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Constructing Native American Identity within the Context of the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act

机译:在《美国原住民格雷夫斯保护和遣返法》的背景下建立美国原住民身份

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摘要

The Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act of 1990 (NAGPRA) established a mechanism for repatriating ancestral Native American human remains and three other categories of special objects already curated by federally funded institutions. NAGPRA is undoubtedly an important piece of human rights legislation recognizing the historical mistreatment of Native American dead. Yet, the process of repatriation, arguably the most salient piece of NAGPRA, highlights larger questions about the construction of tribes, as an analytic category through archaeological and ethnographic evidence. Indeed, this federal law changed the nature of the archaeo-legal landscape. Before NAGPRA, archaeological expertise was used in the context of the National Historic Preservation Act or Archaeological Resources Protection Act, for example. Post NAGPRA the political involvement of archaeology has expanded and archaeological and anthropological methods and theories now occupy a unique place in the archaeo-legal landscape. In particular, the corner stone methods and theories by which archaeologists and anthropologists link contemporary social and cultural groups to their ancestors, together commonly known as cultural affiliation, have become particularly important.;The most salient example this is Bonnichsen v. U.S., 367 F.3d 864 (9th Cir. 2004). In 2004, after almost a decade of litigation, the 9th Circuit in decided the final disposition of approximately 9,000 year old human remains. Popularly known as "Kennewick Man" or "The Ancient One" the remains were inadvertently discovered by four students watching a boat race from the banks of the Columbia River in Kennewick, Washington. The county coroner initially identified the remains as Caucasoid. However, the discovery of an a Clovis spear point in Kennewick Man's hip suggested this identification might not be correct. After further testing, the age of the remains were found to be approximately 9,000 years old. The Army Corps of Engineers, on whose property the remains were found, decided, based on the age of the the remains, that Kennewick Man should be repatriated to area tribes. Subsequently, a group of archaeologists and anthropologists sued claiming that the remains were so old and because the original characterization of Kennewick Man was Caucasoid, cultural affiliation to a modern tribe could not be established within the meaning of NAGPRA and thus the statute did not apply. The central question for the court to consider was whether or not Kennewick man was a Native American.;Relying heavily on archaeological and anthropological evidence, the Court decided that Kennewick Man was not Native American. It is not surprising that the Court would draw heavily upon these disciplines. Indeed, much of the justification for their existence and importance has been their ability to tell us about ancestral pasts and cultural lineages. While archaeology has long played a key role in contributing to national narratives, in both positive and negative ways, NAGPRA paced a new emphasis on political involvement of these disciplines in defining who is Native American. As a result, their taken for granted's are called into question.;The starting point for my broader inquiry into the traditional models and methods of cultural affiliation, is a single site, CA-SJo-42. The objects excavated from CA-SJo-42 are curated at the Phoebe A. Hearst Museum of Anthropology at the University of California, Berkeley (PAHMA) and date from roughly the Late to the Historic Period (A.D. 1500-1830). CA-SJo-42 