Native American Studies
Dave Beck, Chair
The Native American Studies Department at the University of Montana builds its curriculum on the foundation of three interrelated principles: sovereignty, indigeneity and community well-being. In so doing we pay close attention to the continuing role of traditional value systems, the impacts of colonization and the efforts toward decolonization within tribal communities. We define sovereignty broadly as one of the rights of all indigenous peoples, including both the political-legal foundations as provided in U.S. law and policy and self-determination more generally. Indigeneity underlies the unique holistic relationship that Native American communities have to the land and to the environment. In addition, our degree program not only intends to advance the well-being of our individual students, both native and non-native, but also to enhance the well-being of Indigenous communities across Montana, the United States and globally, by providing necessary and relevant education about those communities as well as the skills and knowledge for those working within those communities to do so effectively. Our curriculum and the foundations of faculty research are broadly cross-disciplinary with these principles at their base.
Native American Studies is an academic discipline committed to examining the contemporary and past experiences and life ways of the first Americans from their perspective. The curriculum is designed to provide a study of American Indians from a holistic and humanistic viewpoint by focusing upon their cultures, history, and contemporary life. Courses are designed for both Native American and non Native American students so they can better understand human similarities and differences, thereby leading to more effective work with and within tribal communities, through stronger knowledge bases of tribal America, and the development of better communications and cross-cultural relationships.
The Native American Studies major supports the objectives of a liberal arts education. It is interdisciplinary and provides a perspective that critically analyzes and evaluates the strengths and limitations of each contributing discipline.
Undergraduate Degrees Available
Subject | Type | Option | Track |
---|---|---|---|
Language Rejuvenation & Maint | Certificate of Art | ||
Native American Studies | Bachelor of Arts | ||
Native American Studies | Minor |
Faculty
Professors
- David Beck, Professor of Native American Studies
- Richmond Clow, Professor
- Wade Davies, Professor
- S. Neyooxet Greymorning, Professor
- Kathryn Shanley, Professor & Special Assistant to the Provost for N
Assistant Professors
- Theodore Van Alst, Assistant Professor
Adjunct Faculty
- Heather Cahoon, Adjunct Lecturer
Lecturers
- George Price, Lecturer
Course Descriptions
Film
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FILM 860 - Native Americans & Cinema
Credits: 3. Level: Undergraduate. Offered once each year. Same as NASX 360. Surveys the image of Native Americans in American film with an emphasis on revisionist, or breakthrough films. Ultimate focus will be on films featuring Native American writers, directors and actors.
Native American Studies
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NAS 260 - African Amer & Native Amer
Credits: 3. Level: Undergraduate. Offered Fall, even years. Same as AAS 260. A study of the broad scope of relations between African Americans and Native Americans in colonial and United States history. Topics explored through history, sociology, and cultural anthropology. -
NAS 368H - Latin American Art
Credits: 3. Level: Undergraduate. Prereq., consent of instr. Same as ART 368H. Offered alternate years. Exploration of themes in the development of Latin American art from the colonial period to the present, including Renaissance ideals in the "New World", syncretism of European, African, and indigenous roots, the Black Legend, and the advent of such movements as Academism, Modernism, Social Realism, Magic Realism, and Post-Modernism.Course Attributes:
- Historical & Cultural Course
- Non-Western Course
- Writing Course-Upper-Division
Native American Studies
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NASX 105H - Intro Native Amer Studies
Credits: 3. Level: Undergraduate. Offered Autumn and Spring. Survey course to acquaint the student with Native American Studies by a general overview of Indian history, culture, philosophy, religious beliefs and contemporary issues.Course Attributes:
- Historical & Cultural Course
- Indigenous and Global
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NASX 141 - Elementary Blackfoot I
Credits: 4. Level: Undergraduate. Offered intermittently autumn. An introduction to the Blackfoot language and culture. Students will learn how to write and read Blackfoot as well as how to conduct simple conversations. -
NASX 142 - Elementary Blackfoot II
Credits: 4. Level: Undergraduate. Offered intermittently spring. Continuation of 141. -
