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WRA805

H ISTORIES & T HEORIES


OF R HETORICS
Fall 2015
Dr. Malea Powell


History is not the past; it is a consciousness of the past used for present purposes.
- Greg Denning

Office Hours
Tuesdays, 1-3 p.m. & by appointment
235C Ernst Bessey Hall (EBH)
517-355-2400
powell37@msu.edu

Course Goals
The goal of this course is for us to understand the practice of doing history in relation to
rhetorical traditions, broadly writ. Because we arent using the traditional Western
chronological model with other bits added in along the way, mastery of that traditional
Western canon isnt the point of the course. Instead, well investigate three geographies of
rhetorical practice that have experienced specific points of connection and departure over the
past few thousand years. Participants should come away from the experience of the course with
a deeper sense of what it means to construct rhetorical history, a more complicated
understanding of how to engage in historical scholarship as a rhetorician, and a sense of whats
at stake when we invoke particular histories as the history of rhetoric.
How well get there read, write, talk, read, talk, write, read. Read, talk, think together. Think
about how our practices as scholars accumulate into a story, an ideology, a history.

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Requirements
Materials & access:

Digital access Most of our course materials, our class forum, this policy statement, the daily
syllabus, and all assignment details (including deadlines) will be available only through the D2L
course management system. Before you e-mail me with a question, make sure youve
investigated the available information on D2L, please J

Collegiality, diligence & respect:

Everything in the course depends on your willingness to be an active and engaged member of
the intellectual community of the course. In order to be active and engaged you have to do the
readings, to genuinely engage in the writings as generative (not performative), to be respectful
and thoughtful in your responses to one another (and to me), to challenge your own notions of
what it means to do rhetoric history as well as to understand how the discipline has told the
story of itself, to take risks (again and again and again). I promise to be respectful and
thoughtful in return, to urge you to push further, think harder, quit worrying about performing,
and support what youre trying to learn as much as I possibly can. I promise to reward risk, to
reward engagement, to reward your efforts to be outstanding colleagues to one another. I
cant, however, promise a safe space. The idea of a safe space is a colonizing one meant
to silence some at the expense of others; it is almost always an illusion to protect someone
elses privilege.

The work of the course:


General historical understanding
As I said in my initial e-mail to you, having both a general understanding of world
history and making sure you know the specific histories of a particular place and time
are important for your success in this course. Use the general resources below to orient
yourself and explore the specifics online.
Hyperhistory (http://www.hyperhistory.com/online_n2/History_n2/a.html)
TimeMaps (http://www.timemaps.com/history)
Mihesua, American Indians: Stereotypes & Realities
Treuer, Everything You Wanted to Know About Indians But Were Afraid to Ask
Gonick, Cartoon History of the Universe; Cartoon History of the World; Cartoon
History of the Modern World; Cartoon History of the United States
Weekly writings
For each week of class, youll have a weekly writing due to the D2L course discussion
forum by Monday at midnight prior to our class on Tuesday. My only expectations for
these writings is that they will be substantially engaged with, and rooted in, the
readings for that day. At least one of your responses during the semester needs to be

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public via a blog, vlog or other online space (like Storify). You pick which one & tweet
it using our course hashtag #HistRhetMSU
What does substantially engaged and rooted in really mean?
Week writings should NOT be simple summaries of the readings or a critique of what
the writer got wrong. Instead, they could formulate a provisional response, begin to
synthesize in relation to our other readings/discussions, or pretty much do anything to
demonstrate your engagement with the texts and the work of the course. This is also a
good place to raise substantial questions that you have, or to propose discussion topics
for our class time. I am not looking for appropriate scholarly performance (whatever
that is) in these writings, Im looking for engagement and thoughtful, productive
speculation.
Response pairs
Each week two of you will be the initial responders to your classmates postings on the
discussion list. When we meet on Tuesday, September 8th, well negotiate the focus &
parameters of this response (then Ill change the description in the D2L version of this
syllabus) and have folks sign up for the response days. You will do this twice during the
semester. For the weeks when youre an initial responder, you wont have a weekly
writing due.
Historical brief
Each of you will pick a week to provide specific historical information for that weeks set
of readings through a short (1-2 pages) historical brief. The point of these are to set the
historical/policitcal stage for discussion and understanding of that weeks readings.
Historical briefs should be distributed via the D2L Historical Briefs folder by the
Wednesday prior to the following weeks readings (so, for example, the historical brief
for the readings listed on September 22nd would be due by 9/16). These briefs are
meant to dig deep and augment the general historical knowledge expected of all
members of the course each week.
Final project
The final project will be a collaborative project in which your group assembles a set of
readings for another geographical site. Details and parameters of this assignment will
be collectively negotiated throughout the semester and finalized by September 22nd -Ill post what we decided to D2L after that. Well have at least two formal check-ins
during the semester (via oral or written progress reports, tbd), and well share
presentation-length versions of these projects during our finals slot on December 14th.
The point of this project is to provide a space in which you can practice assembling a
bit of rhetoric history but do so with the support of your colleagues.

