Project 562 Changing the way we see Native America

Matika Wilbur

Book - 2023

"A photographic celebration of contemporary Native American life and an examination of important issues the community faces today by the creator of Project 562, Matika Wilbur"--

Saved in:

2nd Floor Show me where

779.9973/Wilbur
1 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor 779.9973/Wilbur Checked In
Subjects
Genres
portraits
illustrated books
Interviews
Illustrated works
interviews
History
Biographies
Pictorial works
Portraits
Published
California ; New York : Ten Speed Press [2023]
Language
English
Main Author
Matika Wilbur (author)
Edition
First edition
Item Description
Includes index.
Physical Description
10 unnumbered pages, 405 pages : illustrations (chiefly color), color map, portraits ; 26 cm
ISBN
9781984859525
  • Introduction
  • I raise my hands
  • Dr. Henrietta Mann (Cheyenne)
  • Hannah Tomeo (Colville, Yakama, Nez Perce, Sioux, Samoan)
  • Greg Biskakone Johnson (Lac du Flambeau Band of Lake Superior Chippewa Indians)
  • Lee Sprague (Gun Lake Tribe)
  • Angela Gonzalez (Koyukon Athabascan)
  • Holly Mititquq Nordlum (Iñupiaq)
  • Anthony Thosh Collins (Onk Akimel O'Odham)
  • Melba Rita Accawinna Appawora (Northern Ute)
  • J. Miko Thomas (Chickasaw Nation)
  • Anna Cook (Swinomish, Skowlitz, Hualapai, Havasupai, Chemehuevi, Cherokee)
  • Frank Waln (Sicangu Lakota)
  • Jessika Greendeer (Ho-Chunk Nation)
  • Sho Sho Esquiro (Kaska Dena, Cree)
  • Starrburst Flower Montoya (Diegueño (Barona Band of Mission Indians), Taos Pueblo)
  • Richard Aspenwind (Taos Pueblo)
  • The 1491s (Sisseton-Wahpeton Dakota; Wazhazhe; Seminole, Muscogee (Creek) Nation; Ponca, Ojibwe; Mdewakanton Dakota, Diné)
  • Paul Ortega (Mescalero Apache)
  • Wendsler Nosie Sr. (San Carlos Apache)
  • Joely Queen (Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians)
  • Dr. Jessica Metcalfe (Turtle Mountain Chippewa)
  • Gail Small (Northern Cheyenne)
  • Canoe Journey
  • Kayla Marie and Penelope Joseph (Squamish, Tulalip, Sioux, Colville, Yakama)
  • Darkfeather Ancheta, Eckos Chartraw-Ancheta, and Bibiana Ancheta (Tulalip)
  • Raven and Free Eagle Borsey (Lhaq'temish, We Wai Kai)
  • Karleigh Gomez (Port Gamble S'Klallam)
  • Donna Pierite (Tunica-Biloxi)
  • Moira Redcorn (Osage, Caddo)
  • Amanda Attla (Athabascan, Yup'ik)
  • Marina Koonooka (Siberian Yupik)
  • Temryss Xeli'tia Lane (Lummi Nation)
  • Dëgawënö'di:he't and Onegawiyo:h (Onöndowa'ga:' ; Onöndowa'geo:nö', the People of the Great Hills)
  • Rhonda Sparks and Fawn White (Siberian Yupik; Ponca, Cherokee)
  • Forest Spears (Narragansett)
  • Denise Reed (Puyallup, Quileute)
  • Daniel Clay Stevens (Oneida)
  • Christian "Takes the Gun" Parrish (Apsáalooke (Crow Nation))
  • Sky and Talon Duncan (Apache, Arikara, Mandan, Hidatsa)
  • Leon Grant (Omaha)
  • Helena and Preston Arrow-Weed (Taos Pueblo; Kwaatsaan, Kamia)
  • Joan Dana (Passamaquoddy)
  • Stephen Yellowtail (Apsáalooke)
  • Protect Mauna a Wākea
  • Dr. Noe Noe Wong-Wilson (Mokuola, Hawai'i Island)
