Edward P. Dozier: A history of Native-American discourse in anthropology.

The contribution of Native Americans to the production of anthropological knowledge has received minimal critical analysis in the history of the discipline. This paper examines the academic career of Edward P. Dozier, the first Native American academic anthropologist, and founder/first chairman of t...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Norcini, Marilyn Jane.
Other Authors: Basso, Ellen B.
Language:en
Published: The University of Arizona. 1995
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10150/187248
Description
Summary:The contribution of Native Americans to the production of anthropological knowledge has received minimal critical analysis in the history of the discipline. This paper examines the academic career of Edward P. Dozier, the first Native American academic anthropologist, and founder/first chairman of the American Indian Studies Program at the University of Arizona. The changing insider and outsider positions of an indigenous anthropologist are explored historically through the diverse discursive practices in Pueblo and Euroamerican cultures. Edward P. Dozier (1916-71) was born in Santa Clara Pueblo, New Mexico. His primary contributions were in Southwestern Pueblo ethnology and linguistics, specifically acculturation and ethnohistorical studies. For his dissertation research in 1949-50, he studied the changing social and ceremonial traditions of the Arizona Tewa (Hopi-Tewa) at Tewa Village (Hano) on First Mesa, Hopi Reservation. In 1958-59, Dozier conducted fieldwork with the Kalinga of northern Luzon in the Philippines for comparative purposes. This study is organized to reveal correlations between Dozier's indigenous anthropological discourse and Pueblo discursive practices. Chapter 1 discusses Dozier's formative identity as an Anglo and a Tewa within the context of his parent's relationships to language and culture. Chapter 2 describes Boasian anthropology with its emphasis on collecting native language texts and its influence on Dozier's graduate education and early publications. Chapter 3 compares Dozier's discourse with Pueblo systems of knowledge and Pueblo discursive patterns. Chapter 4 describes Dozier's dissertation fieldwork with the Arizona Tewas as a graduate student at the University of California at Los Angeles. Chapter 5 contrasts Dozier's non-indigenous research with the Kalinga of Northern Luzon, Philippines. Chapter 6 examines the economics of Native American research and Dozier's leadership role in establishing the American Indian Studies program at the University of Arizona. The concluding chapter positions Dozier as an indigenous anthropologist in the history of the discipline. Overall, the historical predicament of a Native American academic anthropologist contests the oversimplified dichotomy of Self and Other in the academic construct of "culture."