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Readings:

Most of these are available in the digital course reader on D2L, or a link is provided to an online source
in D2L. Please check with me before you buy any of them.
1491s website, http://1491s.com/
Abbot, Don Paul. Rhetoric & Writing in the Renaissance. A Short History of Writing Instruction 2E. James
Murphy, ed. Hermagoras P, 2001. 145-172.
Absolon, Kathleen. Kaandossiwin: How We Come To Know. Fernwood P, 2012.
Allen, Chadwick. Introduction: Locating the Society of American Indians, Studies in American Indian Literatures
25.2 (Summer 2013), 3-22.
Anderson, Joyce Rain. The Words to Speak: The American Indian Caucus at CCCC. Reflections 251-257.
Aristotle. Nicomachean Ethics. Book 6. Available via the Perseus Digital Library,
Aristotle. On Rhetoric. Book 1, Chapters 1-3, 6, 9-11; Book 2, Chapters 18-26. Available via the Perseus Digital
Library, http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?doc=Perseus:text:1999.01.0060
Atwill, Janet. Instituting the Art of Rhetoric: Theory, Practice, and Productive Knowledge in Interpretations of
Aristotles Rhetoric. Rethinking the History of Rhetoric: Multidisciplinary Essays on the Rhetorical Tradition.
Ed. Takis Poulakos. Boulder: Westview Press, 1993. 91-117.
Augustine. On Christian Doctrine. Book IV. Available at http://www.ccel.org/a/augustine/doctrine/
Berlin, Jim. Revisionary Histories of Rhetoric: Politics, Power, and Plurality. Writing Histories of Rhetoric. Ed.
Victor Vitanza. Carbondale: SIUP, 1994. 112-127.
Bizzaro, Resa Crane. Shooting Our Last Arrow: Developing a Rhetoric of Identity for Unenrolled American
Indians. College English 67.1 (Sept 2004). 61-74.
Blackbird, Alexander. A Complete both early and late History of the Ottawa & Chippewa Indians of Michigan
Blair, Hugh. Lectures on Rhetoric & Belles Lettres. (Selections) Delmar, NY: Scholars Facsimiles & Reprints, 1993
(1819).
Bonin, Gertrude (Zitkala-Sa). Why I Am a Pagan. CITE
Brooks, Lisa. The Common Pot: The Recovery of Native Space in the Northeast. U of MN P, 2008.
Burke, Kenneth. Part One (Chapters 1-4), Part Three (Chapters 1, 5 & 6). Language as Symbolic Action. Berkeley:
U of CA P, 1966.
Cahokia, http://cahokiamounds.org/
Campbell, George. The Philosophy of Rhetoric. NY: Harper & Bros, 1844.
Chaatsmith, Marti. Singing at a Center of the Indian World, Studies in American Indian Literatures 25.2
(Summer 2013), 181-198.
Christi Belcourt website, http://christibelcourt.com/
Cixous, Helene. The Laugh of the Medusa. Cohen & Cohen, trans. Signs 1.4 (Summer 1976). 875-893.
Crowley, Sharon. Let Me Get This Straight. Writing Histories of Rhetoric. Ed. Victor Vitanza. Carbondale: SIUP,
1994. 1-19.
Cruikshank, Oral History, Narrative Strategies, and Native American Historiography. Clearing a Path:
Theorizing the Past in Native American Studies. Nancy Shoemaker, ed. NY: Routledge, 2002. 3-28.
De Certeau, Michel. The Practice of Everyday Life. Steven Rendell, trans. Berkeley: UC P, 1984.
DeCerteau, Michel. Preface, Introduction, Chapter 1. The Writing of History. Trans. Tom Conley. NY: Columbia
UP, 1988 (1975).
Deloria, Philip. Four Thousand Invitations, Studies in American Indian Literatures 25.2 (Summer 2013), 25-43.
Derrida, Jacques. "Signature, Event, Context." Margins of Philosophy. Alan Bass, ed. and trans. Chicago: U of
Chicago P, 1982. 307-330.
Driskill, Qwo-Li. Indian in the archive. Unpublished mss.

