NATIVE AMERICAN VOICES
ON IDENTITY, ART, & CULTURE OBJECTS
OF EVERLASTING ESTEEM Edited
by Lucy Fowler Williams, William Wierzbowski, and Robert W.
Preucel
The dynamic discourse
stimulated by 78 magnificent objects created by Native Americans
over the years, now housed in the University of Pennsylvania
Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, and the responses
of contemporary Native Americans to those objects forms the
core of this book.
As seen in these vibrant pages, the Museum is not a place
of dead objects from the past. It is, rather, a place of people
and ideas about human societies and cultures, a place of living,
active objects, a place where the present can connect to the
past.
The volume editors frame important issues and concepts––the
nature of Native American identity in the past and present,
indigenous sovereignty, the active destruction of Native American
cultures and languages over the past half-millennium, along
with their perseverance and strength to survive, and, finally,
the power of ancestors.
As Richard M. Leventhal notes in his Foreword, the Native
American scholars and artists who contribute to this book
are assisting the Museum in its attempt to become a more integral
part of today’s world. It is the preservation of ideas
embodied within objects from the past and present that allows
for the representation and strength of Native American identity.
Lucy Fowler Williams is the Jeremy A. Sabloff Keeper of American
Collections at the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology
and Anthropology.
William Wierzbowski is Associate Keeper of American Collections
at the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and
Anthropology.
Robert W. Preucel is Professor of Anthropology and the Gregory
Annenberg Weingarten Associate Curator of North American Archaeology
at the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and
Anthropology.
Published with the generous support of Gregory Annenberg
Weingarten and the Annenberg Foundation.
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