AMERICAN INDIAN STUDIES

AND

PHILOSOPHY DEPARTMENT

 

 

NATIVE AMERICAN PHILOSOPHY

 

Course Level:  300-500

Anne Waters, J.D., Ph.D.

email:  brendam234@aol.com

Phone:  (505) 265-3912

 

 

 

Course Description.  This course will study philosophy indigenous to North America through an examination of native and nonnative historical and contemporary oratory, argument, letters, addresses, and texts.  From the influence of Aristotle on Native Americans during the 16th century Spanish debates at Valladolid, to the contemporary writings of Vine Deloria, Jr., we will study the interplay of native and nonnative philosophical concepts upon one another.  The currently popular thesis that contemporary American philosophy has been influenced by its indigenist American roots will be examined.  We will also consider whether indigenist and European thought merely collided against one another without complementary influence, or had an impact, one upon the other.  Finally,  we will undergo an investigation as to whether there might be influences of African, Native, and European American philosophical thought on one another. 

 

 

 

Course Requirements.  Attendance will be presumed.   A journal of informal comments on each reading topic (eg., personhood, naturalism, etc.) will be kept and collected at the end of the term.  All students are expected to arrive at class prepared to discuss the assigned materials.  Questions will be provided for a midterm exam of no more than 10 double spaced typed pages.  A formal research paper, on an APPROVED  topic selected from a list (on reserve at the library),  will be due the second half of the semester--minimal 10 pages for undergraduates, and 20 pages for graduate students.  Precis papers may also  occasionally be required of graduate students.

 

 

 

Grading.  A 100 point scale.  Attendance = 15; Journal = 10; Midterm = 25; Research Paper 50%.  All assignments must be completed to receive a passing grade.  No incompletes without prior written approval.

 

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Required Texts.

Wub-E-Ke-Niew, We Have The Right To Exist:  A Translation of Aboriginal Indigenous Thought --The first book ever published from an Ahnishinahbaeo’jibway Perspective.  New York: Black Thistle Press, 1995.

 

Deloria, Vine.   God Is Red: A Native View of Religion, Golden, Co.: Fulcrum Publishing, 1994.

 

Hanke, Lewis.  Aristotle and the American Indians.  Bloomington:  Indiana Univ. Press, 1959.

 

Warrior, Robert Allen.  Tribal Secrets:  Recovering American Indian Intellectual Traditions.  Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1995.

 

On Reserve in the Library.*

 

Waters, Anne.  Readings in American Indian Philosophy  (unpublished collection of published articles).

 

 

SCHEDULE OF TOPICS AND READING.

 

WEEKS    1-3

 

“On Personhood, Naturalism, and Cultural Difference”

 

*Berger, Thomas R.  The Debate at Valladolid.  A Long and Terrible Shadow .  Seattle: Univ. of Wash. Press, 1991.

 

Lewis Hanke.  Aristotle and the American Indians..

 

*A. Irving Hallowell.  Ojibwa Ontology, Behavior, and World View.  From Stanley Diamond, editor, Culture in History:  Essays in Honor of Paul Radin; New York: Columbia Univ. Press, 1960.  Reprinted in Teachings From the American Earth:  Indian Religion and Philosophy, edited by Dennis Tedlock and Barbara Tedlock; Toronto: George J. McLeod Ltd. 141.

 

*Alice B. Kehoe. Blackfoot Persons.  Women and Power in Native North America.  Edited by Laura F. Klein and Lillian A. Ackerman.  Norman:  Univ. of Oklahoma Press, 1995; 113.

 

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*Henry S. Sharp.  Asymmetric Equals:  Women and Men Among the Chipewyan.  Women and Power in Native North America.  Edited by Laura F. Klein and Lillian A. Ackerman.  Norman:  Univ. of Oklahoma Press, 1995; 46.

 

*Robert A. Williams, Jr.  Gendered Checks and Balances.  24 Georgia Law Review

 1019.

 

*Ward Churchill.  Nobody’s Pet Poodle:  Jimmie Durham, An Artist for Native North America.  From A Native Son:  Selected Essays on Indigenism, 1985-1995. Boston: South End Press. 1996;  483.

 

*Carl Sweezy.  The Indian Concept of Time:  A Cultural Trait.  Carl Sweezy, as told to Althea Bass, in The Arapaho Way:  A Memoir of and Indian Boyhood (New York: Clarkson N. Potter, 1966, 5-6, 17-18.  Reprinted in This Country Was Ours:  A Documentary History of the American Indian, Virgil J. Vogel. New York:  Harper and Row; 1972; 263.

 

WEEKS    4 - 6

 

“Free Will, Sovereign Nations, and Indigenism”

 

*Cornplanter (Seneca) Letter to the Governor of Pennsylvania, February, 1822.  From Samuel G. Drake, Biography and History of the Indians of North America, 11th Ed. (Boston, 1841) pp.611-613.  Reprinted in Great Documents in American Indian History, edited by Wayne Moquin with Charles Van Doren.  New York:  Da Capo Press. 1995; 143.

