Chapter 4 Good Medicine: Prescriptions for Indigenous Archaeological Practice

Ora Marek-Martinez, Sara L. Gonzalez
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Abstract

While the history of North American archaeology points to a long engagement with tribal elders and scholars, these encounters largely consist of unequal, extractive relationships wherein Indigenous collaborators and Indigenous archaeologists have been treated more as objects of study and pity—what Bea Medicine refers to as “creatures”—rather than as equal research partners. As an Indigenous woman and a settler Chicanx woman, we reflect on the life journey and scholarship of Bea Medicine, a Lakota scholar-activist and mentor to Indigenous anthropologists. Dr. Medicine's work has provided generations of Indigenous anthropologists with the means to participate in the discipline with their whole selves and, importantly, on their own terms. We argue that Medicine's contributions provide good medicine for the field in the form of concrete strategies for continuing to decolonize the discipline and for doing work that centers the direct needs and perspectives of Indigenous peoples. When read alongside Indigenous archaeologies’ often overlooked grandmothers, mothers, and aunties, Medicine's work also highlights continuing disparities in archaeological practice, from our relationships with and to Indigenous nations to the relations we cultivate in the Academy as Black, Indigenous, and People of Color.

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第四章良药:土著考古实践的处方
虽然北美考古史表明,他们与部落长老和学者有着长期的接触,但这些接触在很大程度上是不平等的、榨取式的关系,在这种关系中,土著合作者和土著考古学家更多地被视为研究和怜悯的对象——Bea Medicine称之为“生物”——而不是平等的研究伙伴。作为一名土著妇女和一名定居的芝加哥妇女,我们回顾了拉科塔学者活动家、土著人类学家导师Bea Medicine的人生历程和学术成就。Medicine博士的工作为几代土著人类学家提供了全身心参与这一学科的手段,更重要的是,以他们自己的方式参与这一领域。我们认为,医学的贡献以具体战略的形式为该领域提供了良药,以继续使该学科非殖民化,并开展以土著人民的直接需求和观点为中心的工作。当与土著考古学家经常被忽视的祖母、母亲和阿姨一起阅读时,Medicine的工作也突显了考古实践中持续存在的差异,从我们与土著民族的关系,到我们在学院培养的黑人、原住民和有色人种的关系。
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