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Re: By, For, About
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From: Christine Taylor-Butler <kansascitymom_at_earthlink.net>
Date: Sat, 22 Feb 2014 15:12:56 -0600
Debbie,
Well said! Amen!….Christine
On Feb 22, 2014, at 2:38 PM, Debbie Reese wrote:
> Actually, Mark, I've had nonfiction in mind, too, because the nonfiction about American Indians on most library shelves is especially troubling. So much of what is out there puts us firmly in the past.
>
> Some of it is sloppy, too. A good case in point is a book that got lot of twitter-land play last month: Children of the Tipi, by Michael O. Fitzgerald. In it, the sloppyness was in mixing of different tribal nations on a single page, with no information provided to point to the different nations BEING different. Details here:
> http://americanindiansinchildrensliterature.blogspot.com/2014/01/children-of-tipi-life-in-buffalo-days.html
>
> And I have concerns about Floca's book, too. So I'd say that the issue of bias is not different from what I see in fiction. And, you suggest that research, evidence, and knowledge is free of bias, and it isn't. Sources have bias.
>
> Debbie
>
>
> __________________________________________________________
> Debbie Reese, PhD
> Tribally enrolled: Nambe Pueblo
Date: Sat, 22 Feb 2014 15:12:56 -0600
Debbie,
Well said! Amen!….Christine
On Feb 22, 2014, at 2:38 PM, Debbie Reese wrote:
> Actually, Mark, I've had nonfiction in mind, too, because the nonfiction about American Indians on most library shelves is especially troubling. So much of what is out there puts us firmly in the past.
>
> Some of it is sloppy, too. A good case in point is a book that got lot of twitter-land play last month: Children of the Tipi, by Michael O. Fitzgerald. In it, the sloppyness was in mixing of different tribal nations on a single page, with no information provided to point to the different nations BEING different. Details here:
> http://americanindiansinchildrensliterature.blogspot.com/2014/01/children-of-tipi-life-in-buffalo-days.html
>
> And I have concerns about Floca's book, too. So I'd say that the issue of bias is not different from what I see in fiction. And, you suggest that research, evidence, and knowledge is free of bias, and it isn't. Sources have bias.
>
> Debbie
>
>
> __________________________________________________________
> Debbie Reese, PhD
> Tribally enrolled: Nambe Pueblo
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