Recommended organizations and museums with specific collections or resources of interest to Native American Studies.
(1/4) Global Indios is a magnificent study which documents more than 100 lawsuits Indigenous enslaved people living in Castile brought to the Spanish courts to secure their freedom between 1530 and 1585. #twitterstorians #slaveryarchive pic.twitter.com/7BYlHli13N
— Native Bound Unbound (@NatBoundUnbound) November 21, 2022
On view now through September 27 in "Crystal Bridges at 10" đhttps://t.co/Y1oLv9J80N https://t.co/mW0mEMRgtg
— Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art (@crystalbridges) August 19, 2021
Watch a 450-year-old cedar tree become transformed into an ocean-going Tlingit dugout canoe by youth from the Champagne and Aishihik First Nations with the help of a master boat builder. https://t.co/dPJRDrbUQL via @CBCNorthbeat pic.twitter.com/YoOBb3IslZ
— Museum of Anthropology at UBC (@MOA_UBC) September 1, 2021
Always up to some tricks đ we have an e-copy of Berlin Blues featuring other oddly placed pieces on Anishnawbe land đĄđą https://t.co/LtrDRw7lxq https://t.co/63ZW8gr6Af
— X̱wi7x̱wa Library (@Xwi7xwaLibrary) September 2, 2021
Sept. 24-27 - Smithsonian to host the virtual symposium âThe Other Slavery: Histories of Indian Bondage from New Spain to the Southwestern United Statesâ https://t.co/k7M54iac2O
— AmericanIndianMuseum (@SmithsonianNMAI) September 15, 2021
#DYK: @HoopaTribe’s wildlife division has collected and maintained some of the most detailed data about fishers (a weasel-like animal) in North America. Read about their efforts to monitor this culturally important species here âŹïž https://t.co/XB5jVCtM5t
— The Office of Indian Education (@OIEIndianED) April 13, 2022
— Mvskoke Media (@MvskokeMedia) March 21, 2022
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