  • Dr. David Keanu Sai (Mauna Kea, Hawai'i)
  • Heoli Osorio, Malia Osorio, and Kalei Wohi (Ka'ena Point, O'ahu)
  • Warren Queton and Welana Fields-Queton (Kiowa, Seminole, Cherokee; Wah.Zha.Zhe, Muscogee Creek, Tsalagi)
  • Fawn Douglas (Las Vegas Paiute)
  • Russell Box Sr. (Southern Ute)
  • Electa Redcorn (Pawnee, Yankton Sioux)
  • Kaina Makua (Kānaka Maoli)
  • Elsa Armstrong (Red Cliff Band Ojibwe)
  • Drew Michael (Yup'ik, Iñupiaq)
  • Harry Oosahwee (Cherokee Nation)
  • Ramona Peters (Mashpee Wampanoag)
  • Lei'ohu and La'akea Chun (Kānaka Maoli)
  • Cynthia Parada (La Posta)
  • Travis Goldtooth, AKA Buffalo Barbie (Diné)
  • Zetha Battise (Alabama-Coushatta Tribe)
  • Paula Peters (Mashpee Wampanoag)
  • Ras K'dee (Makahmo Mihilakawna)
  • Joseph "Pomo Joe" Byron (ʔA:tat Witukomnoʔm)
  • Bruce and Bradly Gauchino (Pala Band of Mission Indians)
  • Protect Native Women
  • Quinna Hamby (Tuscarora)
  • Jamie Okuma (Luiseño, Shoshone-Bannock, Wailaki, Okinawan)
  • Dr. Desi Small Rodriguez (Northern Cheyenne)
  • Faith Spotted Eagle (Oceti, Peta Sakowin)
  • Orlando Begay (Diné)
  • Paulette Blanchard (Absentee Shawnee)
  • Akwesasne Freedom School (Akwesasne)
  • Helen Thompson Williams (Lovelock Paiute)
  • Dr. Mary Evelyn (Belgarde) Lo Re' (Pueblo of Isleta, Pueblo of Ohkay Owingeh)
  • Juanita C. Toledo (Pueblo of Jemez, African American)
  • Turquoise Chenoa Velarde (Taos Pueblo)
  • Hayes Lewis (Pueblo of Zuni)
  • Robert Mesa (Soboba, Navajo)
  • Crystal Battise Stephenson (Alabama-Coushatta Tribe)
  • Marla Allison (Laguna Pueblo)
  • Alex Soto (Tohono O'odham Nation)
  • Tracy "Ching" King (Fort Belknap Indian Nation)
  • Sunshine Eaton (Tesuque Pueblo, Jicarilla Apache, Lakota)
  • Kale Nissen (Colville Tribes)
  • Jonas John (Coushatta Tribe of Louisiana)
  • Fannie and Robert Mitchell (Diné)
  • Robert Piper Jr. (Paiute, Shoshone)
  • Grace Romero Pacheco (Santa Ynez Band of Chumash Indians)
  • Valita Mi'oux'sah and Dr. Rosette Mitexi Stabler (Omaha Nation)
  • Ryan Redcorn (Wazhazhe)
  • Margaret "Judy" Kakenowash Azure (Turtle Mountain Chippewa)
  • Ernest Siva (Morongo Indian Reservation)
  • Joshua Dean Iokua Ikaikaloa Mori (Kānaka Maoli)
  • Isabella and Alyssa Klain (Diné)
  • Cody Ferguson (Yup'ik)
  • Jaclyn Roessel (Navajo Nation)
  • Rex Tilousi (Havasupai Tribe)
  • J. Nicole Hatfield (Comanche)
  • Angelina Stevens-Desrosiers (San Carlos Apache, Miwok, Kiowa)
  • Lorraine "Shag" Evans (Mescalero Apache)
  • Esther Bourdon (Kiŋikmuit Iñupiaq)
  • Sharlyce Paige and Jennie Parker (Northern Cheyenne Nation)
  • Michelle Lowden (Pueblo of Acoma)
  • Sage Andrew Romero (Big Pine Paiute, Taos Pueblo)
  • Virginia Christman (Viejas Band of Kumeyaay)
  • Nancy Wilbur (Swinomish)
  • Autumn and Norm Harry (Numu, Diné)
  • Michael Frank (Miccosukee Tribe of Indians of Florida)
  • Mní Wičóni, Water is Life: The Story of Standing Rock
  • Danny Grassrope (Khulwíčhaša Oyate (Lower Brule Sioux Tribe))
  • Nataanii Means (Oglāla Lakota, Omaha, Diné)
  • Kandi White (Sacred Stone Camp)
  • Elizabeth Mackensie (Diné)