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Earthworks virtual, http://earthworks.uc.edu/


Eastman, Charles. From the Deep Woods to Civilization. (e-resource through MSU library)
Enos, The Art of Rhetoric at Rhodes. Rhetoric Before and Beyond the Greeks. Carol Lipson and Roberta
Binkley, eds. Albany: SUNY P, 2004. 183-196.
Foucault, Michel. The Archaeology of Knowledge. (Selections) NY: Pantheon, 1982.
Foucault, The History of Sexuality: An Introduction. NY: Pantheon Books, 1978.
Freud, Sigmund. Beyond the Pleasure Principle. (Selections) NY: Liverpool P, 1961.
Great Chain of Being, http://www.newworldencyclopedia.org/entry/Great_Chain_of_Being
Haas, Angela. Wampum as Hypertext: An American Indian Intellectual Tradition of Multimedia Theory and
Practice." Studies in American Indian Literatures 19.4 (2007). 77-100.
Harjo, Joy. A Map to the Next World: Poetry and Tales. NY: Norton, 2000.
History Got It Wrong from Indian Country Today
Hopkins, Sarah Winnemucca. Life Among the Piutes: Their Wrongs and Claims. (e-resource through MSU library)
Howe, LeAnne. The Story of America: A Tribalography. Clearing a Path: Theorizing the Past in Native
American Studies. Nancy Shoemaker, ed. NY: Routledge, 2002. 29-48.
Idle No More website, http://www.idlenomore.ca/
Isaacs, Benjamin. The Invention of Racism in Classical Antiquity. (Selections) Princeton: Princeton UP, 2004.
Isocrates. Against the Sophists. Available via the Perseus Digital Library,
http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?doc=Perseus%3Atext%3A1999.01.0144%3Aspeech%3D13
Jarratt, Susan. Rereading the Sophists: Classical Rhetoric Refigured. (Selections) Urbana: SIUP, 1998.
King, Lisa. Rhetorical Sovereignty and Rhetorical Alliance in the Writing Classroom. Pedagogy 12.2 (2012).
209-233.
King, The Truth About Stories King, Thomas. The Truth About Stories. Minneapolis: U of MN P, 2004.
Lacan, Jacques. The Mirror Stage as Formative of the I Function & The Instance of the Letter in the
Unconscious. Ecrits: the first complete edition in English. (Selections) Bruce Fink, trans. NY: WW Norton,
2006.
Locke, John. An Essay Concerning Human Understanding. (Selections) London: Thomas Tegg, 1841.
Marx, Karl. "Manifesto of the Communist Party." Marx/Engels Selected Works Vol. 1. Samuel Moore (with
Engels), trans. 1888. Moscow: Progress Publishers, 1969. 98-137.
Mignolo, Walter. Local Histories/Global Designs: Coloniality, Subaltern Knowledges, and Border Thinking.
Princeton, NJ: Princeton UP, 2000.
Mignolo, Walter. The Darker Side of the Renaissance: Literacy, Territoriality, and Colonization. Ann Arbor: U of
MI P, 2003.
Mignolo, Walter. The Darker Side of Western Modernity: Global Futures, Decolonial Options. Durham, SC: Duke
UP, 2011.
Newark Earthworks, http://www.ancientohiotrail.org/?q=newark_temp
Noodin, Margaret. Bundling the Day and Unraveling the Night, Studies in American Indian Literatures 25.2
(Summer 2013), 237-240.
Octalog I. The Politics of Historiography. Rhetoric Review 7.1 (Autumn 1988). 5-49.
Octalog II. The Continuing Politics of Historiography. Rhetoric Review 16.1 (Autumn 1997). 22-44.
Octalog III. The Politics of Historiography in 2010. Rhetoric Review 30.2, 2011. 109-134.
Oravec, Christine and Michael Salvador. The Duality of Rhetoric: Theory as Discursive Practice. Rethinking the
History of Rhetoric: Multidisciplinary Essays on the Rhetorical Tradition. Ed. Takis Poulakos. Boulder:
Westview Press, 1993. 173-192.
Perelman, Cham and Lucie Olbrechts-Tyteca. The New Rhetoric. (Selections) John Wilkinson and Purcell Weaver,
Trans. Notre Dame: U of Notre Dame P, 1971.
Powell, Stories Take Place: A Performance in One Act. CCC 64.2 (Dec 2012). 383-406.

