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Give-and-Take: Navajo Grandmothers and the Role of Craftswomen, in American Indian Grandmothers: Traditions and Transitions, edited by Marjorie Schweitzer
Author:
Ann Lane Hedlund
Category:
Chapter in book
Publisher:
University of New Mexico Press
Published:
1999
Other Books From - Chapter in book
Women Weavers OnLine: Rural Moroccan Women on the Internet. In Gender and the Digital Economy: Perspectives from the Developing World. Cecelia Ng and Swasti Mitter, Eds.
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Susan Schaefer Davis
Why We Left
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Norma Schafer and Janet Blaser
Weaving Cooperatives and the Resistance Movement in Highland Chiapas, Mexico: Pass Well Over the Earth in Artisans and Advocacy in the Global Market: Walking the Heart Path. Jeanne Simonelli, Katherine O’Donnell, and June Nash, editors
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Christine Eber
Up for Grabs: Assessing the Consequences of Appropriations of Navajo Weavers’ Patterns. In: No Deal! Indigenous Arts and the Politics of Possessions. Tressa Berman, ed.
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Kathy M′Closkey
Unravelling the Narratives of Nostalgia: Navajo Weavers and Globalization. In Indigenous Women and Work: From Labor to Activism. Carol Williams, ed.
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Three Southwestern Textile Traditions, in Converging Streams: Cross-Cultural Exchange in the Native American and Hispanic Art of the Greater Southwest, edited by Will Wroth and Robin Gavin
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Ann Lane Hedlund
That We May Serve Beneath Your Hands and Feet: Women Weavers in Highland Chiapas in Crafts in The World Market: The Impact of Global Exchange on Middle American Artisans, edited by June Nash
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Christine Eber and Brenda Rosenbaum
That they be in the middle, Lord: Women, Weaving, and Cultural Survival in San Pedro Chenalhó
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Recycled Reds: Raveled Insect-Dyed Yarns in Blankets of the American Southwest, in A Red Like No Other: How Cochineal Colored the World, edited by Carmella Padilla and Barbara Anderson
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Ann Lane Hedlund
Perspectives on Anthropological Collections from the American Southwest (ed.)
Chapter in book
Ann Lane Hedlund
Other Books By - Ann Lane Hedlund
Wool Yarns in Late Classic Navajo Blankets. American Indian Art 28(4)
Article
Ann Lane Hedlund
Three Southwestern Textile Traditions, in Converging Streams: Cross-Cultural Exchange in the Native American and Hispanic Art of the Greater Southwest, edited by Will Wroth and Robin Gavin
Chapter in book
Ann Lane Hedlund
The Barbers of Burnham: A New Breed of Navajo Weaver. Persimmon Hill 25(4)
Article
Ann Lane Hedlund
Speaking For or About Others? Evolving Ethnological Perspectives. Museum Anthropology 18(3)
Article
Ann Lane Hedlund
Reflections of the Weaver’s World: The Gloria F. Ross Collection of Contemporary Navajo Weaving
Book
Ann Lane Hedlund
Searching for Tapestry’s Identity: Gloria F. Ross as Tapestry Editor. Shuttle, Spindle & Dyepot 42(1)
Article
Ann Lane Hedlund
Recycled Reds: Raveled Insect-Dyed Yarns in Blankets of the American Southwest, in A Red Like No Other: How Cochineal Colored the World, edited by Carmella Padilla and Barbara Anderson
Chapter in book
Ann Lane Hedlund
Perspectives on Anthropological Collections from the American Southwest (ed.)
Chapter in book
Ann Lane Hedlund
Navajo Weaving from the Santa Fe Collection, 1971-1996
Book
Ann Lane Hedlund
Navajo Weaving in the Late Twentieth Century: Kin, Community, and Collectors
Book
Ann Lane Hedlund
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