Amy Lonetree will present at the Indigenous Arts in
Transition Seminar on Tuesday, December 10, at 6 pm. Her talk is entitled “Studio Portraits and Tourist
Images: Writing a History of the Ho-Chunk Nation Through the Visual Archive, 1879–1960.”
Engaging
with the 2019–20 Bard Graduate Center theme “Whose
Story?” Lonetree’s talk
considers the challenging, complicated, and inspiring process of writing a history
with and for her community, the Ho-Chunk Nation. The project examines the
intersections of photographic images, family history, tourism, and Ho-Chunk
survivance through an examination of two extraordinary photographic collections
housed at the Wisconsin Historical Society:
the Charles Van Schaick Collection and the Henry Hamilton (H.H.) Bennett
Collection. Both collections include visual materials that document,
represent, and convey a deep history of Ho-Chunk resilience and survival, along
with the ongoing legacies of settler colonialism. This talk will address the
importance of employing decolonizing methodological strategies when analyzing
these sources. Particular attention is given to privileging the perspectives of
the Indigenous people captured in the frame and the ongoing meaning that this
visual archive has to our understanding of Ho-Chunk identity, issues of
representation, modern labor, and survivance.
Lonetree will also consider the diversity of Indigenous
peoples’ affective responses to these historic images through an analysis of her
own engagement with family images in the visual archive.
Amy Lonetree (Ho-Chunk) is an Associate Professor of
History at the University of California, Santa Cruz. She received her PhD in
Ethnic Studies from the University of California, Berkeley, and her scholarly
research focuses on Indigenous history, visual culture studies, and museum
studies. Her publications include, Decolonizing
Museums: Representing Native America in National and Tribal Museums (2012);
a co-edited book with Amanda J. Cobb, The
National Museum of the American Indian: Critical Conversations (2008); and a co-authored volume, People of the Big Voice: Photographs of
Ho-Chunk Families by Charles Van Schaick, 1879–1942 (2011).