NASX 180 - Event Planning
Credits: 3. Level: Undergraduate. Offered spring semester. This course is intended for students to learn the skills necessary to put on a large event. The course is intended as a hands-on experiential learning course. The culmination of the course will be putting on the annual Kyi-Yo contest pow-wow, the first large regional pow-wow of the year on the circuit. -
NASX 191 - Special Topics
Credits: 1 TO 9. Level: Undergraduate. (R-6) Offered intermittently. Experimental offerings of visiting professors, experimental offerings of new courses, or one-time offerings of current topics. -
NASX 192 - Independent Study
Credits: 1 TO 6. Level: Undergraduate. (R-6) Prereq., consent of instr. Selected topics on American Indians under the direct supervision of a faculty member. -
NASX 198 - Internship
Credits: 1 TO 6. Level: Undergraduate. (R-9)Offered by special arrangement. Prereq., consent of department. Extended classroom experience which provides practical application of classroom learning during placements off campus. Prior approval must be obtained from the faculty supervisor and the Internship Services office. A maximum of 6 credits of Internship (198, 298, 398, 498) may count toward graduation.Course Attributes:
- Internships/Practicums
- Internship graduation limit 6
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NASX 201X - Indian Cultr Exprssd Thru Lang
Credits: 3. Level: Undergraduate. Offered Autumn. This course has been designed to introduce students to a non-Western perspective of the relationship that exists between Indian cultures and their languages. Students will be exposed to various languages of American Indian peoples, and how through Native languages insight can be gained into history, traditions, and cultural life-ways of Indian peoples.Course Attributes:
- Indigenous and Global
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NASX 210X - Native Amer Sports & Games
Credits: 3. Level: Undergraduate. Offered Autumn or Spring. Explores Native American sports and games, both traditional and modern. Through classroom learning and actual play, students gain an understanding of how play and competition have been vital to Native communities.Course Attributes:
- Indigenous and Global
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NASX 231X - Indig World View Perspectives
Credits: 3. Level: Undergraduate. Offered Spring. Same as ANTY 231X. Examination of Indigenous belief systems, with regard to world views, religious ceremonies, cultural ways and the impact that Anglo-European culture has had upon these systems. Focus on Indigenous peoples of Australia, New Zealand, Canada and the United StatesCourse Attributes:
- Indigenous and Global
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NASX 235X - Oral/Written Trads Native Amer
Credits: 3. Level: Undergraduate. Offered Autumn and Spring. Analysis of the oral traditions of Native Americans including an introduction to the literary works of early leading American Indian writers.Course Attributes:
- Literary & Artistic Stds Crse
- Writing Course-Approved
- Indigenous and Global
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NASX 239X - Nat North Amer History & Art
Credits: 3. Level: Undergraduate. Focus on Native North American history through art and material culture and its relationship to American Indian tribally specific aesthetics, cosmologies, worldviews and life-ways, historic uses and the contemporary Indian artistic experience.Course Attributes:
- Literary & Artistic Stds Crse
- Indigenous and Global
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NASX 260X - Indig Community Developmnt
Credits: 3. Level: Undergraduate. Offered intermittently. This course introduces the student to concepts in indigenous/rural sustainable community development in the countries of North America in broad historical and cultural frameworks.Course Attributes:
- Indigenous and Global
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NASX 280 - NA Studies Rsrch Theors/Mthds
Credits: 3. Level: Undergraduate. Offered Autumn. Prereq., NAS major or minor. Introduction to the Research materials pertaining to the study of American Indian peoples and cultures. Emphasis on current research trends and writing.Course Attributes:
- Writing Course-Lower-Division
- Writing Course-Approved
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NASX 291 - Special Topics
Credits: 1 TO 6. Level: Undergraduate. (R-9) Offered intermittently. Experimental offerings of visiting professors, experimental offerings of new courses, or one-time offerings of current topics. -
NASX 292 - Independent Study
Credits: 1 TO 6. Level: Undergraduate. (R 6) Experimental offerings of visiting professors, experimental offerings of new courses or one time offerings of current topics. -
NASX 303E - Ecol Persp in Nat Amer Trad
Credits: 3. Level: Undergraduate. Offered Autumn and Spring. An examination of Native American environmental ethics and tribal and historical and contemporary use of physical environmental resources.Course Attributes:
