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Category: 17. Tribal name and identity
MARK002. Marks, Heather Forbis.
'Same ingredients, different labels': marking tribal boundaries
at the North Carolina Indian Cultural Center. Thesis. Wake Forest
U, 1998. 154 pages.
Bibliography: pages 130-142. Appendices: surveys and interview
forms. Also includes tables and photographs.
Publication type: Thesis (masters)
This anthropology thesis examines the concepts
of identity of the five state-recognized tribes in North Carolina and looks
at how each tribe's concept of identity was manifested in its presentation
of itself in the exhibits at the North Carolina Indian Culture Center (near
the town of Pembroke). Data was gathered through opinion surveys and participant-observation.
Marks found that due to common desires for federal recognition,each
tribe did not insist on distinctive material culture markers. Rather, the
tribes manifested a desire for a regional identity. Provides useful background
information on definitions of ethnicity and panethnicity, the history of
Native Americans in North Carolina, and history of the North Carolina Indian
Cultural Center.
Some of the survey questions Marks used included: What
sort of artifacts and information should go in an exhibit or program about
your tribe? What is it that makes you a member of your tribe? How are you
different from other Indians? What are some common misconceptions people
have about your tribe? Marks summarizes responses and— in at least one
case (important tribal concerns)—compares Lumbee to non-Lumbee responses.
Additional subjects: North Carolina Indian Cultural Center
| Stereotypes | Museum theory | Coharie Indians | Haliwa-Saponi Indians
| Meherrin Indians | Waccamaw-Siouan Indians
This annotation was edited on: June 14, 2002
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