian Aborigines to Irish Republicans, and analyzes the practical and ideological significance of the relationships.
Jessica Bardill
Jessica Bardill's research on the narrative power of blood and its relation to current trends in tribal citizenship policies, including the possibility of DNA testing, takes further the work she began at Duke University's Graduate School. Her work "Beyond Blood and Belonging" turns to alternarratives for what they can provide for community belonging, including thinking about the ways that narrative acts as medicine.
Thomas Swensen
Thomas Swensen was born and raised in Kodiak, Alaska though he graduated at a non-traditional age from the Benny Benson Secondary School in Anchorage. He holds a PhD in Comparative Ethnic Studies from the University of California, Berkeley, a MA in English from University of Oregon, and holds a double major BA in English, Fine Arts, and a post baccalaureate degree in Urban Planning and Theory. He has worked as a fisherman, a set designer, and a bartender. Luckily he has been the recipient of many honors such as the University of California, Berkeley Prestigious Chancellor's Fellowship, the Koniag Education Foundation's Larry Matfay Alutiiq Heritage Scholarship, and was awarded the 2010 Autry Prize in Public History from the Western History Association for his work as a lead author on the We Shall Remain: The Utah Indian Curriculum Project. Additionally he was fortunate to work with the Utah Natural History Museum creating public programming for the local five nations indigenous to the Utah region under a fellowship provided by the National Association of Tribal Historic Preservation Officers in 2010.
He is currently working on the manuscript Cama'i America: Alaska Natives and the Spaces of Empire. He is a Koniag, inc. and Leisnoi inc. shareholder (formed under ANCSA) and a member of the Woody Island, Native Village of Targniaq, (an IRA tribal government).
Manu Vimalassery
Manu Vimalassery earned a doctorate in American Studies at New York University. His project — "Skew Tracks: Racial Capitalism and the First Transcontinental Railroad" — rewrites the history of the transcontinental railroad through Chinese, Lakota, Pawnee, and Cheyenne histories.
Sarah Morales
Sarah Morales (Coast Salish and member of the Cowichan Tribes) is completing a Ph.D. in the Faculty of Law at the University of Victoria.
Keith L. Camacho
Keith L. Camacho is a Chamorro scholar from the Mariana Islands. His area of expertise concerns the study of colonization, decolonization and militarization in the Pacific Islands, with an emphasis on indigenous narratives of survival and sovereignty.
Louellyn White
Louellyn White's project, "Free to be Kanienkeha'ka: A case study of educational self-determination at the Akwesasne Freedom School," provides an ethnographic and historical analysis of a community’s assertion of educational self-determination.
Joseph Bauerkemper
Engaging the intersections of cultural studies and American Indian and Indigenous studies, Bauerkemper's research and teaching seek to cultivate innovative approaches to vexing questions regarding nationhood, history, decolonization, literary criticism, and critical theory.
Dustin Tahmahkera (Numunuu)
Within larger cultural frameworks of decolonization and indigeneity, Tahmahkera's work analyzes the genealogical and thematic development of representations of playing “Indian” by non-Native and Native characters in live-action and animated American sitcoms.
Jill Doerfler(Anishinaabe)
Doerfler's research — "Fictions and Fractions: Reconciling Citizenship Regulations with Cultural Values Among the White Earth Anishinaabeg" -- engages the ways in which the ideology of race has functioned as a means to erase American Indian identity and how American Indians have asserted their own conceptions of identity.
Tol Foster (Mvskoke Creek, Oklahoma)
Foster's research — "Dividing Canaan: Oklahoma Writers and the Multicultural Frontier" -- asserts that with the full incorporation of Indian Territory into the United States, African-Americans and Native Americans crafted a rhetorical space to argue for an inclusive America based on their own terms and concepts.
Matthew Sakiestewa Gilbert (Hopi)
Dr. Gilbert is working on a book manuscript titled Education Beyond the Mesas: Hopi Student Involvement at Sherman Institute, 1902-1929, which is under contract with the University of Nebraska Press. In August 2007, Dr. Gilbert joined the faculty as an Assistant Professor of American Indian Studies & History at Illinois.
Kristina Ackley (Oneida/Bad River Chippewa)
Dr. Ackley's research extends her dissertation, "We Are Oneida Yet: Discourse in the Oneida Land Claim." Her scholarly interests closely connect her research with student-centered learning; including community-determined research, Indigenous theories and methods in Native American Studies, anti-Indian movements, and oral history.
Kim Benita Furumoto(Yaqui)
Kim Benita Furumoto is working on a book manuscript based on her dissertation, "Racial Juris-Fiction: Federal Indian Law from the Discovery Doctrine to Allotment" — an this interdisciplinary project traces the racial-colonial conceptions of Indians in U.S legal discourses, drawing upon critical race theory and studies of colonialism in various global contexts.
Sarita Cannon
Dr. Cannon's research engages in the recent emergence of scholarship on Black Indians as she explores various iterations of this particular multiracial identity in verbal and visual texts in the past two centuries. Her teaching and research interests include 19th and 20th century U.S. Literature, Autobiography, Ethnic American Literatures, Feminist Theory, African American Studies, Native American Studies.
Andrea Smith
Dr. Smith is largely concerned with identifying resistance strategies within Native communities that will be helpful in promoting Native sovereignty struggles in particular and social justice in general. Her teaching and research interests include violence against Native American women, the Christian right, American Indian activism, religion/spirituality and political activism.
David Anthony Tyeeme Clark
During his postdoctoral fellowship year, Dr. Clark continued his project "Roots of Red Power: American Indian Protest and Resistance, From Wounded Knee to the American Indian Chicago Conference," a study that will document the "history of American Indian activism and advocacy, as well as a cultural and gender study of Indigenous voice."
Larry Emerson
Dr. Emerson dissertation work, entitled "'Hozho Nahazdlii': Towards a Practice of Dine' Decolonization," investigates and seeks to understand "the dialectical nature of colonialism and decolonization." Professor Emerson's research and writing works to articulate "decolonized notions of Dine' education" by describing "Dine' patterns of resistance to colonialism through the active engagement and advocacy of Dine' non-modern, traditional thought and identity."