  • Dallas Goldtooth (Mdewakanton Dakota, Diné)
  • Bahozhoni Tso (Navajo Nation)
  • Joann Funmaker Jones (Ho-Chunk Nation)
  • Paul W. Chavez (Bishop Paiute Tribe)
  • Alaina Tahlate (Caddo Nation of Oklahoma)
  • Suzette Evelyn Beeter (Taa'tl'aa Dena')
  • Lena Charley (Taa'tl'aa Dena')
  • Ila May Dunzweiler (Quechan)
  • Joey Montoya (Lipan Apache)
  • Brett Logan (Tonowanda Seneca Nation)
  • Olivia Komahcheet (Comanche, Otoe)
  • Stephen Small Salmon (Pend D'oreille, Flathead Reservation)
  • Migizi Pensoneau (Ponca, Ojibwe)
  • Deidra Peaches (Diné)
  • Jake Hoyungowa (Navajo, Hopi)
  • Vernie Lee Gehman (Poarch Band of Creek Indians)
  • Noreen Mirabal-Montoya (Taos Pueblo, Pueblo of Laguna, Navajo Nation)
  • Leonard Sanford (Tanacross)
  • Sophia and Leah Suppah (Warm Springs)
  • Presentation of Colors (Grand Ronde)
  • Martin Brooks (Lumbee)
  • Crystalyn Lemieux (Tlingit)
  • Kyle Khaayak'w Worl (Tlingit, Yup'ik, Athabascan)
  • Dr. Jeremiah "Jerry" Wolfe (Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians)
  • Charlotte Logan (Akwesasne Mohawk)
  • Dr. Adrienne Keene (Cherokee Nation)
  • Waddie and Cippy Crazyhorse (Pueblo of Cochiti)
  • Jeremiah "Jay" Julius (Lummi Nation)
  • Wilson Maŋnak and Oliver Tusagvik Hoogendorn (Iñupiaq)
  • Maryjane Anuqsraaq Litchard (Iñupiaq)
  • Duncan Standing Rock Sr. (Rocky Boy's Chippewa Cree Reservation)
  • Dr. Mary Anne Sanipass (Mi'kmaq Nation)
  • Lubin Walter Hunter (Shinnecock)
  • Darling Chngatux̂ Anderson (Unangax̂)
  • John Sneezy (San Carlos Apache)
  • Dean Mike (Twenty-Nine Palms Band of Mission Indians)
  • Patrick Murphy (Pechanga)
  • Ruth Demmert (Tlingit)
  • Kathy Jefferson (John Pine Paiute, Shoshone)
  • Joseph Duffy (Red Cliff Band of Lake Superior Chippewa)
  • Funny Bone and Lil' Mike (Pawnee)
  • Raymond Mattz (Yurok Tribe)
  • Chief Bill James (Lummi Nation)
  • Ralph Burns (Pyramid Lake Paiute)
  • Nahaan (Tlingit, Fort Bidwell Paiute, Kaigain Haida)
  • Indigenous Women Hike
  • Marilyn Balluta (Dena'ina)
  • Deborah Parker and Kayah George (Tulalip Tribes)
  • Ethan Petticrew (Unangax̂)
  • Charlotte Rutherford (Unangax̂)
  • Kilyaahwii Linton (Santa Ysabel Band of Iipay Indians)
  • Kā'eo Izon (Kānaka Maoli)
  • Shan Goshorn (Eastern Band of Cherokee)
  • Greg Cajete (Santa Clara Pueblo)
  • Louise Wakerakats:te Herne (Kanien'kehà:ka)
  • Quinna Hamby (Tuscarora Nation)
  • Princess Daazhraii Johnson (Neets'aii Gwich'in)
  • Joy Harjo (Muscogee (Creek) Nation)
  • L Frank Manriquez (Tongva, Ajachmem)
  • Joanna and Leah Shenandoah (Oneida Nation)
  • Frank Mapatis (Hualapai, Mojave, Yavapai)
  • Vivian and Raphael Jimmy (Yup'ik)
  • Aurelia Stacona (Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs)
  • Rupert Steele (Goshute, Shoshone)
  • John Keikiala A'ana (Kānaka Maoli)
  • Marva Sii-Xuutesna Jones (Tolowa Dee-ni' Nation, Yurok, Karuk, Wintu)
  • John Trudell (Santee Sioux Nation)
  • Flower Dancers (Tolowa Dee-ni' Nation)
  • Native Nations
  • [Map]
  • Acknowledgements
  • Supporters
  • About the Author
  • Index.