 

*George W. Harkins (Choctaw).  Farewell Letter to the American People, 1832.  The American Indian,  December 1926. Reprinted in Great Documents in American Indian History, edited by Wayne Moquin with Charles Van Doren.  New York:  Da Capo Press. 1995; 151.

 

*John Borrows.  Frozen Rights in Canada:  Constitutional Interpretation and the Trickster. 22  Am. Indian L. Rev. 37 (1997).  Norman: Univ. of Oklahoma College of Law.

 

*Michael Grant.  Seminole Tribe v. Florida--Extinction of the “New Buffalo?”.  22  Am. Indian L. Rev. 171 (1997).   Norman: Univ. of Oklahoma College of Law.

 

*Anne Kass.  The Better Way:  Navajo Peacemaking.

 

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*Ward Churchill.  I Am Indigenist:  Notes on the Ideology of the Fourth World.  From A Native Son:  Selected Essays on Indigenism, 1985-1995. Boston: South End Press. 1996; 509.

 

*Ward Churchill.  Defining the Unthinkable:  Towards a Viable Understanding of Genocide.  A Little Matter of Genocide:  Holocaust and Denial in the Americas, 1492 to the Present.  San Francisco:  City Lights Books. 1997; 399.

 

*Jewell Praying Wolf James (“Se-Sealth”).  Testimony:  Ecocide and Genocide.  Ecocide of Native America:  Environmental Destruction of Indian Lands and Peoples.  Edited by Donald A Grinde and Bruce E. Johansen.  Santa Fe:  Clear Light Publishers. 1995; 246.

 

*Virgil J. Vogel, The Indian in American History, 1968.  This Country Was Ours:  A Documentary History of the American Indian, Virgil J. Vogel. New York:  Harper and Row; 1972; 284.

 

 

WEEKS    7 - 8

 

“Origins, Cosmogony, Power”

 

*The Beginning of Newness:  A Zuni Creation Legend.  From Thirteenth Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology, p.379.  Reprinted in Great Documents in American Indian History, edited by Wayne Moquin with Charles Van Doren.  New York:  Da Capo Press. 1995; 7.

 

*The Origin of Arikara.  From George A. Dorsey, Ed., Traditions of the Arikara (Washington, D.C., 1904).  Reprinted in Great Documents in American Indian History, edited by Wayne Moquin with Charles Van Doren.  New York:  Da Capo Press. 1995; 10.

 

*Journey to the West in Search of Tribal Origins, Moncachtape (Yazoo).  From Samuel G. Drake, Biography and History of the Indians of North America, 11th Ed. (Boston 1841), Chapter 5.  Reprinted in Great Documents in American Indian History, edited by Wayne Moquin with Charles Van Doren.  New York:  Da Capo Press. 1995; 16.

 

*“On Freedom.”  Sitting Bull (Hunkpapa Sioux).  A Message for the President of the United States, 1881.  From W. Fletcher Johnson, Life of Sitting Bull (1891), pp.162-67.  Reprinted in Great Documents in American Indian History, edited by Wayne Moquin with Charles Van Doren.  New York:  Da Capo Press. 1995; 252.

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*What the Indian Means to America (1933)  Luther Standing Bear (Sioux).  From Chief Standing Bear, Land of the Spotted Eagle (Boston 1933), Chapter 9.  Reprinted in Great Documents in American Indian History, edited by Wayne Moquin with Charles Van Doren.  New York:  Da Capo Press. 1995; 306.

 

Whitt, Laurie Anne.  Indigenous Peoples and the Cultural Politics of Knowledge.  Issues in Native American Cultural Identity.  Edited by Michael K. Green.  New York:  Peter Lang, 1995, 223-272.

 

MIDTERM EXAM DUE: _________________

 

 

WEEKS   9 - 10

 

 

Ethics, and Preservation  Maintenance of Native Values

 

*George Copway (Kah-ge-ga-gah-bowh).  The Life of Kah-ge-ga-gah-bowh. Chapter 3:  Spirits; Ojibwa Worship; Description, etc., and Chapter 17:  Appeal to Christians in America.  Reprinted in Masterpieces of American Indian Literature, edited by Willis G Regier.  New York: MJF Books, 1993; 23, 109.

 

*Charles Alexander Eastman (Ohiyesa)  The Soul of the Indian.  Chapter 3:  Ceremonial and Symbolic Worship.  Reprinted in Masterpieces of American Indian Literature, edited by Willis G Regier.  New York: MJF Books, 1993; 164.

 

*Pedro Naranjo, San Felipe Pueblo.  Burn the Temples, Break Up the Bells.  From Revolt of the Pueblo Indians of New Mexico and Otermin’s Attempted Reconquest 1680-1682   by Charles Wilson Hackett.  Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 1942.  Reprinted in Native American Testimony, edited by Peter Nabokov.  New York: Penguin Books, 1978, 1991; 54.

