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Category: 17. 5. Efforts to obtain federal recognition
BLU0005. Blu, Karen I. 5. Region
and recognition: Southern Indians, anthropologists, and presumed biology.
In: Anthropologists and Indians in the new South. Ed. Rachel A.
Bonney and J. Anthony Paredes. Tuscaloosa: Alabama UP, 2001. Pages 71-85;
notes on pages 238-240.
KeySource.
Publication type: Book chapter or section
This insightful, well-reasoned essay touches on
a number of important issues related to federal recognition and uses Blu's
extensive knowledge of the Lumbee as the primary example. Issues include:
- the way the relationship between Indian groups and
anthropologists has changed because the groups need experts to help
them meet the prodigiousrequirements for documentation mandated under
the federalacknowledgement regulations;
- an enlightening, convincing discussion (with numerous
examples and quotations) of blood quantum (the amount of Indian blood
a person has), how the federal acknowledgement process has brought
this racist conceptback into discussion, and how these discussions
exhibit essentialistbiologistic thought;
- reasons why federal acknowledgement is so deeply
desired by groups such as the Lumbee (example: . . . a desire
. . . for an unquestionable, determined, and once-and-for-all autochthonous,
Indian, status: an external validation for their own traditional
knowledge (p. 73));
- how the federal acknowledgement process has brought
about changes in relationships of Native American groups to each other,
and how biological language and essentialism creep into
the discussions (using Lumbee efforts to obtain federal acknowledgement
as an illustration);
- strong arguments that Indianness is a social and
cultural concept (as anthropologists have maintained since Franz
Boas), not a biological or genetic one. One point Blu raises is that
the Lumbee tribe's membership criteria specify that 'eligible
descendants who have failed to maintain tribalaffiliation' . . . and
community ties can be purged from the rolls through thedecision of
the Tribal Elders Review Committee (p. 84).
Here, as in other writings, Blu presents some information
seldom seen in other works. She notes, for example, that a BIA official
stated in 1996 that only three groups with populations over 1,000 had submitted
petitions for federal acknowledgement at that time (the Lumbee: 44,000;
the Houma, 18,000; and the Miami, 4,000); none of them had been recognized.
Additional Subjects: Anthropologists | Tribal rolls | Race
| Blood quantum | Pseuobiology | Essentialism | Culure | Community | Carl
Seltzer | Maynor v. Morton
This annotation was written on: December 30, 2001; last
edited on June 17, 2002.
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