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Powell, Malea. A basket is a basket because: Telling a Native Rhetorics Story. The Oxford Handbook of
Indigenous American Literature. Cox & Justice, eds. Oxford UP, 2014.
Powell, Malea. Dreaming Charles Eastman: Cultural Memory, Autobiography, and Geography in Indigenous
Rhetorical Histories. Beyond the Archives: Research as a Lived Process. Kirsch and Rohan, eds. SIUP, 2008.
115-127.
Powell, Unraveling the Boundaries of We: Walter Mignolo and New Understandings of Our Discipline. Oral
presentation, Rhetoric Society of America, June 2014.
Quintilian, Institutes of Oratory, Book II [optional] Quintilian. Institutes of Oratory. Book II. Available at
http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?doc=Perseus:text:2007.01.0060
Riley-Mukavetz, Andrea. Towards a cultural rhetorics methodology: Making research matter with multigenerations women from Little Traverse Bay Bank. Rhetoric, Professional Communication and
Globalization 5.1 (February 2014). 108-125.
Schilb, John. The History of Rhetoric and the Rhetoric of History. PRE/TEXT: The First Decade. Pittsburgh: U of
Pittsburg P, 1993. 237-262
Scholastics links, http://www.newworldencyclopedia.org/entry/scholasticism
http://www.philosophybasics.com/movements_scholasticism.html
Serpent Mound, http://arcofappalachia.org/visit/serpent-mound.html
Sheridan, Thomas. A Course of Lectures on Elocution. London: W. Strahan, 1762.
Silverman Kaja. The Subject of Semiotics. NY: Oxford UP, 1983.
Smith, Adam. Lectures on Rhetoric & Belles Lettres. (Selections) Urbana: Southern IL UP, 1973.
Society for American Indians conference program reproduction. Studies in American Indian Literatures 25.2
(Summer 2013), inset.
Story of the Peacemaker & The Great Tree of Peace http://www.firstpeople.us/FP-HtmlLegends/ThePeacemakerAndTheTreeOfPeace-Iroquois.html
Tehanetorens. Wampum Belts of the Iroquois. Summertown: Book Publishing Co., 1999.
The Great Binding Law, Gayanashagowa http://www.iroquoisdemocracy.pdx.edu/html/greatlaw.html
Toulmin, Stephen. The Uses of Argument. (Selections) Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 1958.
Uran, Chad. From Internalized Oppression to Internalized Sovereignty: Ojiibwemowin Performance and Political
Consciousness. SAIL 17.1 (Spring 2005), 42-61.
Villanueva, On The Rhetoric & Precedents of Racism Villanueva, Victor. On the Rhetoric and Precedents of
Racism. CCC 50.4 (June 1999). 645-661.
Walker, Jeffrey. The Genuine Teachers of This Art: Rhetorical Education in Antiquity. Columbia: U of SC P. 2011.
Available digitally through the MSU library online catalog.
Walking With Our Sisters website, http://walkingwithoursisters.ca/
Wallace, Paul. The Iroquois Book of Life: White Roots of Peace. Sante Fe, Clear Light, 1986.
Website of the Haudensaunee Confederacy http://www.haudenosauneeconfederacy.com/index2.html
Whately, Richard. (Selections). Elements of Rhetoric. London: B. Fellowes, 1841.
White, Hayden. Chapters 1-3. The Content of the Form: Narrative Discourse and Historical Representation.
Baltimore: Johns Hopkins UP, 1987.
Williams, Robert A. Linking Arms Together: American Indian Treaty Visions of Law and Peace, 1600-1800. NY:
Routledge, 1999.
Wilson, Shawn. Research Is Ceremony: Indigenous Research Methods. Ferbwood P, 2009.
Wilson, Thomas. The Arte of Rhetorique. Book One.
And other readings for our third site plus any additional ones listed on the daily syllabus

