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"Howe, LeAnne"
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Embodied Tribalography: Mound Building, Ball Games, and Native Endurance in the Southeast
2014
[...]I wrote the novel Miko Kings: An Indian Baseball Story set in Indian Territory in 1907 and present-day Ada, Oklahoma. [...]they could have sung songs that embodied the spirituality of a mound. [...]in this essay I build on my earlier essay \"The Story of America: A Tribalography\" by discussing Choctaws and earthworks in the Southeast, Choctaw language, both spoken and expressed through physical actions, to show the often ignored reciprocal embodiment between people and land.
Journal Article
UN-REDACTED: A CENSUS OF NATIVE LAND
2020
In any Native story, the land is our mother, our protector, our sustenance, and she is counted first among the people. We've come here today to tell how the Native land in the Southeast was stolen from her children, the indigenous people. To ease the pain of the telling, we've asked a well-meaning great-uncle to tell the story. There's much more to the story about this land than \"facts are facts\" For example, some historians suggest that the Timucua may have been the first Natives to see the landing of Juan Ponce de Leon near St Augustine in 1513. After all, the Timucua and Guale Indians lived along the coast. Then one day more Spaniards showed up, destroyed the neighborhood, and established the first Spanish mission system. We would then have to talk about the Yamassee Indian Wars that prevented Azilia's existence and pushed the Carolina colony to the brink of annihilation.
Magazine Article