- Ethical & Human Values Course
- Indigenous and Global
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NASX 304E - Native American Beliefs/Philos
Credits: 3. Level: Undergraduate. Offered Autumn and Spring. A study of selected ethical systems; origins, world views; religious beliefs and the way they have been affected by western civilization.Course Attributes:
- Ethical & Human Values Course
- Non-Western Course
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NASX 306X - Contemp Global Iss Indg People
Credits: 3. Level: Undergraduate. Offered Autumn. An examination of the major issues that affect the contemporary experiences of Indigenous Peoples of the Americas, and other global communities.Course Attributes:
- Indigenous and Global
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NASX 340 - Native American Lit
Credits: 3. Level: Undergraduate. Offered Autumn. Prereq., three credits of lower-division LIT courses and NASX 105H or 235X. Same as LIT 305. Selected readings from Native American Literature and criticism with emphasis on the literatures after the Native American literary Renaissance. A minimum of three genres covered and three culture areas.Course Attributes:
- Writing Course-Upper-Division
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NASX 351 - Traditional Eco Knowledge
Credits: 3. Level: Undergraduate. ?Offered summer. This course is one unit of the four unit (12 credit) summer semester program: “Wild Rockies Summer Semester.” Description: This course will explore the traditional ecological perspectives of the Salish, Kootenai, Blackfeet and Tlingit people, as well as how these perspectives relate to Western concepts of ecology. Through field-based activities, lectures by tribal elders, and personal exploration, students will come to a heightened understanding of the still vital cultural perspectives and practices of modern American Indians, particularly in the Rockies of Montana and Canada. -
NASX 352 - Montana’s Indians/Land
Credits: 3. Level: Undergraduate. Offered autumn. This course is one unit of the four unit (12 credit) fall semester program: “Montana Afoot & Afloat: Human/Land Relations.” Description: This course gives students a greater understanding of Indian people’s traditional relationships with the land in Montana, and an understanding of how and why those relationships may have changed. Extensive time will be spent on the Fort Belknap, Northern Cheyenne and Crow Reservations where the class will meet with tribal elders and learning will have an emphasis on environmental and tribal/land relationships. -
NASX 354X - Indians of MT since Rsrvtn Era
Credits: 3. Level: Undergraduate. Offered Autumn. Same as HSTA 354. Examination of the history of Montana Indians since the establishment of the reservations, contemporary conditions, and issues among both reservation and non-reservation Indian communities in the state. Special attention given to social and economic conditions, treaty rights, tribal sovereignty, and legal issues.Course Attributes:
- Indigenous and Global
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NASX 360 - Native Amer and Cinema
Credits: 3. Level: Undergraduate. Offered Autumn or Spring. Same as ENFM 344. Surveys the image of Native Americans in American film with an emphasis on "revisionist," or "breakthrough" films. Ultimate focus will be on films featuring Native American writers, directors and actors. -
NASX 388 - Native Amer Health & Healing
Credits: 3. Level: Undergraduate. Offered alternate years. Examination of traditional and contemporary uses of medicine in Native American societies. Issues covered will include current health conditions of American Indians, and the relationship from a cultural perspective on health, healing and medicine. -
NASX 391 - Special Topics
Credits: 1 TO 6. Level: Undergraduate. (R-9) Offered intermittently. Experimental offerings of visiting professors, experimental offerings of new courses, or one-time offerings of current topics. -
NASX 394 - Workshop/Seminar
Credits: 1 TO 6. Level: Undergraduate. (R-6) Offered intermittently. Variable topics addressing Indian law, policy and culture by visiting scholars. -
NASX 398 - Internship
Credits: 1 TO 6. Level: Undergraduate. (R-6) Offered by special arrangement. Prereq., consent of department. Extended classroom experience which provides practical application of classroom learning during placements off campus. Prior approval must be obtained from the faculty supervisor and the Internship Services office. A maximum of 6 credits of Internship (198, 298, 398, 498) may count toward graduation.Course Attributes:
- Internships/Practicums
- Internship graduation limit 6
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NASX 403 - Contmp Tribal Resource Issues
Credits: 3. Level: Undergraduate, Graduate. Offered intermittently. Acquaints students with contemporary tribal resource management and environmental policies. -