 

*Janitin (Kamia).  Janitin Is Names Jesus.  “Testimonio de Janitil” from Apuntes Historicos de la Baja Caifornia  by Manuel C. Roja. Berkeley: Bancroft Library (Mss. #295).  Reprinted in Native American Testimony, edited by Peter Nabokov.  New York: Penguin Books, 1978, 1991; 58.

 

*William Jones (Fox).  Black Hawk Stands Alone, from “Black-Hawk War” by William Jones, Journal of American Folklore, 24:235-27, 1911.   Reprinted in Native American Testimony, edited by Peter Nabokov.  New York: Penguin Books, 1978, 1991; 98.

 

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*Osceola et al. (Seminole).  Edited Transcript, Seminole Agency, Florida Territory, October 23, 24, and 25, 1834; “Osceola Determined” from The War in Florida: Being an Exposition of Its Causes by Woodburne Potter, Baltimore:  Lewis and Coleman, 1836.  Reprinted in Native American Testimony, edited by Peter Nabokov.  New York: Penguin Books, 1978, 1991; 124.

 

*Medicine Horse et al. (Otoe).  We Are Not Children.  from U.S. National Archives, Office of Indian Affairs.  Letters Sent:  Otoe Agency (1856-1876).   Reprinted in Native American Testimony, edited by Peter Nabokov.  New York: Penguin Books, 1978, 1991; 133.

 

 

*Chairman Sloan.  Discussion of Legal Conditions.  “The Best and the Brightest” from Report of the Executive Council on the Proceedings of the First Annual Conference of the Society of American Indians,  October 12-17, 1911, Columbus, Ohio.  Edited by Arthur C. Parker, Washington, D.C., 1912.  Reprinted in Native American Testimony, edited by Peter Nabokov.  New York: Penguin Books, 1978, 1991; 286.

 

*Gertrude S. Bonnin et  (Zitkala-sa) et al.  “Scandal in Oklahoma”  From Oklahoma’s Poor Rich Indians:  An Orgy of Graft and Exploitation of the Five Civilized Tribes--Legalized Robbery Philadelphia:  Office of the Indian Rights Association, 1924.  Reprinted in Native American Testimony, edited by Peter Nabokov.  New York: Penguin Books, 1978, 1991; 300.

 

*Chief (Simon) Pokagon (Pottawattamie Chief).  “The Red Man’s Rebuke.” Hartford:

C.H. Engle, 1893.  Reprinted in Indian Nation:  Native American Literature and Nineteenth-Century Nationalisms by Cheryl Walker, Durham: Duke Publ, 1997;

 

 

WEEKS   11 - 12

 

Phenomenology of Indian Otherness, Spirituality, and Difference

 

*Vine Deloria, Jr. “Others,” We Talk, You Listen.  New York:  Macmillan; 1970; 85.

 

*Vine Deloria, “Circling the Same Old Rock” in Marxism and Native Americans, edited by Ward Churchill.  Boston:  South End Press, 1984; 113.

 

*Frank Black Elk, “Observations on Marxism and Lakota Tradition” in Marxism and Native Americans, edited by Ward Churchill.  Boston:  South End Press, 1984; 137.

 

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*James Mooney.  The Doctrine of the Ghost Dance.  From James Mooney, The Ghost Dance Religion and the Sioux Outbreak of 1890.  Fourteenth Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology (1896).  Reprinted in Teachings From the American Earth:  Indian Religion and Philosophy, edited by Dennis Tedlock and Barbara Tedlock; Toronto: George J. McLeod Ltd.; 75.

 

*Dennis H. McPherson & J. Douglas Rabb, Chapters 1-3 of Indian From the Inside:  A study in Ethno -Metaphysics. Thunder Bay: Centre for Northern Studies; 1993. p. 1-83.

 

*Colin G. Calloway.  New Americans and First Americans in New Worlds for All:  Indians, Europeans, and the Remaking of Early America; Baltimore: Johns Hopkins; 195.

 

Ortiz, Alfonso.  American Indian Philosophy:  Its Relation to the Modern World.  Indian Voices:  The First Convocation of American Indian Scholars.  San Francisco: Indian Historical Press, 1970, 9-47.

 

*Scott Pratt, Native American Thought and the Origins of Pragmatism.  Ayaangwaamizin:  The International Journal of Indigenous Philosophy; Spring 1997; 55.

 

 

WEEKS   13 - 15

 

Religious and Political Worldviews

 

Vine Deloria, God is Red.

 

Wub-E-Ke-Niew, We Have the Right To Exist

 

Warrior, Robert Allen.  Tribal Secrets:  Recovering American Indian Intellectual Traditions.

 

 

WEEK   16  

 

SUMMARY PRESENTATION. Most Recent Work in Philosophy by native and nonnative persons holding a Ph.D. in Philosophy.