Review by Booklist Review

In a combination of astonishing photographs and stunning storytelling, Matika Wilbur's extensive collection seeks to document members from the more than 562 federally recognized Tribal Nations in the U.S. Wilbur, a member of the Swinomish and Tulalip Tribes, began her journey in 2012 through a Kickstarter campaign, catalyzing a decade-long endeavor to "uplift the contemporary complexity of Native America's intelligence, the truth of our hearts, to build a better way to the other side." Wilbur's project chronicles the beauty, love, activism, art, teaching, and unforgettable stories of Indigenous people across her 600,000-mile journey. Employing "indigenous photography methods," she focuses on the cultivation of relationships and honoring of tradition before capturing her images. From a junior from the Red Cliff Band Ojibwe Tribe navigating the white-centered spaces of Dartmouth College to Duncan Standing Rock Sr. of the Rocky Boy's Chippewa Cree Reservation, one of the last known Little Shell Chippewa/Ojibwe speakers, the immense depth and range of Indigenous stories Wilbur captures creates a vital work of documentation. Wilbur did not quite reach 562 Tribes for this work, acknowledging that, ultimately, that number does not encompass the many variations or experiences of the Native community. Wilbur's work is an engrossing testament that "The extraordinary land we walk on is Native land, whether it be city streets, suburban cul-de-sacs, deserts, plains, mountains, or shorelines. Indigenous existence is all around us. It is up to us to listen."

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Superb collection of images of Indigenous peoples throughout the U.S. Wilbur, a Swinomish and Tulalip photographer, set out with the aim of developing "a documentary project dedicated to changing the way people see Native America." She doesn't present images of all of the 562 federally recognized tribes that give her collection its name, but it's not for want of trying. Featuring hundreds of portraits, this book represents years of travel, conversations, and quiet negotiations, as when Wilbur ventured into the depths of the Grand Canyon to speak with the Havasupai people who live there and was put off for three days until she presented a gift of fry bread to a previously reluctant interlocutor. "We just remain within our people, hidden inside the Earth, inside the canyon," said her interviewee. "Maybe we can find peace and quiet where we live." Whether old or young, the people the author portrays speak to the difficult realities of Native life. Many have experienced the devastating effects of deracination imposed from the outside, with the suppression of Indigenous languages and cultural norms. "I'm the only one here that can speak the language…I talk to myself," notes one Ojibwe elder. Sometimes it's kind of funny--I don't want them Crees to hear me talk to myself. They may send me out to the nut house!" Apart from portraying a vast array of individual people, Wilbur punctuates her portfolio with studies of events and themes; especially moving and memorable is her inside view of the water protectors of the Standing Rock Sioux. Some of the author's subjects are well known, including the famed poet/musician Joy Harjo and the late John Trudell, and some are unknown but making their marks on the world nonetheless. All, Wilbur amply shows, take great pride in being Native even as they battle prejudice, sometimes on many fronts. Essential for readers interested in modern Native American lives and traditions. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Project Mauna A Wākea This is a story about land, culture, and connection to place--this is the story to protect Mauna a Wākea on the Big Island of Hawai'i. Kānaka Maoli (Native Hawaiian people) have been fighting to stop the construction of the Thirty Meter Telescope (TMT) since 2009, and in the summer of 2019, a resistance camp was established at Pu'u Huluhulu. Kia'i (protectors) slept in a parking lot over a lava field at the bottom of the access road to the summit of Mauna Kea for nearly a year to stop construction of what would be the largest telescope in the Northern Hemisphere. Mauna Kea is a dormant volcano and is the tallest mountain on Earth from the seafloor to its summit. Its abbreviated name (which means "white mountain") is short for Mauna a Wākea, the mountain of the Hawaiian deity Wākea. For Kānaka Maoli, it is considered the most sacred place, fundamental in their creation story and time-honored in their traditions. The destruction and ongoing desecration from tourism and the existing thirteen telescopes on Mauna Kea have been devastating to the mountain's fragile and unique ecosystem and are blatantly disrespectful to Kānaka cultural beliefs. Our All My Relations podcast team flew to Hawai'i in January of 2020 to meet with the kūpuna (elders), activists, and scholars behind the movement. When we arrived, it was sunny and warm; the air smelledgood and it quenched our sun-thirsty, Pacific Northwest souls. But when we ascended the Mauna the weather changed. It was cold. The mist was thick. We arrived to Pu'u Huluhulu to see