NASX 405H - Gndr Iss in Native Amer Stdies
Credits: 3. Level: Undergraduate. Offered intermittently. Same as WS 342H. Focus on American Indian gender relations and their cultural continuity and historical evolution. National in scope with concentration on certain tribes. Group analysis of contemporary gender issues relevant to Native American peoples.Course Attributes:
- Historical & Cultural Course
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NASX 430 - American Indian Education
Credits: 3. Level: Undergraduate, Graduate. Offered intermittently. An overview of American Indian education including a look at the unique needs of Indian children. -
NASX 464X - Hist Amer Indian Affrs to 1776
Credits: 3. Level: Undergraduate, Graduate. Offered Autumn. Same as HSTA 465X. A study of American Indian relations with Europeans and the United States from first contact to 1776.Course Attributes:
- Indigenous and Global
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NASX 465X - Hist Amer Indian Affrs 19 Cent
Credits: 3. Level: Undergraduate, Graduate. Offered Spring. Same as HSTA 452X. A study of tribal encounters and adjustments to the American nations in the nineteenth century.Course Attributes:
- Indigenous and Global
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NASX 466X - Hist of Indian Affrs from 1890
Credits: 3. Level: Undergraduate, Graduate. Offered Autumn. Same as HSTA 453X. A study of tribal encounters and adjustments to the American nation from 1890.Course Attributes:
- Indigenous and Global
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NASX 475X - Tribal Sovereignty
Credits: 3. Level: Undergraduate, Graduate. Offered Spring. Same as PSCI 475. An examination of the evolution of tribal governments from a historical and political perspective. Particular attention is devoted to the issues of tribal sovereignty and tribal-state conflicts.Course Attributes:
- Indigenous and Global
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NASX 481 - Native American Film
Credits: 3. Level: Undergraduate, Graduate. Offered once a year. Prereq., NASX 360 or consent of instr. -
NASX 488 - Stds in Native Amer Autobio
Credits: 3. Level: Undergraduate, Graduate. Offered intermittently. Same as LIT 429. Prereq., LIT 300 or LIT 305/NASX 340, or consent of instr. Study of texts that present a first-person story of Native American individual's life within historical and cultural contexts, with discussion of theories of autobiography. -
NASX 491 - Special Topics
Credits: 1 TO 6. Level: Undergraduate, Graduate. (R-6) Prereq., upper-division standing and consent of instr. Selected topics on American Indians under the direct supervision of a faculty member. -
NASX 492 - Independent Study
Credits: 1 TO 6. Level: Undergraduate, Graduate. (R-9) Offered by special arrangement. Experimental offerings of visiting professors, experimental offerings of new courses or one-time offerings of current topics. -
NASX 494 - Seminar/Workshop
Credits: 3. Level: Undergraduate, Graduate. (R-6) Offered Spring. Prereq., NAS major or minor, 18 credits in NAS, and junior standing or higher. Senior reading capstone course for the review of past and current literature on and by American Indians.Course Attributes:
- Writing Course-Upper-Division
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NASX 499 - Senior Capstone/Thesis
Credits: 3 TO 9. Level: Undergraduate, Graduate. (R-9) Offered by special arrangement. Prereq., NAS major or minor, 18 credits in NAS, junior standing, and consent of instr. Independent research project in Native American Studies, supervised by a faculty member, and leading to completion of baccalaureate degree. -
NASX 594 - Sem Native American Stds
Credits: 1 TO 3. Level: Undergraduate, Graduate. (R-6) Offered intermittently. Prereq., consent of instr. A review and discussion of current research. Topics vary. -
NASX 595 - Special Topics
Credits: 1 TO 9. Level: Undergraduate, Graduate. (R-9) Experimental offerings of visiting professors, experimental offerings of new courses, or one-time offerings of current topics.Course Attributes:
- Internships/Practicums
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NASX 596 - Independent Study
Credits: 1 TO 6. Level: Undergraduate, Graduate. (R-6) Offered intermittently. Prereq., graduate standing and consent of instr. Study of selected topics or problems on American Indians under the direct supervision of a faculty member.Course Attributes:
- Service Learning/Volunteer
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NASX 598 - Internship
Credits: 1 TO 6. Level: Undergraduate, Graduate. (R-6) Offered intermittently. Prereq., consent of department. Extended classroom experience which provides practical application of classroom learning during placements off campus. Prior approval must be obtained from the faculty supervisor and the Internship Services office.Course Attributes:
- Internships/Practicums