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The Early years of Native American art history: the politics of scholarship and collecting
Janet Catherine Berlo
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Frontmatter
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Preface (page ix)
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Chapter One Introduction: The Formative Years of Native American Art History (Janet Catherine Berlo, page 1)
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Chapter Two Franz Boas, John Swanton, and the New Haida Sculpture at the American Museum of Natural History (Aldona Jonaitis, page 22)
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Chapter Three New Questions for "Old Things": The Brooklyn Museum's Zuni Collection (Diana Fane, page 62)
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Chapter Four Louisa Keyser and the Cohns: Mythmaking and Basket Making in the American West (Marvin Cohodas, page 88)
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Chapter Five "The Artist Himself": The Salish Basketry Monograph and the Beginnings of a Boasian Paradigm (Ira Jacknis, page 134)
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Chapter Six Lila Morris O'Neale: Ethnoaesthetics and the Yurok-Karok Basket Weavers of Northwestern California (Margot Blum Schevill, page 162)
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Chapter Seven Marketing the Affinity of the Primitive and the Modern: René d'Harnoncourt and "Indian Art of the United States" (W. Jackson Rushing, page 191)
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Contributors (page 237)
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Index (page 239)
Journal Abbreviation | Label | URL |
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AB | 75.4 (Dec. 1993): 726-728 | http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0004-3079%28199312%2975%3A4%3C726%3ATEYONA%3E2.0.CO%3B2-G |
Citable Link
Published: c1992
Publisher: University of Washington Press
- 9780295972022 (hardcover)