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Cynthia-Lou Coleman
Professor and researcher at Portland State University who studies science communication, particularly issues that impact American Indians. She is enrolled with the Osage tribe.
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Native science
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Native Science
Monthly Archives: January 2011
Perspective
Writing to agencies to beg for grant money means putting myself under scrutiny. You keep telling yourself, it’s not about you: it’s about the work. But when I’m occupied with issues that impact Indians, then it is personal.
Posted in authenticity, Indian, medicine, Native Science, Osage, science
Tagged Indigenous Science, literacy, native science, science, stereotypes
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Indian as Suitcase
As I was preparing for this week’s campus-wide lecture, I realized the histories and narratives of Indians in North America are like the content s of a suitcase.
Posted in authenticity, cinema, film, framing, Indian, journalism, Kennewick Man, NAGPRA, Native Science, news bias, repatriation, science
Tagged advertising, Indigenous Science, literacy, science
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Skulls and Baseballs
I started thinking about bones when grad student Erin Dysart Hanes and I began following the news coverage of Kennewick Man.
Posted in authenticity, Indian, journalism, Kennewick Man, NAGPRA, Native Science, news bias, repatriation, science
Tagged literacy, native science
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Got My Pickaxe Handy
It’s a daunting task to study Native science and Western science, drilling down through the crust and mantle to examine the core of what centers our beliefs. While some scholars point to power and capital, I find it stops the … Continue reading
Posted in authenticity, framing, Indian, journalism, Native Science, Osage, writing
Tagged literacy, native science
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What if it’s Not There?
How can you study something that’s not there?
Posted in authenticity, community, framing, human origin, Indian, Native Science, science
Tagged Indigenous Science, literacy, native science, rhetoric, science
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It’s a Dream
My head is wrapped around grant applications for my work in science communication: so much so that I’m dreaming about it. Serves me right.I read an article on learning and teaching that pointed out Indian ways-of-knowing embrace dreams as part … Continue reading
Posted in authenticity, framing, Indian, Native Science, science
Tagged Indigenous Science, native science, writing
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True Grit’s Props
The Coen brothers’ version of True Grit tells a powerful story and viewers are invited to sit back and watch as the Western unfolds.
Posted in authenticity, cinema, film, framing, Indian, Lakota
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