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Last years third site readings (an example) -Alim, Interview with Geneva Smitherman (Journal of English Linguistics)
Averres, Three Short Commentaries. Commentary on Aristotle. Charles Butterworth, ed. and trans.
Albany, NY: SUNY P, 1977. 57-78.
Epps-Robertson, An Interview with Gwendolyn Pough (Composition Forum)
Baddaar, From Athens to Baghdad: Hybridity as Epistemology in the Work of Al-Kindi, Al-Farabi, and in
the rhetorical legacy of the medieval arabic translation movement
Fernheimer, Talmidae Rhetorica: Drashing Up Methods and Models for Jewish Rhetorical Studies
College English 72.6 (July 2010). 577-589.
Diab, Revisiting Arab-Islamic Rhetoric: The Constitution of Medina and Human Rights Discourse in the
7th Century
Gates, Henry Louis, Jr. The Signifying Monkey: a theory of Afro-American Literary Criticism. (Selections)
NY: Oxford UP, 1988.
Gutas, Dmitri. Greek Thought, Arabic Culture: The Graeco-Arabic Translation Movement in Baghdad
and Early Abbsid Society. NY: Routledge, 1998. (Introduction, Chs. 1, 5, 7)
Hallo, The Birth of Rhetoric Rhetoric Before and Beyond the Greeks. Carol Lipson and Roberta Binkley,
eds. Albany: SUNY P, 2004. 25-46.
Harris-Powell, Access(ing), habits, attitudes, and engagements: Re-thinking access as practice
Jackson & Richardson, eds. Selections from Understanding African American Rhetoric Understanding
African American Rhetorics. NY: Routledge, 2003. (Introduction, Jackson, Asante, Karenga,
Alkebulan)
Lipson, Ancient Egyptian Rhetoric
Pough, Its Bigger than Comp/Rhet: Contested and Un disciplined
Ridolfo, Judah Messer Leon and the Sefer Nofet Zuphim: Rethinking Rhetorical Delivery in the Early
Age of Print. Unpublished manuscript.
Rhetoric Africa, http://www.rhetoricafrica.org/
Royster, When the First Voice You Hear Is Not Your Own
Smitherman, African American English: From the hood to the amen corner
Smitherman, Language & African Americans: Movin on up a lil higher
The African Journal of Rhetoric, selections http://reference.sabinet.co.za/sa_epublication/aar_rhetoric

Grading
When I evaluate your work in the course, Ill look at it in two ways your daily performance,
participation and engagement (weekly writings, engagement in discussion, collegial
collaboration, conferences with me, etc.) and your project work (both the along-the-way project
& the final project).
Though I wont grade you work during the semester, I will respond to it. If you have any
questions or concerns about what those responses mean, please talk to me. If, at any time
during the course, you feel anxious or uncertain about how your work will translate into a grade
at the end of the course, please talk to me.

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Daily Syllabus
Note all readings & assignments must be completed by the date they are listed on the syllabus. Please see the
Course Policy Statement for details about assignments.


September 8 prelude
TO READ

King, The Truth About Stories


Powell, Stories Take Place
Powell, Unraveling the Boundaries of We
Villanueva, On The Rhetoric & Precedents of Racism

TO DO

Weekly Writing (see Maleas 8/27 e-mail for details)

September 15 historiography
TO READ

Berlin, Revisionary Histories of Rhetoric


Cruikshank, Oral History, Narrative Strategies,
De Certeau, Preface & Introduction from The Writing of History
Foucault, Introduction from The Archaeology of Knowledge
Oravec & Salvador, The Duality of Rhetoric
White, Chapter 1 from The Content of the Form

TO DO

Weekly Writing

September 22 the west (Europes imagined version of itself)


TO READ

Aristotle, On Rhetoric (Book 1, Chs. 1-3, 6, 9-11) & Nicomachean Ethics (Book 6)
Atwill, Instituting the Art of Rhetoric
Isocrates, Against the Sophists
Walker, Prologue & Chapter Two (read first ten pages then skim the rest) from
The Genuine Teachers of This Art
Enos, The Art of Rhetoric at Rhodes
Augustine, On Christian Doctrine (Book IV
Scholastics links, http://www.newworldencyclopedia.org/entry/scholasticism
http://www.philosophybasics.com/movements_scholasticism.html
Great Chain of Being,
http://www.newworldencyclopedia.org/entry/Great_Chain_of_Being
Isaacs, Introduction from The Invention of Racism in Classical Antiquity

Optional

Quintilian, Institutes of Oratory, Book II

TO DO

Weekly Writing

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September 29 the west


TO READ

Abbot, Rhetoric & Writing in the Renaissance


Blair, selections from Lectures on Rhetoric & Belles Lettres OR
Campbell, The Philosophy of Rhetoric, Book One OR
Smith, Lectures on Rhetoric & Belles Lettres, #2-20
Locke, selections from An Essay Concerning Human Understanding
Whately, selections from Elements of Rhetoric OR
Wilson, The Arte of Rhetoric, Book One

Optional

Sheridan, selections from A Course of Lectures on Elocution

TO DO

Weekly Writing

October 6 the west (Euro & EuroAmerican)