kia'i doing evening protocol in jackets and bare feet. I got this sudden, familiar feeling that I was in a sacred place, and that I needed to respectfully follow the protocol as a guest in this country (which is how we should all act when visiting Hawai'i, since all non-Kānaka are guests there). While at Pu'u Huluhulu, we were able to visit the kūpuna tent and talk story. There we met Dr. Noe Noe Wong-Wilson, a professor, educator, cultural practitioner and Native rights activist. We sat with Auntie Noe Noe in a minivan on the Mauna, as the rain poured down on us. She introduced us to the fundamental and powerful reason for the movement. " 'Āina, land, is an inseparable part of our identity as Hawaiians," Auntie Noe Noe said. "And along with the land comes spirituality because these things, these inanimate things that cannot be produced by a human, are what we call the Gods. So, we revere the very rocks we walk on, the very rocks that you're standing on. To see it abused in this way is painful to the soul. It's painful to our Native soul. That's why we stand." In our first moments on the Mauna, we were invited to participate in the evening protocol led by Lanakila Mangauil, a fierce Hawaiian cultural practitioner, hula teacher, and activist. "I am a strong advocate for the protection and cultivation of Hawaiian culture and the rights of Indigenous peoples as directly connected to the rights, protection, and restoration of the environment," Lanakila told us. His passion fueled the movement to protect Mauna Kea--he led protests, engaged the public via social media, taught cultural classes, and even put his body on the frontline to stop construction. Because of his cultural knowledge and his loquacious nature, Lanakila elaborated on the significance of the Mauna. "It was the first child born of Papahānaumoku and Wākea, which is the Earth Mother and the Sky Father. Then the siblings, the younger siblings of the islands themselves, continued to emerge forth. And eventually also the sibling who is HoʻohŌkūkalani the Star Mother, she is the next, who then birthed the Kanaka, the human, and was brought here to the Earth. And so, we see the mountain as the eldest of all of our siblings. As the hiapo, or the eldest child, it does all this work to gather the nutrients and to feed them to all of us younger siblings. And we maintain that relationship. It's also very sacred to us as being one of the highest points in all of Oceania. It is a burial ground, especially for our high chiefs, high priests, and particular families that are related to the deities of this mountain. For generations upon generations, the bones of ancestors are laid to rest on this mountain. It is a tradition of our people too that we don't mark graves. They are hidden away. The fact that you look and you don't see stone heads or markers doesn't mean that they aren't there. It is a tradition to hide the bones. So there is a burial ground to elevate our ancestors into the heavens. It is also very symbolic for us because we see the mountain also as a piko, which is an umbilical. The mountain is the umbilical of this honua [planet] that stretches into oli ka lani, the black of space is the placenta. And the imagery of that is the mountain channels all this mana [spiritual life force] of the universe to come down through it and it shares it for the growing embryo which is this Earth. "Lanakila paints a strong picture--the Mauna is the piko and the telescopes are cancers. In fact, Kānaka Maoli seldom summit the Mauna since it is a realm reserved for the Gods. The sacrality of the mountain is equally tied to its cultural, religious, and scientific environmental value, as Lanakila explained: "Mauna Kea and Mauna Loa are both registered ice mountains. Within the core of the mountains is permafrost and that's what helps hold the lake up there and what also has been, from the Ice Age, what gives us these artesian wells that permeate down." It's well known that the fresh water supply on the Big Island is dependent on the Mauna's naturally occurring water cycle, in which the atmosphere, ocean, land, and sun are all working together to replenish the island's fresh water. The construction and presence of the telescopes have desecrated the mountain and blatantly disrespected what Kānaka Maoli hold dear. Environmental Impact Statements determined that prior construction sites were destructive to its ecosystem, and although Mauna Kea is legally classified as conservation land, it continues to be denied protection. Hawaiian development and the construction of the roads to access the existing telescopes has led to upward of a thousand tourists visiting Mauna Kea every day. Intrinsically tied to the movement to protect Mauna Kea is Kānaka Maoli sovereignty, nationhood, and identity--undermining and disrespecting the Mauna is equivalent to undermining and disrespecting the Kānaka Maoli. The movement to protect the sacred is just as Lanakila said: "Without the land, we have no culture. Our culture cannot exist without these places." Excerpted from Project 562: Changing the Way We See Native America by Matika Wilbur All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.