is located in a border area separating the Sacramento and the San Joaquin Valleys (The Delta) - a border that coincides with the anthropologically, linguistically, and archaeologically defined "cultural" border separating the Plains Miwok and Northern Valley Yokuts peoples. CA-SJo-42 is the ideal starting point for exploring the empirical foundations of cultural affiliation because it is a collection that the Tachi Yokuts Tribe, a federally recognized tribe, has requested be repatriated but is tenuously labeled culturally unidentifiable by the Hearst Museum. The reason for this designation points to the heart of my analysis.;Despite the best efforts of PAHMA, traditional culture area maps and archaeological typologies provide few answers to the complex interplay of people and objects their data suggest. The goal of this dissertation is to better understand the empirical footings for cultural affiliation within American archaeology. Specifically, I ask two related questions: can we discover cultural differences in the archaeological record and how might dynamic cultural interaction and between-group differences be remodeled to better understand border interactions and group identity? To do this, I address two sets of interrelated issues. First, I examine the theoretical underpinnings for cultural affiliation and examine how data were used to construct and reify a certain notion of cultural boundaries. Second, I reflect on the ways in which cultural interaction and between-group differences might best be represented. I ask how complex social relationships, especially in border areas, can be remodeled so they better incorporate and interpret the variation that often exists among archaeological, linguistic, and ethnohistoric evidence. This, I hypothesize, could provide the foundations for more nuanced archaeological and legal understandings of identity.
机译:1990年的《美国原住民坟墓保护和遣返法案》(NAGPRA)建立了一种机制,用于遣返祖先的美国原住民遗体和联邦政府资助机构已经策划的其他三类特殊物品。毫无疑问,NAGPRA是承认历史上对美国原住民死者的虐待的一项重要人权法案。然而,遣返过程可以说是NAGPRA最重要的部分,它突出了有关部落建设的更大问题,作为通过考古和人种学证据的分析类别。确实,这项联邦法律改变了古代法律景观的性质。在NAGPRA之前,例如在《国家历史保护法》或《考古资源保护法》中使用了考古专业知识。在NAGPRA之后,考古学的政治参与范围扩大了,考古和人类学方法和理论现在在考古法律环境中占有独特的位置。特别是,考古学家和人类学家将当代社会和文化群体与其祖先联系起来的基石方法和理论(通常被称为文化归属)变得尤为重要;最突出的例子是Bonnichsen诉US,367 F .3d 864(2004年第9届)。经过近十年的诉讼,2004年,第九巡回法庭决定对约9000年历史的遗体进行最后处置。四名学生在华盛顿肯纳威克的哥伦比亚河两岸观看游艇比赛时,无意中发现了这些遗体,俗称“肯尼威克人”或“古代人”。县验尸官最初将这些遗骸定为高加索人。但是,在肯纳威克·曼(Kennewick Man)臀部发现克洛维斯(Clovis)长矛点表明,这种识别可能不正确。经过进一步测试,发现遗体的年龄约为9,000年。根据遗骸的年龄,根据遗骸的年龄,陆军工程兵团决定将肯纳威克人遣返地区部落。随后,一群考古学家和人类学家提起诉讼,声称这些遗骸是如此古老,并且由于肯纳威克人的原始特征是高加索人,因此无法在NAGPRA的意义上建立与现代部落的文化联系,因此该法规不适用。法院要考虑的中心问题是肯纳威克人是否是美洲原住民。法院在很大程度上依赖考古和人类学证据,认为肯纳威克人不是美国原住民。法院将大量利用这些学科不足为奇。确实,它们存在和重要性的大部分理由是它们能够告诉我们有关祖先的历史和文化血统的能力。考古学长期以来一直在为民族叙事做出贡献方面发挥着关键作用,无论是正面的还是负面的,NAGPRA都重新强调了这些学科在界定谁是美洲原住民方面的政治参与。结果,他们的理所当然的问题受到了质疑。;我对传统的文化归属模式和方法进行更广泛的研究的起点是一个站点,CA-SJo-42。从CA-SJo-42出土的物品在加利福尼亚大学伯克利分校(PAHMA)的菲比·赫斯特人类学博物馆(PAHMA)进行策划,其日期大约为晚期至历史时期(公元1500年至1830年)。 CA-SJo-42位于萨克拉曼多和圣华金河谷(三角洲)之间的边界区域,该边界与人类学,语言学和考古学定义的“文化”边界重合,将平原米沃克人和北部山谷约科茨人。 CA-SJo-42是探索文化归属的经验基础的理想起点,因为它是联邦认可的部落Tachi Yokuts部落要求遣返的集合,但赫斯特博物馆(Hearst Museum)对其进行了文化上难以识别的标签。指定该名称的原因是我分析的重点。尽管PAHMA尽了最大的努力,但传统文化区图和考古学类型并不能为数据所暗示的人与物之间复杂的相互作用提供任何答案。本文的目的是为了更好地了解美国考古学中文化归属的经验基础。具体来说,我问两个相关的问题:我们能否发现考古记录中的文化差异?如何重新构建动态的文化互动和群体之间的差异,以更好地了解边界互动和群体身份?为此,我要解决两组相互关联的问题。第一,我研究了文化归属的理论基础,并研究了如何使用数据来构建和统一文化边界的某些概念。其次,我思考了如何最好地表现文化互动和群体间差异的方式。我问如何重新构建复杂的社会关系,尤其是在边境地区,以便它们更好地融合和解释考古学,语言学和民族史证据之间经常存在的差异。我认为,这可以为考古学和法律上对身份的细微差别提供基础。

著录项

  • 作者

    Modzelewski, Darren John.;

  • 作者单位

    University of California, Berkeley.;

  • 授予单位 University of California, Berkeley.;
  • 学科 Archaeology.;Native American studies.;Museum studies.
  • 学位 Ph.D.
  • 年度 2012
  • 页码 266 p.
  • 总页数 266
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类
  • 关键词

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