TO READ

Mix & match as directed below -Group 1: (read at least one)


Burke, Language as Symbolic Action (Part One, Chs. 1-4, Part Three,
Chs. 1, 5, 6)
Perelman & Olbrechts-Tyteca, selections from The New Rhetoric
Toulmin, selections from Uses of Argument
Group 2: (read at least two)
Crowley, Let Me Get This Straight
Jarratt, selections from Re-reading the Sophists
Schilb, The History of Rhetoric & the Rhetoric of History
Group 3: (read at least 3)
Freud, selections from Beyond the Pleasure Principle
Lacan, selections from Ecrits
Silverman, The Subject of Semiotics, Chapter 1
Marx, Manifesto of the Communist Party
Foucault, The History of Sexuality: An Introduction (Part One and Part
Two, Ch. 1)
Derrida, Signature, Event, Context
Cixous, The Laugh of the Medusa

TO DO

Weekly Writing

October 13 the discipline


TO READ

Octalog I
Octalog II
Octalog III

TO DO

Weekly Writing

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October 20 colonialism
TO READ

Pick one Mignolo & read it all, or read selections from each:
The Darker Side of the Renaissance,
Local Histories/Global Designs,
The Darker Side of Western Modernity

TO DO

Weekly Writing

October 27 a transition
TO READ

De Certeau, selections from The Practice of Everyday Life


Wilson, from Research Is Ceremony OR
Absolon, from Kaandossiwin: How We Come To Know

TO DO

Weekly Writing

November 3 indigenous North America


TO READ

Williams, Linking Arms Together (Introduction & Conclusion)


Harjo, selections A Map to the Next World
Howe, The Story of America: a Tribalography
And at least one of the sections below -Wampum:
Tehanetorens, Wampum Belts of the Iroquois
The Great Binding Law, Gayanashagowa
http://www.iroquoisdemocracy.pdx.edu/html/greatlaw.html
Story of the Peacemaker & The Great Tree of Peace
http://www.firstpeople.us/FP-HtmlLegends/ThePeacemakerAndTheTreeOfPeace-Iroquois.html
Website of the Haudensaunee Confederacy
http://www.haudenosauneeconfederacy.com/index2.html
Wallace, from The White Roots of Peace
Haas, Wampum as Hypertext
Land: History Got It Wrong from Indian Country Today
Serpent Mound, http://arcofappalachia.org/visit/serpent-mound.html
Newark Earthworks, http://www.ancientohiotrail.org/?q=newark_temp
Earthworks virtual, http://earthworks.uc.edu/
Cahokia, http://cahokiamounds.org/
Chaatsmith, Singing at a Center of the Indian World
Noodin, Bundling the Day and Unraveling the Night

TO DO

Weekly Writing

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November 10 indigenous North America 19 th century intellectuals


TO READ

SAI conference 1911 documents:


Allen, Locating the Society of American Indians
Deloria, Four Thousand Invitations
Plus one other article from SAIL 25.2 (Summer 2013) via ProjectMuse

Eastman, from From the Deep Woods to Civilization OR


Winnemucca, from Life Among the Piutes OR
Blackbird, from History of the Ottawa & Chippewa Indians of Michigan OR
Bonin, Why I Am a Pagan
TO DO

Weekly Writing

November 17 indigenous North America 20 th century practices


TO READ

Read at least five from below -Uran, Chad. From Internalized Oprression to Internalized Sovereignty
Powell, Dreaming Charles Eastman
Powell, A basket is a basket because
Driskill, Indian in the Archive
Brooks, Introduction & Chapter 1 from The Common Pot
Riley-Mukavetz, Towards a cultural rhetorics methodology
King, Rhetorical Sovereignty and Rhetorical Alliance in the Writing Classroom
Bizzaro, Shooting Our Last Arrow
Anderson, The Words to Speak
Explore at least two from below -Christi Belcourt website, http://christibelcourt.com/
Walking With Our Sisters website, http://walkingwithoursisters.ca/
Idle No More website, http://www.idlenomore.ca/
1491s website, http://1491s.com/

TO DO

Weekly Writing

November 24 site three


TO READ

TBD

TO DO

Weekly Writing

December 1 site three


TO READ

TBD

TO DO

Weekly Writing

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December 8 site three


TO READ

TBD

TO DO

Weekly Writing

December 14 (3-5 p.m.) our finals slot


TO DO

Final Project Presentations


Evaluations!

FEAST! Time/place to be determined.

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